The War Between American and United Continues to Escalate


It’s been awhile since we’ve had a good, old-fashioned, knock-down war between two airlines, but sure enough it seems that we are in the early stages of that very thing between American and United. This is centered around a fight over Chicago, but it has already spilled over. Nobody seems interested in blinking.

In theory, these airlines have always been at war, but in recent years United has been surging ahead while American has been busy chasing its own tail. Case-in-point, Chicago. The airline use and lease agreement at O’Hare detailed how gate allocations would work. Someone at United figured out that if it started to rapidly grow capacity, it could get a whole bunch of gates and American would lose. That’s exactly what happened.

Last year, American slowly started ramping up flying at O’Hare, but then when it realized what was happening, it stepped on the gas. HARD. I don’t need to rehash this since it’s something I wrote about only a couple weeks ago. It’s what has happened since then that has made it worth revisiting.

In short, American keeps growing, United threatens angrily, and American keeps growing again. United CEO Scott Kirby was asked about this on the airline’s recent Q4 earnings call. Here’s a snippet:

As we enter 2026, there’s another wave of growth coming from [American]. Mostly that’s going to wind up exactly the same as it did last year, with one difference. In 2025, American added gates. That means we watched it. We could have responded. We chose not to. They’re going to win 3 gates back at our expense when the analysis comes out later this year. We knew that was going to happen. We figured we’d just let it settle into a new normal and that would all be fine.

But in 2026, we’re drawing a line in the sand. We are not going to allow them to win a single gate at our expense in 2026. We’re not trying to win gates, but we’re going to add as many flights as are required to make sure that we keep our gate count the same in Chicago. Look, we’re just going to stay focused. We’ve had the right strategy at the whole network for a decade. We’re going to keep doing it. It’s a winning strategy. It’s working. We’re going to keep doing that in Chicago.

Ok, so, shot across the bow. I guess. United hasn’t exactly been letting up as it is, but this is somewhat disingenuous. American is gaining those gates in the next go-around because it’s based on last year’s flying, three-quarters of which was before United gained all those new gates anyway. The natural expectation here is that United will, in fact, gain back gates in 2027, because it has those extra six gates operating for most of 2026. But this is semantics. The point is, United is mad that American isn’t doing what United thinks is rational. So United is going to make sure that it becomes even less rational for American to make those moves.

Giddyup.

So what does American do? It just keeps adding. We already saw it pull forward its summer schedule into February, not because demand is strong but rather so it can keep those gates. Now, right around when Scott Kirby uttered his proclamation, American added a trio of new routes.

Allentown/Bethlehem and Columbia (SC) will run 2x daily Embraer 170s starting May 21. Kahului will fly 1x daily on a B787-8 during the winter season.

United has flown Kahului for years with up to 1x daily during peak winter/spring break and then down to 1x weekly for the rest of the year. Outside of United hub Washington/Dulles and the obviously unserved Dallas/Love, Kahului is American’s largest unserved domestic market from O’Hare.

As for Allentown, American actually was flying until it left in 2023, but United recently shut the ABE – Newark bus route and has upped Chicago to 3x daily. And in Columbia, American had that through the holidays ending in Jan 2025, but now it’s coming back. I can’t imagine these are particularly lucrative flights or American never would have left, but they are the first and third largest unserved markets (by American) that can be served by regional aircraft. This feels pretty straightforward if American is just going to keep going down the list.

But enough about Chicago. What’s different now is that the war seems to have spilled over into another hub for both airlines, Los Angeles. LAX, of course, isn’t dominated by any airline. American made a play to grow it, but it abandoned the Pacific hub during the pandemic and cut back. United has been like a yo-yo in LA over the years, but now it wants to grow again.

It was something of a surprise when United added a bunch of summer-only routes like Portland (ME) to LAX, but it’s not a terribly expensive bet to make. If it works, great. Then United has a way to use those airplanes on an off-peak Saturday. But it also added three new LAX routes year-round with Columbus (OH), Kansas City, and Pittsburgh joining the network.

Of those routes, American flies 1x daily to both Columbus and Pittsburgh. Neither of these are American hubs, but Pittsburgh can be considered more of a stronghold from the old US Airways hub days. But still, this doesn’t seem like the kind of filing that would gain anyone’s attention. Or so I thought.

American is apparently pretty upset about this, so it will lose a bunch of money flying from LAX to both Cleveland and Washington/Dulles, both United hubs. Dulles is one of the larger unserved markets from LAX, but Cleveland isn’t even close. This is not a demand-based move.

I’m honestly not sure what American hopes to gain with these routes. They aren’t going to do well, but it certainly sends a warning shot over at United that LAX is now on the table in this war. And American has decided LAX is a market it should defend as its own.

A lot of what we’ve seen lately doesn’t seem like the smart thing to do financially. But when emotion gets involved, well, watch out. It could mean some great deals this summer.

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Brett Avatar

17 responses to “The War Between American and United Continues to Escalate”

  1. William Avatar
    William

    No need to wait for the summer. I got a great fare on AA to ORD in February.

  2. Mike Avatar
    Mike

    What makes this more fun is there isnt an issue on God’s green earth that Scott Kirby doesn’t enjoy going off on more than American Airlines operational decisions. Grab the popcorn

  3. Tim Dunn Avatar
    Tim Dunn

    2026 was supposed to be an uptick year for the big 4 carriers as LCC and ULCC capacity is reigned it but AA and UA will waste all of those gains fighting each other.

    and the winner in all of this is DL and to a lesser extent WN.

    AA and UA are committed to spending years on end bloodying each other which just makes it that much easier for everyone else to grow and improve performance in markets where AA and UA don’t directly compete.

    1. Angry Bob Crandall Avatar
      Angry Bob Crandall

      Delta is losing premium flyers like myself. The level of service has decreased due to retirements; many newer FAs are glued to their phones rather than serve, their pricing is much higher compared to UA an AA and we are tired of playing Ed’s stupid MQD games. Last year we moved our corporate flying away from DL and now many of us are flying more UA,AA and even Spirit metal.

      1. Mike Avatar
        Mike

        I couldnt imagine a thing I could possibly care less about when choosing an airline than “is a flight attendant using their phone instead of waiting on me hand and foot constantly”

        1. Angry Bob Crandall Avatar
          Angry Bob Crandall

          I never said “hand and foot “. It’s the optics. Delta was known for superior service and it has slipped so why pay more for a ticket when they’re now the same as AA and UA.

        2. Kevin Avatar
          Kevin

          Fair; but it speaks to a broader issue; DL has positioned itself both as a premium carrier and a lifestyle brand. When reality doesn’t match expectations that’s an issue. In aviation, brand loyalty isn’t nearly as sticky as it was even a few years ago. If one’s needs aren’t being met (and I’m thinking of things like IFE, schedule, and service recovery), it’s very easy to just move a couple of counters down.

          A huge portion of DL’s workforce is new. The learning curve is real, and not something you can paper over with “culture” or a proprietary font.

      2. See_Bee Avatar
        See_Bee

        I agree with Mike. It’s a nice touch when an FA is attentive, but the priorities of most people tend to be safe, clean, on time with bags. DL does that better than almost anyone else

        Ed can make the “MQD game” more challenging because he has more demand than supply. He’s prioritizing people that pay cash for the premium product because he doesn’t want to play games either…

        1. Tim Dunn Avatar
          Tim Dunn

          All of the ins and outs of what passengers want or how well airlines do falls at the feet of how well each airline does financially.

          DL just reported net earnings 50% better than UA for 2025; UA is the closest US airline to challenging DL.

          Regardless of what UA execs say, these types of competitive battles are costly to both sides. AA and UA’s earnings for 2026 will be harmed because of the Chicago and now LA shootout and the harm will continue until one side or the other backs off.

          Everyone else not involved in the shootout benefits as AA and UA’s finances are weakened relative to other carriers, esp. DL and WN.

  4. Eric R Avatar
    Eric R

    It will be interesting to see the routes / frequencies AA adds to LAX once their terminal renovations are complete.

    I’m sure they will be tempted to add LAX-Asia routes to compete with UA for US-Asia traffic even though AA’s last attempt was a poor financial decision.

    1. PlanetAvgeek Avatar
      PlanetAvgeek

      AA flew the wrong planes, in the wrong configurations, to the wrong markets, at wrong schedules

      That’s why they failed. AA does have the potential to profitably fly TPAC from LAX, they just handled it wrong last time

  5. SandyCreek Avatar
    SandyCreek

    Will AA look to grow its long-haul footprint from ORD? They are obviously not required for the purpose of the gate war, but I wonder how much connecting traffic AA is missing out with a single year-round long-haul international destination out of ORD, and if there are any lower-hanging fruits that AA can catch for ‘27.

  6. BRMM Avatar
    BRMM

    Would appreciate hearing more about why LAX-IAD is guaranteed to lose money (not challenging the point, just interested). At one point, AA flew that route up to 3x/daily. While it was 737s in the later years of the route, before that, it was 757s and 767s. I guess they left it because it was losing money, but it seems like at least at one point it made money.

    1. PlanetAvgeek Avatar
      PlanetAvgeek

      I think it’s safe to say that all the high yield traffic will either stick to the DCA flights, or stick to UA who have a far superior schedule at IAD. All AA could be left with is low yield traffic.

  7. Mark Avatar
    Mark

    On the earnings call, Kirby said another ORD schedule increase is just around the corner.

    Apart from UA, who is receiving 120 mainline planes this year, where are AA and DL finding planes for expansion. AA in particular, but even DL has been shrinking in NYC while UA grows there (year over year, so not related to the EWR spring issues). Is that so that DL can build up AUS against WN and SEA against AS?

    1. flyer49er Avatar

      AS cut back LAX & SFO why brother to get into a dog fight with AA or UA, lets try to build out SAN, like PDX & especially SEA. Delta may try SEA, however Mark what you lower 48 airline Econ 101 majors don’t understand, Alaska Airlines controls the flying in the State of Alaska. State Government sends all state citizens a big yearly bonus check, (no income state tax) so Alaskan’s fly every winter to Hawaii or Mexico or both, also lets fly to Seattle for a concert, play, shopping, first class restaurants, or a sports game for the weekend once a month (largest Seahawks fan club is Anchorage, duh). Sure DL can waste money on SEA but it won’t even dent AS bottom line.

  8. Emil D Avatar
    Emil D

    Cranky, with UA getting 19 new gates in Concourse D won’t the 5 gates that UA took over this month be returned to AA?

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