Delta Air Lines reports revenue uptick from no-frills tickets
The idea of a no-frills airline ticket that can’t be changed or upgraded and probably lands you in a cramped middle seat may sound unappealing, but it is making Delta Air Lines executives happy.
The carrier launched the so-called basic economy fare in 2012 and later expanded it to about 1,650 of Delta’s roughly 20,000 domestic routes. It was created to compete with low-cost carriers such as Spirit Airlines and Frontier Airlines, which are threatening to steal budget-minded fliers away from the big carriers.
The airline announced recently that the no-frills ticket has generated $20 million in incremental revenue in the first three months of 2016, and Delta’s executives plan to expand the bare-bones ticket to more routes.
“So if you’re shopping for just solely price, we want to have a product that can compete effectively and provide the best services against carriers who are providing a much lower quality of service,” Glen W. Hauenstein, Delta’s chief revenue officer, told analysts. “And I think that’s what this is designed for.”
Hoping to cash in on the same fliers, American Airlines and United Airlines will introduce later this year a class of ticket that is cheaper and offers even fewer amenities than the regular economy section seats.
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James Compton, chief revenue officer for United Continental Holdings, the parent company for United Airlines, told analysts that the new ticket will complement higher-priced tickets that include food, drinks and entertainment but instead “will appeal to the purely price-sensitive customer.”
To read more about travel, tourism and the airline industry, follow me on Twitter at @hugomartin.
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