United Airlines ramps up flights for European travel comeback

United Airlines ramps up flights for European travel comeback


A United Airlines passenger aircraft arrives over the top of residential houses to land at Heathrow Airport in west London, Britain, March 13, 2020.

Matthew Childs | Reuters

United Airlines says demand for trans-Atlantic travel is heating up, despite higher fuel prices and the Ukraine war.

The airline plans to fly 25% more across the Atlantic this peak spring and summer travel season compared with 2019, including new destinations it unveiled last fall such as Bergen, Norway; Amman, Jordan; and Portugal’s Azores. United is adding new routes and frequencies, including service to London, Zurich, Munich, Milan and Nice.

The stronger demand “was something that we anticipated and it’s something we’re seeing results of,” Patrick Quayle, United’s senior vice president of international network and alliances, said on a call with reporters Monday.

United is ramping up its schedule as the airline faces several challenges: the longer-than-expected process to resume flying its 52 Pratt & Whitney-powered Boeing 777s after an engine failure last year, delivery delays of new Boeing Dreamliners, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and a surge in costs.

“We have not seen any softness in terms of demand,” Quayle said of the carrier’s easternmost European destinations, such as Germany or Croatia. But, he added, there might be some impact on demand for connections to cities farther east in countries like Poland and Romania that are served by United’s partner Lufthansa.

Quayle also said United is logging “robust” demand for more expensive products like its Polaris business class and its premium economy class for trans-Atlantic. He also said that business travel across the Atlantic is returning.

The grounded 777s are on track to return in mid-May, and the airline isn’t planning to ramp up capacity beyond its current schedule if they come back earlier. However, Quayle said the planes could be used for cargo flights, which have been a bright spot during the pandemic.



Source

Spirit Airlines CEO on carrier’s collapse: ‘We just kind of ran out of runway’
Travel

Spirit Airlines CEO on carrier’s collapse: ‘We just kind of ran out of runway’

A Spirit Airlines plane sits parked at Hollywood Burbank Airport on April 16, 2026 in Burbank, California. Justin Sullivan | Getty Images Spirit Airlines struggled for years, battered by larger, cash-rich airlines that copied its business model, failed mergers, higher costs and, most recently, a surge in jet fuel prices because of the war in […]

Read More
Wyndham CEO on Q1: Big pickup in our customers looking to travel
Travel

Wyndham CEO on Q1: Big pickup in our customers looking to travel

Geoff Ballotti, Wyndham CEO, joins ‘The Exchange’ to discuss the company’s quarterly earnings results, the Wyndham consumers and much more. Source

Read More
How Spirit Airlines’ demise will benefit rivals — and raise airfares even more
Travel

How Spirit Airlines’ demise will benefit rivals — and raise airfares even more

A Spirit Airlines Airbus A321 airplane taxis at Los Angeles International Airport after arriving from Fort Lauderdale on March 30, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. Kevin Carter | Getty Images Just hours after Spirit Airlines collapsed, its rivals unveiled their new flight plans. Airlines had actually been at work for months on their route changes […]

Read More