Several Airlines Cancel Change Fees for Domestic Tickets

Delta Air Lines, American Airlines, and Alaska Airlines have all joined rival United Airlines in ditching onerous change fees for U.S. flights.

As with United, Delta and American’s policies eliminate the $200 change fee on domestic tickets, except for the airlines’ basic economy tickets, no-frills fares with a pile of restrictions including no changes or cancellations. But change fees are waived on even those tickets on both airlines through the end of the year due to its more flexible COVID-19 travel policies.

“We’ve said before that we need to approach flexibility differently than this industry has in the past, and today’s announcement builds on that promise to ensure we’re offering industry-leading flexibility, space, and care to our customers,” Delta CEO Ed Bastian said in a statement. “We want our customers to book and travel with peace of mind, knowing that we’ll continue evaluating our policies to maintain the high standard of flexibility they expect.”


Before the coronavirus pandemic, Bastian and other Delta executives were dropping hints that the airline was going to change its change policy.

Southwest has never charged a change fee.

American Chief Revenue Officer Vasu Raja said the elimination of change fees, along with the new option to stand by for free for another flight on the day of your flight, is designed to help travelers in a changing travel environment.

“American is offering more flexibility and ease than ever before, should travel plans change,” he said in a statement.

Unlike United, American is eliminating change fees on some international flights, including flights to Canada, Mexico, and the Caribbean.

American also said travelers who change a flight will receive a credit for any fare difference if the new flight is less expensive than the original. Under United’s policy, travelers forfeit any fare difference if the new flight is cheaper.   has not spelled out its terms on this front.

On Tuesday, Alaska Airlines followed suit, and, like American, also dropped its change fees on international flights. (The Seattle-based carrier flies to Canada, Mexico, and Costa Rica.)  The new policy applies to all tickets except Saver fares, Alaska’s version of basic economy.

Until Tuesday, Alaska charged $125 to change a reservation, except for guests traveling on refundable tickets and Mileage Plan top elite status members.

“COVID has taught us that flexibility in travel is key,” said Andrew Harrison, executive vice president and chief commercial officer for Alaska Airlines. “As we evolve our approach to travel to include more than 100 safety actions, it’s important to give our guests flexibility when they book by eliminating change fees.”

At the same time, Alaska announced it’s extending its flexible travel policy on all new ticket purchases – including Saver fares – through Dec. 31.

Delta, American, and United will be leaving a lot of money on the table when travel rebounds. Delta collected  $830.2 million in change fees in 2019, more than any U.S. carrier, followed by American at $818.7 million and United at $625 million, according to the Bureau of Transportation Statistics. The industry’s total take was $2.8 billion.

Airlines regularly match each others’ fares and fees in the ultra-competitive industry. When United raised change fees by $50, to $200, in 2013, its major competitors matched within weeks.

Airline analyst Joseph DeNardi of investment firm Stifel said in a report Monday that he expected United’s rivals to match for competitive reasons.

“On a scale of competitive actions with 1 being benign and 10 being nuclear, we view United’s announcement as somewhere north of a 5 given that it’s likely to result in escalation,” he said.

DeNardi said he thinks one of United’s motives in being the first airline to eliminate the $200 fee was to put pressure on financially weaker American Airlines.