US airlines chase profits in premium cabins, deepening a fare class
divide on flights
[July 07, 2026] By
RIO YAMAT
They may arrive at the same destination, but two passengers on the same
flight can have strikingly different travel experiences.
One traveler breezes through a priority security lane and heads straight
to an invite-only lounge for craft cocktails and a chef-prepared meal
before boarding early. A flight attendant offering a glass of champagne
and a warm hand towel welcomes the passenger to a spacious seat at the
front of the plane.
The other traveler stands in a line at every step — security screening,
a café selling $16 sandwiches, a crowded gate — then boards with one of
the final groups, hoping there’s still room for a carry-on in the
overhead bin before folding into a cramped middle seat. After the cabin
lights dim, sleep comes in fragments, and a travel pillow does little to
ease a stiff neck.
The contrasting journeys are no accident. Since the COVID-19 pandemic,
the largest U.S. airlines have pulled out all the stops to court premium
passengers who are willing to pay for comfort, convenience and
exclusivity. Budget-conscious travelers may notice a widening gap
between the back of the plane and up front as the carriers increasingly
build their businesses around selling first-class, business-class and
premium-economy seats.
“We can’t win by trying to provide the cheapest. We have to be able to
win by providing the best," Delta Air Lines CEO Ed Bastian said in a
recent Fortune podcast interview.
The strategy embraced by Delta and rivals American Airlines and United
Airlines marks a notable evolution for an industry that spent decades
making air travel more accessible. Now, the nation's largest carriers
are reconfiguring aircraft to expand premium seating, designing new
fleets with larger premium cabins and investing billions in amenities
that extend the top-tier travel treatment beyond their jetliners.

But United CEO Scott Kirby has pushed back on the idea that the industry
has become solely focused on chasing big spenders. He said United’s
premium investments are part of a broader strategy to boost the
experience of every traveler, pointing to initiatives such as seatback
entertainment and improvements to the airline’s mobile app.
“We’re investing nose to tail for all customers,” Kirby said last month
on financial firm Morgan Stanley’s Exceptional Leaders podcast.
Premium cabins have become airlines’ most valuable real estate
The premium playbook didn’t emerge overnight.
Airlines used to fill empty first-class seats mainly by giving their
most loyal frequent flyers free upgrades. Delta rewrote the rules in the
early 2010s by using sophisticated pricing tools to offer more of those
seats to coach passengers who were willing to pay a little more, said
Henry Harteveldt, president of travel advisory firm Atmosphere Research
Group.
The strategy unlocked demand airlines hadn’t fully recognized,
encouraging more travelers to trade up and laying the groundwork for
today’s broader premium push.
“Travelers could and would pay for noticeably more comfort, noticeably
better service, noticeably more amenities, if the price was right,”
Harteveldt said.
Then came the pandemic. When business travel collapsed and Zoom replaced
many corporate trips, airline analysts wondered whether carriers would
once again have to lure travelers with cheap fares. Instead, eager
leisure travelers proved willing to splurge on premium seats and perks,
convincing airlines that demand extended well beyond the traditional
business road warrior, Harteveldt said.
That confidence has only grown. Premium demand is now a fixture of
quarterly earnings calls, with airline executives regularly touting
premium revenue as they compete for higher-spending travelers.
“When you think about what’s different and what’s changed over the last
10 or 15 years, the premium products used to be loss leaders, and now
they’re the highest-margin products," former Delta President Glen
Hauenstein said last summer. “That’s really the headline.”
Analysts say premium cabins — a category that expanded with the
introduction of premium economy seats featuring more legroom and
amenities at a fraction of the cost — now generate a disproportionate
share of airline revenue compared with the space they take up on
commercial aircraft.

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A bartender pours a glass of sparkling wine at the United Club
lounge, Monday, June 29, 2026, in Minneapolis, Minn. (AP Photo/Chris
Carlson)
 On heavily trafficked transatlantic
routes, business-class tickets can bring in nearly as much revenue
as fares and fees paid by passengers in the much larger economy
cabin, according to an analysis by consulting firm McKinsey &
Company.
Airlines are competing with chef-designed menus
and high-end skin care
The premiumization of air travel has become impossible to miss, even
for travelers who only get a glimpse through an airport lounge door
or while walking down an airplane aisle.
Delta’s new first-class lounges resemble upscale restaurants, with
open kitchens plating dishes such as hamachi crudo, cocktail bars
serving made-to-order drinks, soundproof relaxation pods and outdoor
decks overlooking the tarmac.
American has refreshed its premium cabin menus with “globally
inspired dishes,” like crispy maitake mushroom and fried chicken bao
topped with yuzu aioli, in partnership with the James Beard
Foundation. The airline also redesigned its newest Boeing 787-9
Dreamliners for long-haul international flights around individual
business-class compartments with sliding privacy doors, lie-flat
seats longer than a standard twin mattress and amenity kits that
might include a celebrity facialist's brand of sheet masks and
under-eye patches.
United’s newest business-class cubicles add oversized 27-inch
entertainment screens, caviar service, luxury skincare products and
multi-course dining on long-haul international services. The airline
said its revamped menus “feature flavors and dishes” inspired by
cities across its network.
“Marie Antoinette would feel very comfortable on any of the big
three airlines these days,” said William J. McGee, senior fellow for
aviation at the American Economic Liberties Project. “But instead of
saying, ‘Let them eat cake’ in the back of the plane, she would say,
‘Let them eat Biscoffs.’”
Air travel is getting more stratified as fuel costs increase
fares
The airlines' pursuit of higher-paying passengers shows no loss of
momentum. On board Delta's next-generation Airbus A350-1000 aircraft
arriving in 2027, nearly half the cabin will be devoted to premium
seating. American has said it plans to expand premium cabins by 50%
by the end of the decade.
Yet the new era of luxury in the skies is unfolding alongside a very
different reality for other U.S. travelers as broader inflationary
pressures have added to the strain on household budgets.

New York-based travel advisor Mary Auteri said more of her clients
are “experiencing sticker shock” as fares and add-on fees have
gotten more expensive since the Iran war broke out and pushed up the
price of jet fuel, one of the largest operating costs for airlines.
A group of friends in their 20s recently asked Auteri to price out
flights to the sugar-white sand beaches of Punta Cana, a resort town
in the Dominican Republic. After she sent them an itinerary, they
said they had found what looked like the same flights on Google
Flights for more than $100 less.
But the cheaper fares were basic economy tickets that excluded seat
assignments, checked bags and flexibility to change plans. Once
those costs were added back in, the trip no longer fit their budget.
Checked-bag fees, seat-selection charges and other add-on costs fall
heaviest on economy travelers, McGee said. For wealthier travelers,
those fees may amount to little more than an inconvenience. For
budget-conscious travelers, they can determine whether a trip
happens at all.
“The idea that we’re all created equal? Not in the airlines’ eyes,"
McGee said. “Not by any means.”
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