Spirit Airlines halted all operations early on May 2, 2026, ending 34 years of service. A fuel cost surge tied to the U.S.-Iran War wiped out the carrier’s path back to profitability.
The final flight landed in Dallas shortly after 1 a.m. EST, with the systemwide shutdown set for 3 a.m. Spirit had filed for Chapter 11 in November 2024 and again in August 2025 before preparing for Chapter 7 liquidation.
Fuel Costs From the Iran War Broke the Math
Jet fuel prices roughly doubled after the Iran conflict escalated in early 2026. Supply disruptions through the Strait of Hormuz drove the spike. Spirit reported the war added $10 million to $15 million a week to its costs.
Fuel typically accounts for between 25% and 33% of airline operating expenses. For an ultra-low-cost carrier built on thin margins, the macro shock left no room to absorb the increase. Pandemic-era debt and grounded Pratt & Whitney aircraft had already weakened the balance sheet.
The $500 Million Bailout That Never Closed
Spirit had been negotiating roughly $500 million in federal aid under the Trump administration. Bondholders balked at terms that would have handed the U.S. government an equity stake. Republican lawmakers also resisted the package.
Talks stalled while the airline burned through cash reserves. Spirit confirmed all flights were cancelled and customer service was offline.
“It is with great disappointment that on May 2, 2026, Spirit Airlines started an orderly wind-down of our operations, effective immediately.”
— Spirit Airlines official statement
Spirit’s exit removes between 1.8% and 3.4% of U.S. domestic capacity. Analysts expect fares on overlapping routes to climb roughly 20% on average.
Up to 17,000 jobs, including contractors, are at risk in the wind-down. JetBlue and Frontier said they would help stranded Spirit passengers with rebookings.
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