American Airlines

Airline of the United States From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

American Airlines

American Airlines, Inc. is a major airline in the United States headquartered in Fort Worth, Texas, within the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex, and is the largest airline in the world in terms of passengers carried and daily flights.[8] American, along with its regional subsidiaries and contractors operating under the brand name American Eagle, operate an extensive international and domestic network with almost 6,800 flights per day to nearly 350 destinations in 48 countries.[9][10] The airline is also a founding member of the Oneworld alliance, one of the world's three major airline alliances.

Quick Facts IATA, ICAO ...
American Airlines, Inc.
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A Boeing 787-9 of American Airlines
IATA ICAO Call sign
AA[1] AAL[1] AMERICAN[2]
FoundedApril 15, 1926; 99 years ago (1926-04-15)
(as American Airways, Inc.)[3]
Commenced operationsJune 25, 1936; 88 years ago (1936-06-25)
AOC #AALA025A[4]
Hubs
Frequent-flyer programAAdvantage
AllianceOneworld
Fleet size985
Destinations353[5]
Parent companyAmerican Airlines Group
HeadquartersFort Worth, Texas, U.S.[6]
Key people
Revenue US$49.6B (2024)[7]
Operating income US$2.6 billion (2024)[7]
Net income US$.8bn (2024)[7]
Total assets US$61.8bn (2024)[7]
Total equity US$−5.0bn (2024)[7]
Employees103,440 (2024)[7]
Websiteaa.com
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American Airlines and American Eagle operate out of ten hubs, with Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport (DFW) being the largest. The airline serves more than 200 million passengers annually, and averages more than 500,000 daily. As of 2024, the company employs 103,440 staff members.

History

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DC-3 "Flagship" American's chief aircraft type during the World War II period

American Airlines was started in 1930 as a union of more than eighty small airlines.[11] The two organizations from which American Airlines originated were Robertson Aircraft Corporation and Colonial Air Transport. The former was first created in Missouri in 1921, with both being merged in 1929 into holding company The Aviation Corporation. This, in turn, was made in 1930 into an operating company and rebranded as American Airways. In 1934, when new laws and attrition of mail contracts forced many airlines to reorganize, the corporation redid its routes into a connected system and was renamed American Airlines. The airline fully developed its international business between 1970 and 2000. It purchased Trans World Airlines in 2001.[12]

American had a direct role in the development of the Douglas DC-3, which resulted from a marathon telephone call from American Airlines CEO C. R. Smith to Douglas Aircraft Company founder Donald Wills Douglas Sr., when Smith persuaded a reluctant Douglas to design a sleeper aircraft based on the DC-2 to replace American's Curtiss Condor II biplanes. (The existing DC-2's cabin was 66 inches (1.7 m) wide, too narrow for side-by-side berths.) Douglas agreed to proceed with development only after Smith informed him of American Airline's intention to purchase 20 aircraft. The prototype DST (Douglas Sleeper Transport) first flew on December 17, 1935, the 32nd anniversary of the Wright Brothers' flight at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina. Its cabin was 92 in (2.3 m) wide, and a version with 21 seats instead of the 14–16 sleeping berths of the DST was given the designation DC-3. There was no prototype DC-3; the first DC-3 built followed seven DSTs off the production line and was delivered to American Airlines.[13] American Airlines inaugurated passenger service on June 26, 1936, with simultaneous flights from Newark, New Jersey, and Chicago, Illinois.[14]

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Passengers exiting plane at the El Paso Airport in 1957

American also had a direct role in the development of the DC-10, which resulted from a specification from American Airlines to manufacturers in 1966 to offer a widebody aircraft that was smaller than the Boeing 747, but capable of flying similar long-range routes from airports with shorter runways. McDonnell Douglas responded with the DC-10 trijet shortly after the two companies' merger.[15] On February 19, 1968, the president of American Airlines, George A. Spater, and James S. McDonnell of McDonnell Douglas announced American's intention to acquire the DC-10. American Airlines ordered 25 DC-10s in its first order.[16][17] The DC-10 made its first flight on August 29, 1970,[18] and received its type certificate from the FAA on July 29, 1971.[19] On August 5, 1971, the DC-10 entered commercial service with American Airlines on a round-trip flight between Los Angeles and Chicago.[20]

In 2011, due to a downturn in the airline industry, American Airlines' parent company, the AMR Corporation, filed for bankruptcy protection. In 2013, American Airlines merged with US Airways but kept the American Airlines name, as it was the better-recognized brand internationally; the combination of the two airlines resulted in the creation of the largest airline in the United States, and ultimately the world.[21]

In December 2023, the company was added to the Dow Jones Sustainability World Index.[22]

Network

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Destinations

As of September 2024, American Airlines flies (or has flown) to the following destinations:

More information Country or Territory, City ...
Country or Territory City Airport Notes Refs
American SamoaPago PagoPago Pago International AirportTerminated
Antigua and BarbudaSt. John'sV. C. Bird International Airport
ArgentinaBuenos AiresMinistro Pistarini International Airport
CórdobaIngeniero Aeronáutico Ambrosio L.V. Taravella International AirportTerminated[23]
ArubaOranjestadQueen Beatrix International Airport
AustraliaBrisbaneBrisbane AirportSeasonal[24][25]
SydneySydney Airport[26]
BahamasNassauLynden Pindling International Airport
FreeportFreeport International Airport
BarbadosBridgetownGrantley Adams International Airport
BelgiumBrusselsBrussels AirportTerminated[27]
BelizeBelize CityPhilip S. W. Goldson International Airport
BermudaHamiltonL.F. Wade International Airport
BoliviaLa PazEl Alto International AirportTerminated[28]
Santa Cruz de la SierraViru Viru International AirportTerminated[29]
BonaireKralendijkFlamingo International Airport[30]
BrazilBelo HorizonteTancredo Neves International AirportTerminated
BrasíliaBrasília International AirportTerminated[31]
CampinasViracopos International AirportTerminated
CuritibaAfonso Pena International AirportTerminated[32]
FortalezaPinto Martins International AirportTerminated
ManausEduardo Gomes International AirportTerminated[33]
Porto AlegreSalgado Filho International AirportTerminated[34]
RecifeRecife/Guararapes–Gilberto Freyre International AirportTerminated[35]
Rio de JaneiroRio de Janeiro/Galeão International Airport
Salvador da BahiaDeputado Luís Eduardo Magalhães International AirportTerminated[35]
São PauloSão Paulo/Guarulhos International Airport
CanadaCalgaryCalgary International Airport
MontrealMontréal–Trudeau International Airport
TorontoToronto Pearson International Airport
VancouverVancouver International Airport
Cayman IslandsGeorge TownOwen Roberts International Airport
ChileSantiagoArturo Merino Benítez International Airport
ChinaBeijingBeijing Capital International AirportTerminated
Beijing Daxing International AirportSuspended[36]
ShanghaiShanghai Pudong International Airport[37]
ColombiaBarranquillaErnesto Cortissoz International Airport
BogotáEl Dorado International Airport
CaliAlfonso Bonilla Aragón International Airport
CartagenaRafael Núñez International Airport
MedellínJosé María Córdova International Airport
PereiraMatecaña International Airport
San AndresGustavo Rojas Pinilla International Airport
Costa RicaLiberiaGuanacaste Airport
San JoséJuan Santamaría International Airport
CroatiaDubrovnikDubrovnik AirportTerminated[31]
CubaCamagüeyIgnacio Agramonte International Airport[38][39]
HavanaJosé Martí International Airport[40][41]
HolguínFrank País Airport[38][42][39]
Santa ClaraAbel Santamaría Airport[38][42][39]
Santiago de CubaAntonio Maceo Airport[43][42][39]
VaraderoJuan Gualberto Gómez Airport[38][42][39]
CuraçaoWillemstadCuraçao International Airport
Czech RepublicPragueVáclav Havel Airport PragueTerminated[44][45]
DenmarkCopenhagenCopenhagen Airport[46][47]
Dominican RepublicLa RomanaLa Romana International AirportTerminated
Puerto PlataGregorio Luperón International Airport
Punta CanaPunta Cana International Airport
Santiago de los CaballerosCibao International Airport
Santo DomingoLas Américas International Airport
EcuadorGuayaquilJosé Joaquín de Olmedo International Airport
QuitoMariscal Sucre International Airport
El SalvadorSan SalvadorEl Salvador International Airport
FinlandHelsinkiHelsinki AirportTerminated
FranceParisCharles de Gaulle Airport
Orly AirportTerminated
NiceCôte d'Azur Airport[46][47]
GermanyBerlinBerlin Tegel AirportAirport Closed
DüsseldorfDüsseldorf AirportTerminated[27]
FrankfurtFrankfurt Airport
MunichMunich Airport
GreeceAthensAthens International AirportSeasonal
GrenadaSt. George'sMaurice Bishop International Airport
GuadeloupePointe-à-PitrePointe-à-Pitre International AirportTerminated
GuatemalaGuatemala CityLa Aurora International Airport
GuyanaGeorgetownCheddi Jagan International Airport[48]
HaitiCap-HaïtienHugo Chávez International AirportTerminated[49][50]
Port-au-PrinceToussaint Louverture International Airport (Suspended)
HondurasRoatánJuan Manuel Gálvez International Airport[51]
San Pedro SulaLa Mesa International Airport
TegucigalpaComayagua International Airport
Hong KongHong KongHong Kong International AirportTerminated[37][52]
HungaryBudapestBudapest Ferenc Liszt International AirportTerminated[31]
IcelandReykjavíkKeflavík International AirportTerminated[53][45]
IndiaDelhiIndira Gandhi International Airport[54][55]
Indonesia Jakarta Soekarno–Hatta International Airport Seasonal
IrelandDublinDublin Airport[56]
ShannonShannon AirportTerminated[56]
IsraelTel AvivDavid Ben Gurion International AirportSuspended[57]
ItalyBolognaBologna Guglielmo Marconi AirportTerminated[58]
MilanMilan Malpensa Airport[37]
NaplesNaples International Airport[46][47]
RomeRome Fiumicino Airport
VeniceVenice Marco Polo AirportSeasonal[56][47]
JamaicaKingstonNorman Manley International Airport
Montego BaySangster International Airport
JapanNagoyaChubu Centrair International AirportTerminated[59]
Komaki AirportTerminated
OsakaKansai International AirportTerminated
TokyoHaneda Airport[60]
Narita International Airport
MartiniqueFort-de-FranceMartinique Aimé Césaire International AirportTerminated
MexicoCancúnCancún International Airport
CozumelCozumel International Airport
GuadalajaraGuadalajara International Airport
Mexico CityMexico City International Airport
MoreliaGeneral Francisco Mujica International Airport
LeónBajío International Airport
OaxacaOaxaca International Airport
PueblaPuebla International AirportTerminated
Puerto VallartaLicenciado Gustavo Díaz Ordaz International Airport
San José del CaboLos Cabos International Airport
ZihuatanejoIxtapa-Zihuatanejo International Airport
NetherlandsAmsterdamAmsterdam Airport Schiphol
New ZealandAucklandAuckland Airport
ChristchurchChristchurch AirportTerminated
NicaraguaManaguaAugusto C. Sandino International Airport
PanamaPanama CityTocumen International Airport
ParaguayAsunciónSilvio Pettirossi International AirportTerminated
PeruLimaJorge Chávez International Airport
CuzcoAlejandro Velasco Astete International AirportTerminated
PortugalLisbonLisbon AirportSeasonal
QatarDohaHamad International Airport[61]
RussiaMoscowDomodedovo International AirportTerminated[62]
Saint Kitts and NevisBasseterreRobert L. Bradshaw International Airport
Saint LuciaVieux FortHewanorra International Airport
Saint Vincent and the GrenadinesKingstownArgyle International Airport[63]
Sint MaartenPhilipsburgPrincess Juliana International Airport
South KoreaSeoulIncheon International Airport[64]
SpainBarcelonaJosep Tarradellas Barcelona–El Prat Airport[47]
MadridAdolfo Suárez Madrid–Barajas Airport
SurinameParamariboJohan Adolf Pengel International AirportTerminated[65][66]
SwedenStockholmStockholm Arlanda AirportTerminated
SwitzerlandZürichZurich Airport
Trinidad and TobagoPort of SpainPiarco International Airport
Turks and Caicos IslandsProvidencialesProvidenciales International Airport
South CaicosNorman B. Saunders Sr. International Airport
United KingdomBirminghamBirmingham AirportTerminated[27]
EdinburghEdinburgh AirportResumes May 23, 2025
GlasgowGlasgow AirportTerminated[67]
LondonGatwick AirportTerminated
Heathrow Airport
Stansted AirportTerminated
ManchesterManchester AirportTerminated[45]
United States (Alabama)BirminghamBirmingham–Shuttlesworth International Airport
HuntsvilleHuntsville International Airport
MobileMobile Regional Airport
MontgomeryMontgomery Regional Airport
United States (Alaska)AnchorageTed Stevens Anchorage International AirportSeasonal
FairbanksFairbanks International AirportTerminated[68]
United States (Arizona)PhoenixPhoenix Sky Harbor International AirportHub
TucsonTucson International Airport
YumaYuma International Airport
United States (Arkansas)BentonvilleNorthwest Arkansas Regional Airport
United States (California)BurbankHollywood Burbank Airport
FresnoFresno Yosemite International Airport
Los AngelesLos Angeles International AirportHub
OaklandOakland International AirportTerminated[69]
OntarioOntario International Airport
Palm SpringsPalm Springs International Airport
SacramentoSacramento International Airport
San DiegoSan Diego International Airport
San FranciscoSan Francisco International Airport
San JoseSan Jose Mineta International Airport
Santa AnaJohn Wayne Airport
Santa BarbaraSanta Barbara Municipal Airport
United States (Colorado)Colorado SpringsColorado Springs Airport
DenverDenver International Airport
Stapleton International AirportAirport Closed
Eagle/VailEagle County Regional Airport
Hayden/Steamboat SpringsYampa Valley AirportSeasonal
MontroseMontrose Regional Airport
United States (Connecticut)HartfordBradley International Airport
United States (District of Columbia)Washington, D.C.Dulles International Airport
Ronald Reagan Washington National AirportHub
United States (Florida)Fort LauderdaleFort Lauderdale–Hollywood International Airport
Fort MyersSouthwest Florida International Airport
JacksonvilleJacksonville International Airport
MiamiMiami International AirportHub
OrlandoOrlando International Airport
SarasotaSarasota–Bradenton International Airport
PensacolaPensacola International Airport
TampaTampa International Airport
West Palm BeachPalm Beach International Airport
United States (Georgia)AtlantaHartsfield–Jackson Atlanta International Airport
United States (Hawaii)HonoluluDaniel K. Inouye International Airport
KahuluiKahului Airport
Kailua-KonaKona International Airport
LihueLihue Airport
United States (Idaho)BoiseBoise Airport
United States (Illinois)ChicagoO'Hare International AirportHub
United States (Indiana)IndianapolisIndianapolis International Airport
United States (Iowa)Des MoinesDes Moines International Airport
United States (Kansas)WichitaWichita Dwight D. Eisenhower National Airport
United States (Kentucky)LouisvilleLouisville Muhammad Ali International Airport
United States (Louisiana)Baton RougeBaton Rouge Metropolitan Airport
New OrleansLouis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport
United States (Maine)PortlandPortland International Jetport
United States (Maryland)BaltimoreBaltimore/Washington International Airport
United States (Massachusetts)BostonLogan International Airport
WorcesterWorcester Regional Airport
United States (Michigan)DetroitDetroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport
United States (Minnesota)MinneapolisMinneapolis−Saint Paul International Airport
United States (Mississippi)JacksonJackson–Medgar Wiley Evers International Airport
GulfportGulfport–Biloxi International Airport
United States (Missouri)Kansas CityKansas City International Airport
St. LouisSt. Louis Lambert International Airport
United States (Montana)BozemanBozeman Yellowstone International Airport
MissoulaMissoula International Airport
United States (Nebraska)OmahaEppley Airfield
United States (Nevada)Las VegasHarry Reid International Airport
RenoReno–Tahoe International Airport
United States (New Hampshire)ManchesterManchester-Boston Regional Airport
United States (New Jersey)NewarkNewark Liberty International Airport
United States (New Mexico)AlbuquerqueAlbuquerque International Sunport
Santa FeSanta Fe Municipal Airport
United States (New York)AlbanyAlbany International Airport
BuffaloBuffalo Niagara International Airport
New York CityJohn F. Kennedy International AirportHub
LaGuardia AirportHub
RochesterGreater Rochester International Airport
SyracuseSyracuse Hancock International Airport
WatertownWatertown International Airport
United States (North Carolina)CharlotteCharlotte Douglas International AirportHub
GreensboroPiedmont Triad International Airport
RaleighRaleigh–Durham International Airport
WilmingtonWilmington International Airport
United States (North Dakota)BismarckBismarck Municipal Airport
FargoHector International Airport
United States (Ohio)AkronAkron–Canton Airport
Cincinnati/CovingtonCincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport
ClevelandCleveland Hopkins International Airport
ColumbusJohn Glenn Columbus International Airport
DaytonDayton International Airport
ToledoToledo Express Airport
United States (Oklahoma)Oklahoma CityWill Rogers World Airport
TulsaTulsa International Airport
United States (Oregon)PortlandPortland International Airport
RedmondRedmond Municipal Airport
United States (Pennsylvania)HarrisburgHarrisburg International Airport
PhiladelphiaPhiladelphia International AirportHub
Wyoming ValleyWilkes-Barre/Scranton International Airport
PittsburghPittsburgh International Airport
United States (Puerto Rico)AguadillaRafael Hernández AirportTerminated[70]
PonceMercedita AirportTerminated[70]
San JuanLuis Muñoz Marín International Airport
United States (Rhode Island)ProvidenceRhode Island T. F. Green International Airport
United States (South Carolina)CharlestonCharleston International Airport
United States (Tennessee)KnoxvilleMcGhee Tyson Airport
MemphisMemphis International Airport
NashvilleNashville International Airport
United States (Texas)AustinAustin–Bergstrom International Airport
DallasDallas Fort Worth International AirportHub
El PasoEl Paso International Airport
HoustonGeorge Bush Intercontinental Airport
McAllenMcAllen Miller International Airport
San AntonioSan Antonio International Airport
United States (U.S. Virgin Islands)Saint CroixHenry E. Rohlsen Airport
Saint ThomasCyril E. King Airport
United States (Utah)Salt Lake CitySalt Lake City International Airport
United States (Virginia)NorfolkNorfolk International Airport
RichmondRichmond International Airport
United States (Washington)SeattleSeattle–Tacoma International Airport
SpokaneSpokane International Airport
United States (Wisconsin)MilwaukeeMilwaukee Mitchell International Airport
United States (Wyoming)JacksonJackson Hole Airport
UruguayMontevideoCarrasco International AirportSeasonal[71]
VenezuelaCaracasSimón Bolívar International AirportTerminated[72][73]
MaracaiboLa Chinita International AirportTerminated[73]
ValenciaArturo Michelena International AirportTerminated[citation needed]
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Hubs

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American operates its largest hub at Dallas Fort Worth International Airport.

American currently operates ten hubs.[74]

  • Charlotte: American's hub for the southeastern United States and secondary Caribbean gateway.
  • Chicago–O'Hare: American's hub for the Midwest.
  • Dallas/Fort Worth: American's hub for the southern United States and largest hub overall.
  • Los Angeles: American's hub for the West Coast and secondary transpacific gateway.
  • Miami: American's primary Latin American and Caribbean hub.
  • New York–JFK: American's secondary transatlantic hub mainly serves destinations with high demand from local New York traffic.
  • New York–LaGuardia: American's New York hub for domestic flights with a few exceptions.
  • Philadelphia: American's primary transatlantic hub.
  • Phoenix–Sky Harbor: American's southwestern hub.
  • Washington–National: American's hub for the capital of the United States.

Interline agreements

American Airlines have interline agreements with the following airlines:

Alliance and codeshare agreements

American Airlines is a member of the Oneworld alliance and have codeshares with the following airlines:[75]

Joint ventures

American Airlines has established three joint ventures with fellow Oneworld alliance members, expanding beyond basic codesharing to include coordinated route planning, scheduling, and revenue sharing on jointly operated routes.[77] The Atlantic Joint Business covers transatlantic flights with Aer Lingus, British Airways, Finnair and Iberia.[78][79] The Pacific Joint Business encompasses transpacific flights with Japan Airlines.[80] A joint venture with Qantas covers routes between the United States, Australia, and New Zealand.[81][82]

Fleet

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American Airbus A320 family aircraft at Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport

As of April 2025, American Airlines operates 988 mainline aircraft, making it the second largest commercial airline fleet in the world.[83][84][85] The fleet consists of Airbus and Boeing narrow-body aircraft, and Boeing wide-body aircraft. American exclusively ordered Boeing aircraft throughout the 2000s until July 20, 2011, when American announced the largest combined aircraft order in history for 260 Airbus A320 family and 200 Boeing 737 aircraft.[86] As of March 2024, American has 338 Airbus and Boeing aircraft on order along with 20 orders and 40 options for Boom Overture supersonic aircraft.[87][88] The average age of the American mainline fleet is 13.8 years as of December 31, 2024.[89]

As of 2024, American Airlines has four maintenance bases: Tulsa International Airport, Pittsburgh International Airport, Dallas Fort Worth International Airport, and Charlotte Douglas International Airport.[90]

Cabins

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Flagship First
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Flagship First on an Airbus A321

Flagship First is American's international and transcontinental first class product. It is offered only on Boeing 777-300ERs and select Airbus A321s, which American designates "A321T". The seats are fully lie-flat and offer direct aisle access with only one on each side of the aisle in each row.[91] As with the airline's other premium cabins, Flagship First offers wider food and beverage options, larger seats, and lounge access at certain airports.[92] American offers domestic Flagship First service on transcontinental routes between New York–JFK and Los Angeles, New York–JFK and San Francisco, New York-JFK and Santa Ana, Boston and Los Angeles, and Miami and Los Angeles, as well as on the standard domestic route between New York-JFK and Boston.[93] The airline will debut new Flagship Suite premium seats and a revamped aircraft interior for its long-haul fleet with fresh deliveries of its Airbus A321XLR and Boeing 787-9 aircraft, beginning in 2024.[94]

Flagship Business
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Flagship Business on an Airbus A321

Flagship Business is American's international and transcontinental business class product. It is offered on all Boeing 777-200ERs, Boeing 777-300ERs, Boeing 787-8s, and Boeing 787-9s, as well as select Airbus A321s. All Flagship Business seats are fully lie-flat.[95] The amenities in Flagship Business include complimentary alcoholic/non-alcoholic beverages, multi-course meals, and lounge access.

First and Business
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First/Business on a Boeing 737 MAX 8

First class is the highest class of service on domestically configured aircraft. When such aircraft are used on international services this cabin is branded as business class. Seats range from 19–21 inches (48–53 cm) in width and have 37–42 inches (94–107 cm) of pitch.[95] Dining options include complimentary alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages on all flights as well as standard economy snack offerings, enhanced snack basket selections on flights over 500 miles (800 km), and meals on flights 900 miles (1,400 km) or longer.[96]

Premium Economy

Premium Economy is American's economy plus product. It is offered on all widebody aircraft. The cabin debuted on the airline's Boeing 787-9s in late 2016[97] and is also available on Boeing 777-200s and -300s, and Boeing 787-8s. Premium Economy seats are wider than seats in the main cabin (American's economy cabin) and provide more amenities: Premium Economy customers get two free checked bags, priority boarding, and enhanced food and drink service, including free alcohol. This product made American Airlines the first U.S. carrier to offer a four-cabin aircraft.[95]

Main Cabin
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Main Cabin on an Airbus A321neo

Main Cabin (economy class) is American's economy product found on all mainline and regional aircraft in its fleet. Seats range from 17–18.5 inches (43–47 cm) in width and have 30–32 inches (76–81 cm) of pitch. American markets several rows within the main cabin immediately behind Main Cabin Extra as "Main Cabin Preferred", which requires an extra charge to select for those without status.[95]

Main Cabin Extra

Main Cabin Extra seats are located in the front few rows and exit rows of the economy cabin on all aircraft and have additional pitch, complimentary alcoholic beverages and boarding one group ahead of the main cabin.[98] It is available on all of the mainline fleet and American Eagle aircraft.[95]

Basic Economy

American also offers Basic Economy, the airline's lowest main cabin fare on many routes. Basic Economy consists of a Main Cabin ticket with numerous restrictions, including waiting until check-in for a seat assignment, no upgrades or refunds, and boarding in the last group.[99] Originally Basic Economy passengers could only carry a personal item. Later, American revised their Basic Economy policies to allow for a carry-on bag.[100]

In May 2017, American announced it would add more seats to some of its Boeing 737 MAX 8 jets and reduce overall legroom in the basic economy class. The last three rows were to lose 2 inches (5.1 cm), going from the current 31 to 29 inches (79 to 74 cm). The remainder of the main cabin was to have 30 inches (76 cm) of legroom. This "Project Oasis" seating configuration has since been expanded to all 737 MAX 8s as well as standard Boeing 737-800 and non-transcontinental Airbus A321 jets. New Airbus A321neo jets have been delivered with the same configuration. This configuration has been considered unpopular with passengers, especially American's frequent flyers, as the new seats have less padding, less legroom, and no seatback entertainment.[101][102]

Reward programs

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AAdvantage

AAdvantage is the frequent flyer program for American Airlines. It was launched on May 1, 1981, and remains the largest frequent flyer program, with over 115 million members as of 2021.[103] Miles accumulated in the program allow members to redeem tickets, upgrade service class, or obtain free or discounted car rentals, hotel stays, merchandise, or other products and services through partners. The most active members, based on the accumulation of Loyalty Points with American Airlines, are designated AAdvantage Gold, AAdvantage Platinum, AAdvantage Platinum Pro, and AAdvantage Executive Platinum elite members, with privileges such as separate check-in, priority upgrade, and standby processing, or free upgrades. AAdvantage status corresponds with Oneworld status levels allowing elites to receive reciprocal benefits from American's Oneworld partner airlines.[104][better source needed]

AAdvantage co-branded credit cards are also available and offer other benefits. The cards are issued by CitiCards, a subsidiary of Citigroup, Barclaycard, and Bilt card in the United States,[105] by several banks including Butterfield Bank and Scotiabank in the Caribbean,[106][107] and by Banco Santander in Brazil.[108] In December 2024, it was announced that American would be cutting ties with Barclays and would instead be rolling members into its partnership with Citigroup starting in 2026.[109]

AAdvantage allows one-way redemption, starting at 7,500 miles.[110]

Admirals Club

The Admirals Club was conceived by AA president C.R. Smith as a marketing promotion shortly after he was made an honorary Texas Ranger. Inspired by the Kentucky colonels and other honorary title designations, Smith decided to make particularly valued passengers "admirals" of the "Flagship fleet" (AA called its aircraft "Flagships" at the time).[111][better source needed] The list of admirals included many celebrities, politicians, and other VIPs, as well as more "ordinary" customers who had been particularly loyal to the airline.[citation needed]

There was no physical Admirals Club until shortly after the opening of LaGuardia Airport. During the airport's construction, New York Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia had an upper-level lounge for press conferences and business meetings. At one such press conference, he noted that the entire terminal was being offered for lease to airline tenants; after a reporter asked whether the lounge would be leased as well, LaGuardia replied that it would, and a vice president of AA immediately offered to lease the premises. The airline then procured a liquor license and began operating the lounge as the "Admirals Club" in 1939.[112]

The second Admirals Club opened at Washington National Airport. Because it was illegal to sell alcohol in Virginia at the time, the club contained refrigerators for the use of its members so they could store their liquor at the airport.[113] For many years, membership in the Admirals Club (and most other airline lounges) was by the airline's invitation. After a passenger sued for discrimination,[114] the club switched to a paid membership program in 1974.[115][116]

Flagship Lounge

Though affiliated with the Admirals Club and staffed by many of the same employees, the Flagship Lounge is a separate lounge designed explicitly for customers flying in first class and business class on international flights and transcontinental domestic flights.[117]

Corporate affairs

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The key trends for American Airlines are (as of the financial year ending 31 December):[118]

More information Net income (US$ m), Number ofemployees (FTE, k) ...
Net income
(US$ m)[a]
Number of
employees
(FTE, k)[b]
Passenger
enplanements
(m)[a]
Passenger
load factor
(%)[a]
Fleet size[b] References
2015 7,610 99 201 83.0 946 [119]
2016 2,676 101 198 81.7 930 [120]
2017 1,919 103 194 81.9 948 [121]
2018 1,412 102 203 82.0 956 [122]
2019 1,686 104 215 84.6 942 [123]
2020 −8,885 78 95 64.1 855 [124]
2021 −1,993 97 165 75.3 865 [125]
2022 127 102 199 82.9 925 [126]
2023 822 103 210 83.5 965 [127]
2024 846 103 226 84.9 977 [128]
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Ownership and structure

American Airlines, Inc., is publicly traded through its parent company, American Airlines Group Inc., under NASDAQ: AAL Nasdaq: AAL, with a market capitalization of about $11 billion as of 2024, and is included in the S&P 500 index.[47]

American Eagle is a network of six regional carriers that operate under a codeshare and service agreement with American, operating flights to destinations in the United States, Canada, the Caribbean, and Mexico. Three of these carriers are independent, and three are subsidiaries of American Airlines Group: Envoy Air Inc., Piedmont Airlines, Inc., and PSA Airlines Inc.[47]

Headquarters

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Image of the signs of the former headquarters

American Airlines is headquartered across several buildings in Fort Worth, Texas that it calls the "Robert L. Crandall Campus" in honor of former president and CEO Robert Crandall. The 1,700,000-square-foot (160,000 m2), five-building office complex called was designed by Pelli Clarke Pelli Architects.[129] The campus is located on 300 acres, adjacent to Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport, American's fortress hub.[130]

Before it was headquartered in Texas, American Airlines was headquartered at 633 Third Avenue in the Murray Hill area of Midtown Manhattan, New York City.[131][132] In 1979, American moved its headquarters to a site at Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport, which affected up to 1,300 jobs. Mayor of New York City Ed Koch described the move as a "betrayal" of New York City.[133] American moved to two leased office buildings in Grand Prairie, Texas.[134] On January 17, 1983, the airline finished moving into a $150 million ($474,000,000 when adjusted for inflation), 550,000-square-foot (51,000 m2) facility in Fort Worth; $147 million (about $464,000,000 when adjusted for inflation) in Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport bonds financed the headquarters. The airline began leasing the facility from the airport, which owns the facility.[134] Following the merger of US Airways and American Airlines, the new company consolidated its corporate headquarters in Fort Worth, abandoning the US Airways headquarters in Phoenix, AZ.

As of 2015, American Airlines is the corporation with the most significant presence in Fort Worth.[135]

In 2015, American announced it would build a new headquarters in Fort Worth. Groundbreaking began in the spring of 2016, and occupancy was completed in September 2019.[136] The airline plans to house 5,000 new workers in the building.[135]

It will be located on a 41-acre (17 ha) property adjacent to the airline's flight academy and conference and training center, west of Texas State Highway 360, 2 miles (3.2 km)[136] west from the current headquarters. The airline will lease 300 acres (120 ha) from Dallas–Fort Worth International Airport, and this area will include the headquarters.[135] Construction of the new headquarters began after the demolition of the Sabre facility, previously on the site.[136]

The airline considered developing a new headquarters in Irving, Texas, on the old Texas Stadium site, before deciding to keep the headquarters in Fort Worth.[135]

Corporate identity

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American Airlines' fourth logo, used until 2013

In 1931, an American employee, Goodrich Murphy designed the AA logo as an entry in a logo contest. The eagle in the logo was copied from a Scottish hotel brochure.[137] The logo was redesigned by Massimo Vignelli in 1967.[138][139] Thirty years later, in 1997, American Airlines was able to make its logo Internet-compatible by buying the domain AA.com. AA is also American's two-letter IATA airline designator.[140]

On January 17, 2013, American launched a new rebranding and marketing campaign with FutureBrand dubbed "A New American". This included a new logo, which includes elements of the 1967 logo.[141]

American Airlines faced difficulty obtaining copyright registration for their 2013 logo. On June 3, 2016, American Airlines sought to register it with the United States Copyright Office,[142] but in October of that year, the Copyright Office ruled that the logo was ineligible for copyright protection, as it did not pass the threshold of originality, and was thus in the public domain.[142] American requested that the Copyright Office reconsider. Still, on January 8, 2018, the Copyright Office affirmed its initial determination.[142][143] After American Airlines submitted additional materials, the Copyright Office reversed its decision on December 7, 2018, and ruled that the logo contained enough creativity to merit copyright protection.[144]

Aircraft livery

American's early liveries varied widely, but a standard livery was adopted in the 1930s, featuring an eagle painted on the fuselage.[145] The eagle became a symbol of the company and inspired the name of American Eagle Airlines. Propeller aircraft featured an international orange lightning bolt running down the length of the fuselage, which was replaced by a simpler orange stripe with the introduction of jets.[146]

In the late 1960s, American commissioned designer Massimo Vignelli to develop a new livery. The original design called for a red, white, and blue stripe on the fuselage and a simple "AA" logo, without an eagle, on the tail; instead, Vignelli created a highly stylized eagle, which remained the company's logo until January 16, 2013.[147]

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American's previous livery on an MD-83 at O'Hare International Airport in May 2012

On January 17, 2013, American unveiled a new livery.[148] Before then, American had been the only major U.S. airline to leave most of its aircraft surfaces unpainted. This was because C. R. Smith would not say he liked painted aircraft and refused to use any liveries that involved painting the entire plane. Robert "Bob" Crandall later justified the distinctive natural metal finish by noting that less paint reduced the aircraft's weight, thus saving fuel costs.[149]

In January 2013, American launched a new rebranding and marketing campaign dubbed "The New American." In addition to a new logo, American Airlines introduced a new livery for its fleet. The airline calls the new livery and branding "a clean and modern update".[150] The current design features an abstract American flag on the tail, along with a silver-painted fuselage, as a throw-back to the old livery. The new design was painted by Leading Edge Aviation Services in California.[151] Doug Parker, the incoming CEO, indicated that the new livery could be short-lived, stating that "[the] only reason this is an issue now is that they just did it right in the middle [of the merger], which kind of makes it confusing, so that allows us, actually, to decide if we are going to do something different because we have so many airplanes to paint".[152] The current logo and livery have had mixed criticism, with Design Shack editor Joshua Johnson writing that they "boldly and proudly communicate the concepts of American pride and freedom wrapped into a shape that instantly makes you think about an airplane",[153] and AskThePilot.com author Patrick Smith describing the logo as a linoleum knife poking through a shower curtain'.[154] Later in January 2013, Bloomberg asked the designer of the 1968 American Airlines logo (Massimo Vignelli) on his opinion over the rebranding.[155]

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Boeing 737-800 in the current livery at Boston Logan International Airport in June 2013

In the end, American let their employees decide the new livery's fate. On an internal website for employees, American posted two options, one the new livery and one a modified version of the old livery. All of the American Airlines Group employees (including US Airways and other affiliates) were able to vote.[156] American ultimately decided to keep the new look. Parker announced that American would keep a US Airways and America West heritage aircraft in the fleet, with plans to add a heritage TWA aircraft and a heritage American plane with the old livery.[157] As of September 2019, American has heritage aircraft for Piedmont, PSA, America West, US Airways, Reno Air, TWA, and AirCal in their fleet.[158] They also have two AA branded heritage 737-800 aircraft, an AstroJet N905NN,[159] and the polished aluminum livery used from 1967 to 2013, N921NN.[160]

Customer Service

American, both before and after the merger with US Airways, has consistently performed poorly in rankings. The Wall Street Journal's annual airline rankings have ranked American as the worst or second-worst U.S. carrier for ten of the past twelve years, and in the bottom three of U.S. Airlines for at least the past twelve years. The airline has persistently performed poorly in the areas of losing checked luggage and bumping passengers due to oversold flights.[161]

Worker relations

The main representatives of key groups of employees are:

Subsidiary companies

Sky Chefs

In 1942, American Airlines established Sky Chefs, a wholly-owned subsidiary, as a catering company to serve their fleet.[169] In 1986, Sky Chefs was sold to Toronto-based Onex Capital Corporation for $170 million.[169][170] Sky Chefs became a subsidiary of Onex Food Services Inc.[171][citation needed] Since 2001, it has been fully owned by the LSG Group.[172][173]

Flagship Hotels / Americana Hotels

In the late-1960s, American Airlines established the Flagship Hotels chain as a subsidiary of Sky Chefs. On July 21, 1972, American Airlines leased four hotels from the Loews Corporation, three of them branded as Americana Hotels, for a period of thirty years. American merged the hotels with their Flagship Hotels, and rebranded the entire chain as Americana Hotels.[174] In 1980, American Airlines sold Americana Hotels to Bass Brothers Enterprises of Fort Worth, Texas.[175]

Concerns and conflicts

Summarize
Perspective

Environmental violations

Between October 1993 to July 1998, American Airlines was repeatedly cited for using high-sulfur fuel in motor vehicles at 10 major airports around the country, a violation of the Clean Air Act.[176]

Lifetime AAirpass

In 1981, as a means of creating revenue in a period of loss-making, American Airlines offered a lifetime pass of unlimited travel for the initial cost of $250,000.[177][178] This entitled the pass holder to fly anywhere in the world. Twenty-eight were sold. However, after some time, the airline realized they were making losses on the tickets, with the ticketholders costing them up to $1 million each. Ticketholders were booking large numbers of flights with some ticketholders flying interstate for lunch or flying to London multiple times a month. AA raised the cost of the lifetime pass to $3 million, and then finally stopped offering it in 2003. AA then used litigation to cancel two of the lifetime offers, saying the passes "had been terminated due to fraudulent activity".[179]

Cabin fume events

  • In 1988, on American Airlines Flight 132's approach into Nashville, flight attendants notified the cockpit that there was smoke in the cabin. The flight crew in the cockpit ignored the warning, as on a prior flight, a fume event had occurred due to a problem with the auxiliary power unit. However, the smoke on Flight 132 was caused by improperly packaged hazardous materials. According to the NTSB inquiry, the cockpit crew persistently refused to acknowledge that there was a serious threat to the aircraft or the passengers, even after they were told that the floor was becoming soft and passengers had to be reseated. As a result, the aircraft was not evacuated immediately on landing, exposing the crew and passengers to the threat of smoke and fire longer than necessary.[180][181]
  • On April 11, 2007, toxic smoke and oil fumes leaked into the aircraft cabin as American Airlines Flight 843 taxied to the gate. A flight attendant who was present in the cabin subsequently filed a lawsuit against Boeing, stating that she was diagnosed with neurotoxic disorder due to her exposure to the fumes, which caused her to experience memory loss, tremors, and severe headaches. She settled with the company in 2011.[182]
  • In 2009, Mike Holland, deputy chairman for radiation and environmental issues at the Allied Pilots Association and an American Airlines pilot, said that the pilot union had started alerting pilots of the danger of contaminated bleed air, including contacting crew members that the union thinks were exposed to contamination based on maintenance records and pilot logs.[183]
  • In a January 2017 incident on American Airlines Flight 1896, seven flight attendants were hospitalized after a strange odor was detected in the cabin. The Airbus A330 involved subsequently underwent a "thorough maintenance inspection", having been involved in three fume events in three months.[184][185]
  • In August 2018, American Airlines flight attendants picketed in front of the Fort Worth company headquarters over a change in sick day policy, complaining that exposure to ill passengers, toxic uniforms, toxic cabin air, radiation exposure, and other issues were causing them to be sick.[186][187]
  • In January 2019, two pilots and three flight attendants on Flight 1897 from Philadelphia to Fort Lauderdale were hospitalized following complaints of a strange odor.[188][189]

Discrimination complaints

On October 24, 2017, the NAACP issued a travel advisory for American Airlines urging African Americans to "exercise caution" when traveling with the airline. The NAACP issued the advisory after four incidents. In one incident, a black woman was moved from first class to coach while her white traveling companion was allowed to remain in first class. In another incident, a black man was forced to give up his seats after being confronted by two unruly white passengers.[190] According to the NAACP, while they did receive complaints on other airlines, most of their complaints in the year before their advisory were on American Airlines.[191] In July 2018, the NAACP lifted their travel advisory saying that American has made improvements to mitigate discrimination and unsafe treatment of African Americans.[192]

Accidents and incidents

As of January 2025, American Airlines has had almost 60 aircraft hull losses, beginning with the crash of a Ford 5-AT-C Trimotor in August 1931.[193][194] Of the hull losses, most were propeller-driven aircraft, including three Lockheed L-188 Electra aircraft (of which one, the crash in 1959 of Flight 320, resulted in fatalities).[194] The two accidents with the highest fatalities in both the airline's and U.S. aviation history were Flight 191 in 1979 and Flight 587 in 2001.[195]

Out of the 17 hijackings of American Airlines flights, two aircraft were hijacked and destroyed in the September 11 attacks: Flight 11 crashed into the North Tower of the World Trade Center and Flight 77 crashed into the Pentagon.[196] Flight 11, which is responsible for an estimated 1,700 deaths, is the deadliest air crash in the history of aviation.

Two training flight accidents have occurred in which the crew was killed and six that resulted in no fatalities.[194] Another four jet aircraft have been written off due to incidents while they were parked between flights or while undergoing maintenance.[194]

Carbon footprint

American Airlines reported total CO2e emissions (direct and indirect) for the twelve months ending December 31, 2020, at 20,092 Kt (-21,347 /-51.5% y-o-y).[197] The company aims to achieve net zero carbon emissions by 2050.[198] In November 2023, American Airlines purchased the first carbon credit contract (for 10,000 metric tons of CO2 sequestered at $100 per ton) from Graphyte, a carbon removal startup company invested in by Breakthrough Energy that compresses sawdust, tree bark, rice hulls, plant stalks, and other agricultural waste into biomass bricks wrapped in a polymer barrier to prevent decomposition that are stored underground.[199][200]

More information Dec 2016, Dec 2017 ...
American Airline's annual total CO2e emissions - Location-based scope 1 + scope 2 (in kilotonnes)
Dec 2016Dec 2017Dec 2018Dec 2019Dec 2020
39,254[201]39,388[202]40,604[203]41,439[204]20,092[197]
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Emissions and Reporting

American Airlines emitted roughly between 40,000,000-45,000,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalents (MTCDE) annually between 2014-2019.[205] In 2020, emissions declined to 20,000,000 MTCDE as a result of travel restrictions during the Covid-19 Pandemic[206], and have since increased back up to 40,000,000 MTCDE in 2023.[205] According to Bloomberg terminal data, American Airlines receives an overall Environmental Social Governance (ESG) score of 5.82, which is ranked as a “leading” score compared to competitors in the industry.[205]

Bloomberg calculates ESG scores on a scale of 1 to 10 by compiling publicly available environmental, social, and governance data such as greenhouse gas emissions, energy consumption, water usage, human rights practices, employee diversity, and board composition.[207][208] American Airlines is not in compliance with the Task Force on Nature-Related Financial Disclosures (TNFD) due to the lack of information published by the Airline relating to pollution and waste.[209] TNFD is a reporting framework that provides guidance for effective environmental reporting.

Climate Change Implications

Climate change is affecting the company’s operations through extreme weather events that interrupt flight patterns. Extreme heat causes air density to decrease which makes it harder for planes to take off, causing the airline to burn more fuel, and therefore affecting both profits and the planet.[210] High temperatures can also affect the weight limit, reducing the maximum revenue generated by each flight.[210] A Colombia University study estimates that 30% of the flights departing during the hottest times of the day will not be able to carry their weight capacity by 2050.[210]

See also

Notes and references

Further reading

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