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Alaska Airlines plans resumption of 737 MAX 8 flights to New York-JFK in June

Alaska Airlines plans resumption of 737 MAX 8 flights to New York-JFK in June
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Boliviana Airlines | Wikimedia

On March 29, 2025, Alaska Airlines announced plans to resume Boeing 737 MAX 8 flights to New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK) starting in June. This move marks the airline's return to JFK after several months of absence.

The aviation analytics company Cirium, through its Diio Mi airline planning tool, showed that Alaska Airlines scheduled eight weekly 737 MAX 8 flights to JFK in June. The airline will operate a once-weekly service from Seattle-Tacoma International Airport (SEA) and a daily flight from Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport (ANC).

These 737 MAX 8 services from Seattle and Anchorage to New York-JFK will join Alaska Airlines' existing flights operated by 737-900ER and 737 MAX 9 aircraft during the same month. The airline plans three daily 737-900ER flights and six weekly 737 MAX 9 flights from Seattle to NYC, totaling 35 weekly flights from Anchorage and Seattle to JFK.

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Alaska Airlines' 737 MAX 8 aircraft are relatively rare at New York-JFK, predominantly appearing in the months of June through August 2024, October 2024, and December 2024, according to Cirium's data. During October and December, the 737 MAX 8 aircraft exclusively operated flights to New York’s largest airport from the Pacific Northwest.

Beyond New York-JFK, these aircraft will serve various destinations across the United States, including intra-Alaskan routes such as Anchorage to Juneau International Airport, Ketchikan International Airport, King Salmon Airport, and Wiley Post-Will Rogers Memorial Airport.

Alaska Airlines operates five 737 MAX 8 aircraft, a small number compared to its fleet of 74 737 MAX 9 aircraft. Of Alaska Airlines' 9,674 weekly flights in June, the 737 MAX 8 is set to operate 191 flights, representing 1.9% of the airline's total schedule.

Expectations for fleet expansion include plans to have up to 20 737 MAX 8 aircraft by the end of 2026, with nine deliveries scheduled for 2025 and six for 2026, in line with the company’s annual report filed with the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Additionally, Alaska Airlines anticipates eight deliveries of 737 MAX 9 aircraft in 2025.

Boeing has aimed to certify the 737 MAX 10 by the end of the year, although Alaska Airlines does not expect to receive this variant until 2026. The carrier also plans to retire its 737-900 models, completing the transition by moving out the last six of these aircraft from its fleet during the year.

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