U.S. Complaints Against Airlines Soar As On-time Arrivals Fall

U.S. Complaints Against Airlines Soar As On-time Arrivals Fall

U.S. consumers lodged more than quadruple the number of complaints against U.S. airlines in April compared with pre-pandemic levels as on-time arrivals fell, according to a report seen by Reuters.

The U.S. Department of Transportation (USDOT) plans to announce later on Thursday that it received 5,079 complaints about airline service in April, up more than 320% over the 1,205 complaints received in April 2019.

USDOT said 32% of complaints concerned refunds and 31% involved flights problems.

In April 2022, major carriers posted an on-time arrival rate of 76%, down from 77.2% in March and below the 79.8% rate in April 2019, the report said.


Airlines operated 566,893 flights in April, about 87% of the number flown in the same month in 2019. The 10 largest carriers canceled 2.3% of domestic flights in April, down slightly from the 2.4% of flights canceled in April 2019, USDOT said.

Travelers are bracing for a difficult summer as airlines expect record demand and as they rebuild staff levels after thousands of workers left the industry during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Most planes are operating near full capacity and airlines often have less margin to address flight disruptions.

Delta Air Lines led carriers with the highest percentage of on-time arrivals, at 81.9%, followed by United Airlines (80.9%) and Hawaiian Airlines (80.8%). JetBlue Airways had the lowest on-time performance at 53.3%, followed by Frontier Airlines (58.4%) and Spirit Airlines (58.5%).

JetBlue said in April it would reduce its originally planned summer schedule by more than 10%, citing operational issues.

USDOT has numerous airline consumer rules under review. On Thursday it said it "remains committed to ensuring airline passengers are protected fairly and is concerned about recent cancellations and flight disruptions."

The department plans to announce formal rules to codify requirements that airlines provide prompt refunds when carriers cancel or make a significant change, including when the ticket purchased is non-refundable.

In July 2021, USDOT proposed new rules to require passenger airlines to refund fees for significantly delayed bags and for inoperative services like onboard Wi-Fi.