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This is why your airline tickets are so expensive right now

Internet searches show sky-high airfares for many routes, yet travelers are opting to stomach the higher costs after being grounded for so long.

A family checks in for their flight to Nashville at Dallas Love Field Airport in Dallas, Texas.
A family checks in for their flight to Nashville at Dallas Love Field Airport in Dallas, Texas.Read moreShafkat Anowar / MCT

Now that the worst of the pandemic seems to be over and people are traveling more freely again, a hot topic is on the tip of everyone’s tongues: expensive plane tickets.

People are looking for flights — sometimes their first in years — in a rush of what’s been termed “revenge travel.” Internet searches show sky-high airfares for many routes, yet travelers are opting to stomach the higher costs after being grounded for so long.

“The demand is off the charts,” Ed Bastian, Delta Air Lines CEO, said at an industry conference earlier this month, noting that fares this summer may be 30% higher than pre-pandemic levels. “It’s coming with leisure, it’s coming with premium customers, it’s coming with business, it’s coming with international. It doesn’t matter what the category is.”

The trend is across geographies, though some places are more squeezed than others. Searches for a return economy-class ticket between Hong Kong and London on Cathay Pacific Airways Ltd. in late June turn up prices as high as $5,360, which is more than five times the typical cost before the pandemic. Direct flights between New York and London at about the same time cost more than $2,000 in economy.

“Ticket prices are really expensive these days,” said Jacqueline Khoo, who works in tourism. Her company paid $3,632 for a colleague’s return trip with Singapore Airlines Ltd. to Hamburg later this month. “It’s really amazing that an economy-seat ticket would cost you so much.”

A Mastercard Economics Institute study found the cost of flying from Singapore was on average 27% higher in April than in 2019, while flights from Australia were 20% more. More travelers are booking tickets months in advance as they’re worried about the cost of buying at the last minute, said David Mann, chief economist for Asia Pacific, Middle East and Africa at the institute.

There are several reasons for the higher fares, not all of which are within the control of airlines.

Carriers are cautious about bringing back all their idled jets, even though most countries have eased cross-border restrictions. That’s particularly true for giant aircraft such as Airbus SE’s A380 super-jumbos and Boeing Co.’s older 747-8s, as airlines turn to more fuel-efficient models such as A350s and 787 Dreamliners. The pinch is most acute in Asia, which was the slowest to ease restrictions, and as China, the biggest market in the region, remains essentially closed.

After navigating varied and changing government policies for the last two years, airlines will need time to rebuild fleets, given that many restrictions eased only in May, said Subhas Menon, director general of the Association of Asia Pacific Airlines. “It’s still early days,” he said. “We’re just in June, so it’s not like turning on the tap.”

Carriers also scaled down their networks during COVID-19, none more so than Cathay, which has been hemmed in by Hong Kong’s onerous travel and quarantine rules. That’s left people considering lengthy journeys with one or more stopovers, whereas before they might have flown direct. British Airways Plc doesn’t even fly to Hong Kong at the moment.

With fewer planes in the skies, there are fewer seats to meet the recovery in demand, which in turn has pushed up fares.

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has exacerbated a steady rise in crude oil prices over the last 18 months. Jet fuel now represents as much as 38% of an average airline’s costs, up from 27% in the years leading to 2019. For some budget airlines, it can be as high as 50%.

Spot jet fuel prices in New York have soared more than 80% this year, though prices vary from region to region depending on refining costs and local taxes. Many U.S. carriers have been able to cover the increased fuel costs so far — but only by passing them along to travelers in the form of higher fares.

Some investors believe airlines may seek to boost fuel surcharges as a way to cope, analysts at Citigroup Inc. said in March. Most of Asia’s airlines don’t hedge jet fuel, which means they are more vulnerable to price increases.

Higher ticket costs don’t seem to be dissuading people from making trips now that many travel restrictions have eased. Some consumers are tapping dormant holiday budgets and upgrading to more expensive aircraft cabins for leisure trips, Willie Walsh, the International Air Transport Association’s director general, said last month.

The so-called revenge traveler is “an individual that has been emotionally affected by the lockdowns and has craved travel over the last two years and they’ve dreamt about it,” said Hermione Joye, sector lead for travel in Asia Pacific at Alphabet Inc.’s Google. “They are very spontaneous.”

Hundreds of thousands of pilots, flight attendants, ground handlers and other aviation workers lost their jobs over the last couple of years. With travel picking up, the industry now finds itself unable to hire fast enough to allow for seamless operations at its pre-pandemic levels.

Singapore’s Changi Airport — regularly voted the world’s best — is looking to recruit more than 6,600 people. Many workers who were let go have found other, less volatile careers, and aren’t willing to come back to a cyclical industry.

In the U.S., smaller regional airlines can’t fly at full capacity because bigger carriers have hired away too many pilots. Hundreds of flights have been canceled in the UK, scrapping holiday plans and leading to long delays and scenes of passengers sleeping at airports. In Europe, major airports have faced delays and cancellations after failing to hire adequate staff. That has disrupted airline schedules and added to costs.

Aviation is a capital-intensive industry with historically wafer-thin margins. COVID-19 has made that operating climate even more challenging: globally, airlines lost more than $200 billion in the three years to 2022.

Elevated fares provide carriers with a path to recover from losses and return to the black.

“We’ve never seen a revenue environment like this, led by domestic leisure,” Robert Isom, CEO of American Airlines Group Inc., the dominant carrier out of Philadelphia International Airport, said at an industry conference earlier this month. “On top of that, we see large corporates coming back in. Small- and medium-sized businesses have been really off the charts for a number of months now.”

It’s unclear how long these high prices will persist, even as many travelers seem willing to pay up.

“The rise in prices is a short-term phenomenon,” estimates Stephen Tracy, chief operating officer at Milieu Insight, a Singapore-based consumer insight and analytics firm. “Let’s all just hope that once these things equalize again, the prices come back down. I am fairly confident that they will.”

In a few cases, fares are actually lower than pre-pandemic levels, according to Michael O’Leary, chief executive officer of Ryanair Holdings Plc. Although there’s a prospect of more fares returning to levels they were at before COVID-19, the war in Ukraine and virus outbreaks are still risks, he said.