Delta’s Operation Ain’t What It Used to Be


We’ve already talked about American’s operational issues, but today I’m looking at you, Delta. American hasn’t been a star performer for ages, but Delta? Delta has been the king for years. That crown appears to have some tarnish on it these days.

You may have heard about the Delta pilots setting up a website to help travelers deal with disruption. This is nothing but a negotiating ploy. The contract becomes amendable later this year, and they are just starting to chirp about it. This won’t help negotiations, but it does attract a lot of media coverage which Delta management certainly doesn’t like. The hope is presumably that this will put pressure on Delta to make concessions to get a deal done. It won’t, and the reality is… I don’t care about this at all.

What I do care about is that this effort is coming from somewhere — the union isn’t making this issue up. Delta does have an operational problem. So today I’ll focus on what has been going on.

In a note from COO Dan Janki in May, the airline indicated it was happy with its on-time performance, but “we need to improve controllable cancels and IROP recovery.” I’m not sure I agree. Oh sure, it does have a problem with cancellations and irregular operations, but on-time performance has suffered as well. While there are several issues that have led to this decline, one of the hot button topics is centered around pilot availability.

A letter from Ryan Gumm, SVP Flight Operations from April, explained that trips that needed coverage saw acceptance rates plummet from 37 percent to two percent. To me, this sounds like an effort to blame labor, so I spoke with Delta’s pilots union chair Eric Criswell to get his side. Eric said they don’t have access to the dataset that Delta referred to in that latter, but he wanted to point out that the number of trips made available has jumped significantly in the last year. You would expect acceptance rates to drop in a bigger pool. From the union’s perspective, staffing is a primary concern in this whole mess.

In 2025, they say pilot demand hours increased 4.2 percent versus last year, but the actual number of pilots employed at the airline fell. Thanks to that, they also said that pilots are working on their days off at a higher rate than in the past. In a recent Chairman’s Letter from the union, it said “the Company is now hiring aggressively to address their self-imposed staffing shortfall.” The airline certainly doesn’t dispute that. It is hiring as we speak, so clearly some pilot modeling went wrong last year.

Regardless of the reason for these issues, Delta is not living up to the carefully-constructed brand image as an operational rock star over the last couple decades. Though as mentioned this isn’t just about cancellations and IROPS, let’s start with those cancellations first. As usual, I turned to Anuvu for the data.

This is where Delta used to excel the most. It almost never canceled flights back in its heyday, but now it is doing that far more often. Instead of looking at aggregate numbers, I thought it more help to compare to the industry.

Delta Completion Factor vs Industry By Month

Data via Anuvu, Industry includes AA/AS/B6/DL/HA/UA/WN

Remember, a good standard is to try to complete 99 percent of flights or better, so if Delta is consistently up by 1 to 2 points on the industry as it was for years? That’s a huge difference. But it has slipped, and this year it has been downright worse than the industry overall in more than one month. Outside of April, it has not been above 99 percent in any single this year.

We’ve talked about why that might be happening, but what about on-time percentage? I don’t like what I see there either. Delta doesn’t seem concerned in its communications, but maybe it shouldn’t be…

Delta A14 % By Month

Data via Anuvu, Industry includes AA/AS/B6/DL/HA/UA/WN

Delta was performing better than industry even until the end of 2024 with just a little hiccup thanks to the Crowdstrike failure at the end of July that year. But then, A14 has continued to trail off. It has rebounded after a pretty bad winter, but it is still below where it has been historically.

One of the big issues here seems to be block time. Delta was known for padding block times to improve performance, and there’s nothing wrong with that as a strategy. It certainly bought the airline massive goodwill. But that seems to have changed, and it just hasn’t given itself the block time it needs to run an on-time airline. Let’s take a look.

Delta B0 % By Month

Data via Anuvu, Industry includes AA/AS/B6/DL/HA/UA/WN

As a reminder, B0 is the percentage of time that a flight operates within the allotted block time. It can run 5 hours late, but if the airline files a schedule that shows gate pushback to gate arrival is 74 minutes and the flight operates in 74 minutes or less? That counts as meeting block time.

In the chart above, you can see a marked fall-off in 2024. Delta must have lowered its block times to try to improve utilization and lower costs, and the result has been performance degradation. It has in some recent months performed worse than the industry overall.

So what is Delta doing? We’ve already talked about pilot hiring which will help bolster the reserves that are needed to cover trips, but the airline is also bulking up in crew scheduling and customer-facing agents so it can better help when things go wrong. It has also been having issues with what it calls “fleet health, so it is working with the maintenance organization to try to fix some of those gaps. There are other moves it can make around the edges as well.

What isn’t clear to me is where Delta wants to be. Is it hoping to get back to the more expensive but more reliable operation it had? Or is it ok being a little lower down the list if it saves the airline some money? Now that Delta has built a brand on operational excellence, it probably has a more complicated decision than others might.

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Brett Avatar

13 responses to “Delta’s Operation Ain’t What It Used to Be”

  1. 1990 Avatar
    1990

    *TD meltdown in 3, 2, 1…*

    (For real, hope they can sort this out, fast, because it’s no bueno. Reliability matters. Wish we had an EU-261-equivalent, so affected passengers would be compensated for the operational failures. Good incentive to ‘fix’ it, too.)

    1. Angry Bob Crandall Avatar
      Angry Bob Crandall

      This ought to be good! I have the popcorn popped and my drink poured. Can’t wait for the “Baghdad Bob” of Delta to start his PR blitz!

  2. Simon Avatar
    Simon

    I think your last paragraph is the key point. Somewhere in Delta there will be an internal standard for these metrics which will be one of: be the outright best; be in the top quartile; beat the median. (Other, lower, targets are available but I have discounted them.) From your data, I sense it has likely switched from the first to the last of these in the past couple of years and would guess it is tracking things like Net Promoter Scores to see whether it can get away with it.

  3. Southside Emil Avatar
    Southside Emil

    It’s more than what has been written. Many of the newer FA’s don’t provide the level of service and friendliness that the more experienced FA’s provide (except for many dragons on their trans-Atlantic routes). ATL service is bad. Food quality reduced. And so on and so on. My company and I moved last year away from the “Delta service”. Getting to our destinations just as quickly but without spending a fortune.

    I blame this on Ed’s shenanigan’s a few years back.

  4. Kevin Avatar
    Kevin

    A lot of what we’re seeing are second order effects of decisions made during COVID. The rush to cut as many people as possible might’ve made sense at the time (hindsight’s 20/20), but it has had massive ramifications across every department. The airline’s focus on being a lifestyle brand instead of a transportation company hasn’t helped, either. Original fonts and cachet are great until you can’t get where you need to go when you want to. Lastly, the IT is ancient. I’m mindful the fix isn’t cheap, but neither is an operation left vulnerable.

    1. NYC Former DAL Fan Avatar
      NYC Former DAL Fan

      They should have been looking at SWA’s IT crap and taken notes. No excuses.

      1. Tim Dunn Avatar
        Tim Dunn

        It should be noted that Southwest is now generating the lowest cancelation rates among the Big Four but it also has a much smaller presence in the Northeast, at least north of Baltimore. Southwest’s on Time percentages are at the lower end of the Big 4 so they are trading lower cancelations for poorer on time

  5. Chet the Old Eastern Airlines Mechanic Avatar
    Chet the Old Eastern Airlines Mechanic

    Delta places decals on the exterior of its aircraft near the boarding doors to celebrate major corporate awards and customer satisfaction milestones. These visual “badges of honor” typically display logos from organizations like J.D. Power or Fortune that recognize the airline for service excellence. Now that their service hassles gone down the toilet are they going to do the honorable thing and replace those stickers with “We are #5” or “Our Service Sucks”?

  6. Tom Gold Avatar
    Tom Gold

    I have experienced significant disruption recently on Delta flights based on lack of crew availability, in one case due to weather the day before, and in another due to crew time outs. In one instance this resulted in an overnight stay on a bench at LGA, and in another (where the pilots were there but flight attendants were not and the equipment was ferried to my destination of BOS) resulting in a 12 hour delay at CVG. Not to get too much into the weeds, but when I complained to Delta they said these delays were weather related. Well, maybe initially. But, gosh, weather is a known factor in airline operations, isn’t it? There has to be some plan (other than extreme inconvenience to passengers) to recover from it. For my 12 hours in CVG, they offered me a pathetic $50 flight coupon. Sometimes there is no real choice out of BOS but to fly DL. However, given their performance and their price gouging on captive routes I think Delta avoidance is a good life goal.

  7. NedsKid Avatar
    NedsKid

    This is always the problem when a company believes its own hubris and goes aggressive with using things like on time performance to denigrate competitors…. because then this happens.

    I have to agree with Spirit’s strategy during its operational turnaround under Bob Fornaro. They didn’t want to be the best – that’s very expensive to pull off doing things like having a lower pay to block (meaning more crews underutilized in case they are needed for IROP) or padding block time. Their goal was to be middle of the pack. You don’t want to be last as that gets you lots of free media attention in a bad way. Being square in the middle is affordable and sustainable.

    Delta lost a lot of good operational and service people during Covid buy-outs and retirement incentives. Delta corporate is a much different place than it was a decade ago. You have dispatchers who can’t get to work on time because there is nowhere to park since the Delta Museum is rented out for some mayoral victory celebration. Corp comm wants to clear the name/background of anybody allowed in to take a tour and often will ask a guarantee of a positive social media post as the ticket to entry. You can look up Delta corp folks on Instagram and see endless reels of playing pickleball during work or the whole office shutting down to have a 1 year anniversary party for an employee complete with catering or popcorn day in the customer relations department or whatever. Delta has turn into an airline run for social media.

  8. Tim Dunn Avatar
    Tim Dunn

    This topic has received a lot of industry press but it really has not been a significant story outside of aviation blogging.

    first, the DOT measures domestic on time and cancelation rates among other metrics. And they only measure domestic flights so that is the only data that matters. The DOT measures mainline and regional carrier statistics but They do not accept that one is more important than the other or that it is OK to cancel regional jet services in order to keep mainline operating which is what some carriers do.

    Second, All of these metrics only matter within the context of the competition. No company invests in its product at a significantly greater rate then what is competitively necessary. There was undoubtedly a period where Delta ran an excessively reliable operation and it really wasn’t necessary competitively.

    Third, Delta is still the most on time US airline other than Hawaiian and Alaska has inherited that ranking now that they have merged statistics. Delta was number two in on time for 2025 and is through May of the this year.

    Delta’s operational issue has been about completion factor and it has almost entirely been related to Delta’s pilot staffing formula. You can tell from the statistics above that Delta pilots were dropping their bid lines and then picked up flights at premium pay at a much faster rate than the growth of the airline. With the very lucrative post covid pilot contract, Delta was counting on a certain amount of premium paying to cover flying especially during peak periods and IROPS but that amount of premium pay far exceeded their expectations and budget.

    Delta has put in place strategies to limit the ability of some pilots to Drop their bid trips and pick up premium flying. Their expectation is that pilot labor expense will fall which will allow them to hire more pilots and to have rates of premium pay that are in line with AA, UA and WN.

    DL said that returning to a leadership position in completion rate performance would take until later this year but they are already seeing improvements in their completion rate. And let’s be clear that the difference competitively amounts to about 1 percent compared to the best competitors

    1. Angry Bob Crandall Avatar
      Angry Bob Crandall

      Tim,
      Delta’s service has gone way down. Its planes are no longer the cleanest, their in-air service has been reduced to many of its competitors, and in some cases below them, etc, etc. Delta lost a lot of loyal customers, including me because instead of focusing on me and my needs, they drank their own hype and expected all of us to follow.

  9. George from Long Island Avatar
    George from Long Island

    I used to work for TWA and Delta is no TWA!

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