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Spirit Airlines considers postponing or canceling Airbus orders due to trade war

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Spirit Airlines considers postponing or canceling Airbus orders due to trade war
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Spirit Airlines | Official Website

Spirit Airlines is considering postponing or canceling some of its Airbus orders due to the ongoing trade conflict between the United States and the European Union. The airline, which operates an all-Airbus fleet, is particularly vulnerable to tariffs on EU products imposed by the Trump administration.

The low-cost carrier recently emerged from Chapter 11 restructuring, where it had to sell aircraft and defer deliveries to stabilize financially. In its latest 10-Q filing, Spirit Airlines disclosed that new tariffs could significantly increase costs for Airbus aircraft and parts. This financial strain might lead the airline to delay or cancel future deliveries.

In April, the Trump administration announced a 20% tariff on all EU imports, which was temporarily suspended for 90 days starting April 9th. Currently, a universal baseline tariff rate of 10% applies to EU goods imported into the US. If tariffs return to 20% after July 8th, costs for Spirit's order of 92 Airbus A320-family aircraft through 2031 could rise substantially.

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An A320neo has a baseline cost of $110 million; even at a 10% tariff rate, this would add at least $1 billion in costs. Spirit acknowledges in its filing that "the future impact of tariffs is very much subject to change," with uncertainties about the duration and rate of duties imposed by the US government.

"The imposition of tariffs will increase the cost of imported new Airbus aircraft and parts," states Spirit's filing. "We may seek to postpone or cancel delivery of aircraft currently scheduled for delivery."

Spirit Airlines' current fleet consists entirely of A320-family aircraft with an average age of just under six years—the youngest among US airlines. However, due to financial pressures during bankruptcy proceedings in 2024, Spirit revised its projected fleet size down from 219 to 196 by year-end 2025.

Despite emerging from bankruptcy with reduced debt and fresh funding, Spirit continues facing challenges such as selling off part of its existing fleet and deferring direct deliveries from Airbus originally planned for this decade's latter half. Consequently, it offers fewer flights this summer compared to last year.

After reporting significant losses in recent periods—including a $1.2 billion loss in 2024—Spirit remains burdened with $3.3 billion in debt amid an unpredictable travel market affecting even profitable US airlines.

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