Skip to content

Alaska Airlines blocks middle seats over Christmas as coronavirus losses shrink

Oct. 22, 2020
3 min read
Alaska Airlines Airplane Landing at LAX
Alaska Airlines blocks middle seats over Christmas as coronavirus losses shrink
The cards we feature here are from partners who compensate us when you are approved through our site, and this may impact how or where these products appear. We don’t cover all available credit cards, but our analysis, reviews, and opinions are entirely from our editorial team. Terms apply to the offers listed on this page. Please view our advertising policy and product review methodology for more information.

Alaska Airlines will block seats on flights over Christmas and into the new year, continuing the split between carriers that do and do not view the confidence-boosting measure as needed to spur travel during the coronavirus pandemic.

The Seattle-based carrier extended its blocking of middle seats on mainline jets — Airbus A320s and A321neos, and Boeing 737s — through Jan. 6, 2021, Alaska said on Thursday. The policy was previously due to end on Nov. 30.

Alaska's extension comes as competitor Southwest Airlines said it will remove its seating caps on Dec. 1. The move leaves just Alaska, Delta Air Lines and JetBlue Airways capping the number of passengers on any given flight in the U.S. The policies are widely viewed more as a confidence-boosting measures since social distancing is difficult within the confines of an aircraft.

Want more airline-specific news? Sign up for TPG's free new biweekly Aviation newsletter!

Trade group the International Air Transport Association (IATA) has found that wearing masks, coupled with an airplane's air filtration system, is the best defense against COVID onboard a plane. The group estimates that the chance of catching the virus on a plane is less than the risk of being struck by lightning.

"The social distance onboard an aircraft are ensured by the airflow," IATA medical advisor Dr. David Powell said on Oct. 8. "That's the best protection onboard an aircraft."

Alaska intends to begin unblocking seats early in 2021, said president Ben Minicucci during a quarterly earnings call on Thursday. He cited several studies that show that air filtration and mask wearing on planes reduces the risk of COVID infection to near zero.

The airline will likely lift its seating caps gradually. Middle seats will be filled on shorter flights and those with pre-flight testing requirements first before being sold systemwide, said Minicucci.

Related: Risk of coronavirus on planes less than getting struck by lightning

Daily Newsletter
Reward your inbox with the TPG Daily newsletter
Join over 700,000 readers for breaking news, in-depth guides and exclusive deals from TPG’s experts

Selling blocked middle seats is key to Alaska's return to financial health. The airline lost an average of $4 million a day during the three months ending in September and is unlikely to hit its goal of break even by year-end, Alaska chief financial officer Shane Tackett said on the call.

"At this point, it will require a further recovery of demand and the likely removal of seat blocks to achieve" cash break even, he said.

Alaska plans to fly about 60% of its 2019 schedule in the last three months of 2020. That represents a steady improvement from the roughly 45% in the third quarter when the carrier reported a $431 million net loss.

Related: Which US airlines are blocking middle seats?

The story was updated with additional details from Alaska's third quarter earnings call.

Featured image by MICHAEL ROSEBROCK/SHUTTERSTOCK

TPG featured card

4 / 5
Go to review
Rewards rate
1XChoose to earn up to 1X points on rent and mortgage payments with no transaction fee
2XEarn 2X points + the option to earn 4% back in Bilt Cash on everyday purchases
Intro offer
Open Intro bonus
50,000 Bilt Points + Gold Status + $300 of Bilt Cash
Annual fee
$495
Regular APR
26.74 - 34.74% variable
Recommended credit
Open Credit score description
Good Credit, Excellent Credit

Pros

  • Choice to earn up to 1 Bilt Point per dollar spent on rent and mortgage payments
  • Elevated everyday earnings with both Bilt Points and the option to earn Bilt Cash
  • $400 Bilt Travel Portal hotel credit per year (up to $200 biannually)
  • $200 Bilt Cash annually
  • Priority Pass membership
  • No foreign transaction fees

Cons

  • Moderate annual fee
  • Designed primarily for members seeking a premium, all-in-one card
  • Earn points on housing with no transaction fee
  • Choose to earn 4% back in Bilt Cash on everyday spend. Use Bilt Cash to unlock point earnings on rent and mortgage payments with no transaction fee, up to 1X.
  • 2X points on everyday spend
  • $400 Bilt Travel Hotel credit. Applied twice a year, as $200 statement credits, for qualifying Bilt Travel Portal hotel bookings.
  • $200 Bilt Cash (awarded annually). At the end of each calendar year, any Bilt Cash balance over $100 will expire.
  • Welcome bonus (subject to approval): 50,000 Bilt Points + Gold Status after spending $4,000 on everyday purchases in the first 90 days + $300 of Bilt Cash.
  • Priority Pass ($469/year value). See Guide to Benefits.
  • Bilt Point redemptions include airlines, hotels, future rent and mortgage payments, Lyft rides, statement credits, student loan balances, a down payment on a home, and more.