Travel

Why Flights Might Get Cheaper After a Busy Summer 

In the US — and in some cases, beyond — there’s reason to believe that prices will let up as soon as the fall.

A passenger at Schiphol Airport in Amsterdam.

Photographer: Simon Wohlfahrt/Bloomberg

It might seem as if getting back to the days of cheap or reasonably priced flights — beyond, say, a serendipitous airline pricing blunder — is a thing of the past. But recently, aviation insiders have shown optimism that relief is on the way, with predictions that fares will soften as pent-up demand lets up and airlines continue to expand capacity and improve staffing.

Prices have already fallen 12% since hitting a peak in May 2022, says Scott Keyes, chief executive officer of the airfare deals subscription service Going, formerly known as Scott’s Cheap Flights, noting that the spike last spring was caused in part by the convergence of overwhelming “revenge travel” demand and an acute pilot shortage. The April 20 state of the industry report by trade association Airlines for America shows that airfares dropped 8.7% in the first quarter of 2023 from the 2019 first quarter. “For airfare the rest of the year, it’s going to be largely lower than it was last spring and summer,” says Keyes.