USA TODAY US Edition

MORE WI-FI IN THE SKY

BUDGET AIRLINE SPIRIT ADDING SERVICE TO FLEET

- Ben Mutzabaugh

Spirit Airlines is introducin­g a new fee, but it’s for an option the carrier thinks customers will be happy about: in-flight Wi-Fi.

Spirit announced Friday that it will become the first North American “ultra low-cost carrier” to add that capability, unveiling an aggressive plan to equip its entire fleet of about 120 planes with Wi-Fi by next summer.

Spirit touted the move as fitting into a broader strategy to “invest in the guest” and its ongoing effort to improve customers’ experience­s with the carrier.

It’s an abrupt turn for Spirit, sometimes referred to as “America’s mosthated airline” — a tag earned earlier this decade when it struggled with on-time performanc­e, customer complaints and an uneven roll-out of what was then a new fee-heavy business model.

But that has changed, said Spirit president Ted Christie, who points to an on-time arrival rate that recently has been among the industry’s best and an improving rate of customer complaints.

Christie said adding Wi-Fi is part of an “evolution” that’s proving low-fare budget air travel doesn’t have to be awful. “Someone who may have traveled with us five or six years ago is going to have a completely different experience today,” Christie said in an interview with USA TODAY.

“We can show we are a best-in-class operator,” he said about the carrier’s efforts to improve punctualit­y and reduce cancellati­ons.

“And now (that) onboard experience includes Wi-Fi,” Christie said.

Despite Spirit’s apparent kinder, gentler approach to customer service, it is not wavering from its core no-frills, fee-heavy business model.

Wi-Fi will be the latest add-on fee offered by the airline. Spirit said its Web-browsing and streaming options will have an average price of $6.50, “with a cost range expected to be lower or higher based on the route and demand.”

“This price point is going to be very attractive,” Christie said, “given what we know is the overall average charged in the industry today.”

Costs for Wi-Fi on U.S. airlines can vary wildly. Southwest charges $8 a day per device, while Delta offers an advance-purchase $16 “day pass” for 24 hours of access on flights within North America. Often, prices are higher if fliers purchase access at the last minute.

To provide its Wi-Fi service, Spirit has selected Thales Group and its Ka-band HTS (high throughput satellite) service. Spirit believes that satellite-based option will deliver a better service than what’s now offered on most airlines. Intermitte­nt outages and slow browsing have been top complaints among fliers logging on in-flight at other U.S. carriers that already have the option.

“We found a partner that could deliver a kind of at-home experience to the seat,” Christie said.

The technology provided by Thales will allow Spirit to offer Wi-Fi coverage on 97% of its routes upon launch of the service. “Remember, we fly into South America, so there are going to be some places there where we won’t quite have the reach. But by 2021, that all will be covered also,” Christie adds, noting Thales’ launch of a new satellite that the carrier says will “increase speeds and coverage to an unpreceden­ted level in the industry.”

Competitiv­ely, Spirit’s addition of Wi-Fi will make it the only one among no-frills ultra low-cost carriers like Frontier and Allegiant to have such an offering. It also comes as major rivals American, Delta and United have all added restrictiv­e “Basic Economy” fares meant to compete with the discounter­s on price while still offering a “fullservic­e” flight.

Asked where Spirit’s Wi-Fi effort helps it fit in between those two sets of rivals, Christie said: “For those buyers of airline tickets who are making a decision based on availabili­ty of in-flight Wi-Fi, clearly today we’re not reaching them.”

“What we think we’ve done is solve for that in a way that doesn’t damage the core business,” he continues. “We’re just trying to broaden the field of available travelers, and this is another way to do it.”

Christie touts the effort as one that will benefit both the carrier’s bottom line and elevate its standing in a competitiv­e marketplac­e.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O ?? Spirit said its Web-browsing and streaming options will have an average price of $6.50.
GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O Spirit said its Web-browsing and streaming options will have an average price of $6.50.
 ?? SPECIAL TO USA TODAY ?? Spirit says it’s not wavering from its no-frills ways.
SPECIAL TO USA TODAY Spirit says it’s not wavering from its no-frills ways.

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