Airlines are redesigning travel around their highest-paying passengers
Airlines are redesigning travel around their highest-paying passengers reflects how major U.S. carriers have shifted since COVID-19 toward premium offerings that monetize comfort, convenience, and exclusivity. The article contrasts two travelers on the same route—one using priority security and an invite-only lounge with early boarding, and another navigating multiple queues and boarding late into a cramped middle seat. It says Delta Air Lines, American Airlines, and United Airlines are reconfiguring aircraft to expand premium cabins and investing billions, building businesses around selling first-class, business-class, and premium-economy products. Delta CEO Ed Bastian is quoted saying airlines can’t win by being the cheapest, while United CEO Scott Kirby argues premium upgrades are part of a broader effort benefiting all customers, citing seatback entertainment and mobile app improvements. The premium shift is described as evolving from earlier strategies, including Delta’s early-2010s use of pricing tools to offer first-class seats to some coach buyers willing to pay more.







