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Icelandair ends Detroit service after record-breaking year for US passenger traffic

Icelandair ends Detroit service after record-breaking year for US passenger traffic
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Webp ice
Bogi Nils Bogason, CEO and President | Icelandair

Icelandair has announced it will end its service to Detroit in January 2026, marking the airline's first withdrawal from a US airport since 2020. The decision comes as Icelandair continues to adjust its network in response to shifting market conditions and competition.

The United States remains Icelandair’s largest market from its Keflavik hub. According to data from the US Department of Transportation, nearly 1.55 million passengers traveled with Icelandair between the US and Iceland in 2024, making it the carrier’s best year on record for this market. The airline filled 83.60% of available seats that year.

Despite these strong numbers, Icelandair has gradually reduced its presence at several US airports over the years. Since 1990, it has ended passenger flights to ten different US cities, including Anchorage, Cleveland, Dallas/Fort Worth, Fort Lauderdale, Kansas City, Philadelphia, Sanford (for Orlando), San Francisco, Tampa, and now Detroit.

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The period between 2017 and 2019 saw significant growth for Icelandair’s US operations due in part to increased competition from WOW Air. During this time, both airlines rapidly expanded their networks before WOW Air ceased operations. In 2018 alone, Icelandair served 18 US airports while WOW Air reached 15 destinations.

Competition also played a role in other markets such as Dallas/Fort Worth. In May 2018, WOW Air launched flights there with an Airbus A330-300; Icelandair followed later that month with Boeing 757-200 service. American Airlines joined soon after with daily flights from its main hub using the same aircraft type. All three carriers eventually exited the route within about a year.

While new destinations like Nashville have been added recently and Miami International Airport is set to join Icelandair’s network in winter 2025/26, some routes have proven unsustainable amid changing demand and industry dynamics.

"PLAY materialized from WOW's ashes. But while WOW took a highly aggressive approach to its network, PLAY intentionally did not. It wanted to implement the lessons. Despite this, its sole remaining US route will end in October."

As for future developments on routes like Detroit-Keflavik—currently also operated by Delta Air Lines—it remains uncertain whether other carriers will continue or discontinue similar services following Icelandair’s exit.

Organizations Included in this History
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