From Japan to St. Lucia, here’s where airfare is falling in 2025

From Japan to St. Lucia, here’s where airfare is falling in 2025


Tourists take photos in Shinsekai with Tsutenkaku tower in sight in Osaka, Japan, on December 12, 2024. 

Kichul Shin | Nurphoto | Getty Images

Planning an international trip this year? You could be in luck, if you’re willing to fly far.

Long-haul trips are cheaper than last year, according to data released this week from flight-tracking company Hopper.

For example, through mid-2025, flights between the U.S. and Asia are down 11% this year over last, averaging $1,087, with capacity up 6% from 2024. Europe flights are down 6% at $754, Hopper data show.

Flights to Africa and the Middle East are flat compared with last year, while flights to South America are down 4% to $685, and Mexico and Central America flights from the U.S. are up 9% to $469.

Meanwhile, domestic U.S. ticket prices are on the rise, as airlines have become more cautious about capacity growth in the U.S. and face aircraft delivery delays from Boeing and Airbus.

Read more CNBC airline news

But the cheaper international trips come as airlines have increased capacity to popular destinations and as demand growth has leveled out compared with post-pandemic surges, when travelers raced to book trips abroad after travel restrictions were lifted. Fares were higher as airlines faced labor and aircraft shortages coming out of the pandemic.

As airlines have ramped up capacity, Europe fares late last year were the lowest in years.

“You’re definitely not at a point now where there’s pent-up demand left,” said Scott Keyes, founder of travel app Going, previously known as Scott’s Cheap Flights.

Favorable exchange rates for travelers using U.S. dollars in many countries, including hotspot Japan, have boosted demand. International visitors to Japan surged nearly 50% in the first 11 months of 2024 to close to 33.4 million people, according to the Japanese government data.

Travel-search site Kayak said flights to Asia are the cheapest in at least three years, with interest from customers on the rise. Japanese cities Tokyo, Sapporo and Osaka are posting the biggest percentage increases in searches, Kayak noted.

Tourists sit in front of the Patong Beach sign by the seafront on the southern Thai island of Phuket on Nov. 29, 2024. 

Chanakarn Laosarakham | AFP | Getty Images

It also said airfares are lower across the Caribbean, with cheaper tickets to Dominica (down 21% over last year), and Barbados and St. Lucia, which are down 17% compared with last year, Kayak said.

Travelers flying this year are also more interested in business class, a trend carriers like Delta, which kicks off 2025 airline earnings on Friday, have capitalized on.

Kayak estimates that searches for those four-digit business class fares are up 19% over last year.



Source

Detroit auto stocks jump on report of tariff relief for U.S. vehicles
Business

Detroit auto stocks jump on report of tariff relief for U.S. vehicles

Production is now set to begin at the former Detroit-Hamtramck assembly plant, less than two years after GM announced the massive $2.2 billion investment to fully renovate the facility to build a variety of all-electric trucks and SUVs. Photo by Jeffrey Sauger for General Motors DETROIT – Shares of the Detroit automakers closed higher Friday […]

Read More
Tesla, GM lead record U.S. EV sales this year as federal incentives end
Business

Tesla, GM lead record U.S. EV sales this year as federal incentives end

A Tesla Cybertruck and GMC Sierra Denali EV First Edition next to one another. Michael Wayland | CNBC DETROIT – Tesla and General Motors are leading the U.S. automotive industry this year in record domestic sales of all-electric vehicles, as consumers hurried to buy EVs before up to $7,500 in federal incentives for each purchase […]

Read More
The wealth of the top 1% reaches a record  trillion
Business

The wealth of the top 1% reaches a record $52 trillion

A version of this article first appeared in CNBC’s Inside Wealth newsletter with Robert Frank, a weekly guide to the high-net-worth investor and consumer. Sign up to receive future editions, straight to your inbox. The top 10% of Americans added $5 trillion to their wealth in the second quarter as the stock market rally continued to benefit […]

Read More