Quantcast

United Airlines reduces frequency on Australian routes amid capacity concerns

Airline Stocks To Keep An Eye On - April 28th
Report: JetBlue, United Mulling Partnership
New First-Class Suites, Futuristic Aircraft and the Top Air Travel News From April 2025
Southwest Airlines Announces Reimagined Fare Products, New Benefits for Rapid Rewards Credit Cardmembers and Tier Member Customers
United CEO calls Trump's tariffs a 'chess game'
Flight tickets from Srinagar remain exorbitantly high despite aviation ministry request
RTX Q1 Earnings & Sales Beat Estimates, Increase Year Over Year
Delta faces federal investigation as it scraps hundreds of flights for fifth straight day
Coalition pledges to remove EV tax break two days after Dutton ruled out scrapping it – as it happened
Adani’s airport unit seeks $750 million loan from global banks
GE Aerospace affirms outlook; CEO met with Trump to discuss tariffs
Flight made emergency landing in Denver after reported animal strike and engine fire
General Dynamics says G800 jet receives FAA, EASA certifications
Archer unveils plans for NYC air-taxi network in partnership with United Airlines
United Airlines doubles down on Chicago roots with new O'Hare billboards
ICAO Proposes ‘Journey Pass’ Biometric ID Boarding
Gatwick airport strikes, Easter 2025: will my flight be cancelled?
Boarding passes and check-in could be scrapped in air travel shake-up
European air traffic warning means summer delays for holidaymakers
The EU rule change that could affect millions of Brits when their flight is delayed or cancelled
Delta Earnings Land Soon. Why They’re Key for Airline Stocks and the Economy.
Avelo Airlines to Operate Deportation Flights, Hiring Flight Attendants
Travel chaos 2025: all the strikes and disruption expected across Europe
Qatar Airways accelerates Starlink wifi implementation
Southwest Airlines extends flight schedule through early April 2025
Cathay Pacific reaches 3,400 pilots this year, with low resignation rate of 2.9%
Qatar Airways Nears Boeing 777 Fleet-Wide Starlink Upgrade
United receives FAA approval for first Starlink-equipped planes
50 New Routes Launching In April 2025
Qantas launches mammoth Asia flight sale including Bali and Japan
United Airlines reduces frequency on Australian routes amid capacity concerns
Research
Webp txr36ytg6uuvd13i8xrjnuempd4m
Gary Leff Chief Financial Officer | View from the Wing

Fifteen months ago, United Airlines announced significant growth plans for routes to Australia and New Zealand, becoming the largest airline serving Australia and surpassing Qantas. However, as noted by aviation watchdog JonNYC, the airline is now scaling back its operations.

".. IAH-SYD reduced from 7x to 3x weekly in November and December," tweeted JonNYC (@xJonNYC) on July 26, 2024.

United's current route network to Australia includes flights from Los Angeles and San Francisco to Sydney, Melbourne, and Brisbane, as well as from Houston to Sydney. The seasonal second flight between San Francisco and Sydney will operate only for two months at three days a week instead of daily. Additionally, a smaller aircraft will be used for the San Francisco to Melbourne route, and there will be fewer flights from Los Angeles to Melbourne leading into peak season. Houston to Sydney will also see reduced frequencies.

Get the Newsletter
Sign-up to receive weekly round up of news from Sky Industry News
By submitting, you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service. By providing your phone number you are opting in and consenting to receive recurring SMS/MMS messages, including automated texts, to that number from our short code. Msg & data rates may apply. Reply HELP for help, STOP to end. SMS opt-in will not be sold, rented, or shared.

United benefits from domestic feed provided by Virgin Australia, which controls about one-third of Australia's domestic flying compared to Qantas' two-thirds share. Historically, the Australian market has been strong for U.S. airlines during winter but weaker in summer; however, post-Covid trends have shown strong summer demand as well.

Despite this demand, there has been an overcapacity issue—particularly to Brisbane—which invested heavily in subsidizing new services from United, American Airlines, and Delta Air Lines. As these subsidies expire, further cuts are anticipated.

The Chicago-based carrier remains larger than its rivals in terms of service to Australia but is opting for smaller planes or less frequent flights on several routes. This strategy aims to reduce available seats while hoping to fill remaining aircraft at higher fares.

Interestingly, United has not made reasonable award seats available on underperforming routes, especially in premium cabins. Securing a premium cabin award seat to Australia remains challenging.

American Airlines previously released reasonably-priced redemption seats if passengers avoided non-stop flights or booked shortly after travel dates were loaded into their schedule; however, this practice has ceased. Delta rarely offers reasonably-priced long-haul redemptions. Similarly, Air Canada's flights to Australia are costly and Qantas primarily releases premium cabin saver inventory only to its own members rather than partner frequent flyer programs.

The difficulty in obtaining discounted premium seats suggests that flights might be performing well despite insufficient demand sustaining all operations—a potential indication of revenue management issues rather than just scheduling problems.

Organizations Included in this History
More News

Star Alliance has been named the World's Best Airline Alliance at the 2025 Skytrax Awards.

Jul 12, 2025

SAS and Air France have applied for a codeshare network covering ten U.S. destinations, including New York's JFK and Los Angeles' LAX.

Jul 12, 2025

Aviation analytics firm Cirium has released its June 2025 On-Time Performance (OTP) report, which analyzes global punctuality trends among airlines and airports.

Jul 12, 2025

United Airlines is set to resume flights to Tel Aviv Ben Gurion Airport on July 21, 2025.

Jul 12, 2025

Seattle-Tacoma International Airport experienced significant growth in 2024, surpassing pre-pandemic passenger numbers.

Jul 12, 2025

Emirates' fleet currently includes 253 widebody aircraft, with the addition of eight Airbus A350-900s.

Jul 12, 2025