ATLANTA, GA — Delta has turned itself into the most profitable airline in the U.S. by leaning hard into premium travelers, loyalty spending and status-driven perks. The result is an airline that many customers now treat less like a utility and more like a luxury brand.
That shift has brought more revenue from first class, business travel and loyalty programs, while coach passengers face higher fees and tighter service. Delta is also testing new technology that could push ticket pricing even further.
Delta’s elite tiers and premium cabins now define the brand
The article describes Delta 360°, an invitation-only tier with unusual benefits that include Porsche airport transfers on some tight connections, private attention from flight attendants and handwritten welcome cards before flights.
Beyond that top tier, Delta One lounges and premium cabins have become part of the airline’s appeal. Frequent fliers interviewed for the piece described going out of their way to use Delta, even for long trips.
SkyMiles and higher baggage fees are steering customers toward spending more
Delta’s SkyMiles program is now valued at more than $31 billion by one consulting ranking, with more than 120 million members estimated and about 5,000 in the 360° tier. The company declined to confirm those figures.
Delta also changed its loyalty formula in 2024 so travelers earn status based on spending, not miles flown. At the same time, it raised fees on some checked bags, including a third checked bag priced at $200, up $50 from the start of the year.
Premium revenue is growing faster than coach as Delta keeps adding first-class seats
Delta reported $14.2 billion in first-quarter revenue and said premium-ticket revenue rose 14 percent, compared with 1 percent growth in the main cabin. The airline has also expanded the share of premium seating on newer aircraft, including 44 first-class seats on its seven newest Airbus A321neos.
Industry executives quoted in the piece said airlines are increasingly designing planes around higher-paying customers, while reducing the appeal of standard economy service. Delta’s approach has become a model others have copied or closely studied.
New AI fare tools raise concerns about personalized ticket prices
Delta told investors it is moving away from fixed ticket prices and toward artificial intelligence from Fetcherr, an Israeli startup, to help set fares based on what a specific passenger may be willing to pay for a given flight and time.
That has drawn concern from critics and several New York Democrats, including Jerry Nadler and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who asked for clarity about the technology. Delta said it remained committed to improving the customer experience.
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