American adds Budapest, Prague and Buenos Aires flights for summer 2026

American adds Budapest, Prague and Buenos Aires flights for summer 2026


An American Airlines Boeing 787-9 Dreamliner lands at the Miami International Airport on December 10, 2021 in Miami, Florida.

Joe Raedle | Getty Images

American Airlines is reviving some of its pre-pandemic destinations like Prague and Budapest, Hungary, as international travel continues to hold up better than domestic demand.

Other additions include its first-ever Dallas Fort Worth International flights to Athens, Greece, and year-round nonstop service between Miami and Milan.

American is also extending service for next year’s World Cup, from Buenos Aires, Argentina, to Dallas and between Dallas and Zurich, where soccer’s governing body, FIFA, is based,. Those flights will run from May 21 to Aug. 4 of next year, a bid for more business travel and sports tourism.

Brian Znotins, American’s senior vice president of network and schedule planning, told CNBC that the airline saw high numbers of customers from Argentina travel to Doha, Qatar, during the 2022 World Cup and that he expects even more to travel to the 2026 World Cup, which will be played in Canada, the U.S. and Mexico.

He also said the airline is expanding its Europe service in a bet that customers would rather connect in a U.S. hub like Dallas or Charlotte, North Carolina.

“We took a fresh look at where the demand hotspots are in Europe and we continue to see strength in Italy and Greece,” Znotins said. “We continue to see high numbers of travelers connecting in Europe to get to places like Rome and Athens,” so the airline is adding more options from U.S. hubs.

Read more CNBC airline news

With Prague and Budapest service from American’s hub at Philadelphia International Airport, he said many customers already fly into one city and out of the other for Danube River cruises and other tours.

American’s unit revenue for domestic flights in the last quarter fell 6.4% from 2024, while trans-Atlantic revenue rose 5%.

Many of American’s summer routes were discontinued because of the Covid-19 pandemic, but Znotins said the changes weren’t just a return to that period.

“We’ve redesigned the entire airline based on today’s demand environment and not some desire to get back to 2019,” he said. “Everything has changed.”

American will use Boeing 787-8 Dreamliners for all the new flights except for Zurich to Dallas, which will be flown by Boeing 777-200s.



Source

Delta Air Lines CEO Ed Bastian: Q3 results represent about 60% of overall industry profits
Travel

Delta Air Lines CEO Ed Bastian: Q3 results represent about 60% of overall industry profits

ShareShare Article via FacebookShare Article via TwitterShare Article via LinkedInShare Article via Email CNBC’s Phil LeBeau and Delta Air Lines CEO Ed Bastian join ‘Squawk Box’ to discuss the company’s quarterly earnings results, state of consumer travel demand, impact of airport staffing issues, corporate travel demand, and more. Source

Read More
Delta CEO says government shutdown hasn’t impacted airline’s operation
Travel

Delta CEO says government shutdown hasn’t impacted airline’s operation

A Delta Air Lines Airbus A220 airplane prepares to takeoff at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport in Arlington, Virginia, on July 10, 2025. Saul Loeb | Afp | Getty Images Delta Air Lines CEO Ed Bastian told CNBC that the carrier’s operation is running smoothly despite the federal government shutdown, but if it goes another […]

Read More
China’s Golden Week travel boom masks a bruising price war
Travel

China’s Golden Week travel boom masks a bruising price war

Tourists visit the Confucius Temple market area in Nanjing, Jiangsu province, China, on Oct. 1, 2025. Cfoto | Future Publishing | Getty Images BEIJING — The latest sign of hyper-competition, or “involution,” has emerged in China’s tourism industry, adding to concerns about growing deflationary pressure in the broader economy. Over the Oct. 1 to 8 […]

Read More