Airlines stand to realize substantial savings on jet fuel after oil prices fell following an interim U.S.-Iran peace accord, but travelers should not expect an immediate rollback of elevated ticket prices. Carriers face conditions - notably constrained capacity and still-elevated fuel costs relative to last year - that give them room to allocate any fuel-cost relief toward rebuilding profit margins rather than reversing fare increases implemented earlier in the year.
In the U.S., the disconnect between ticket prices and fuel expenses is particularly clear. Jet fuel spot prices were at $2.85 a gallon on June 17, down from an early April peak of $4.88 a gallon. A drop of that magnitude, if sustained over time, would reduce the industry’s annual fuel bill by more than $40 billion based on industry fuel consumption calculations.
Despite the earlier surge in fuel costs provoking fare hikes, bag fees and schedule reductions, those measures offset only a portion of the added expense. Data tracking the period from January through May show jet fuel prices rose at a rate more than three times that of airfares. An analysis by Deutsche Bank quantified the imbalance: U.S. carriers would recoup about 60 cents of every additional dollar spent on fuel, representing roughly $14.4 billion in extra revenue against about $24.1 billion in added fuel costs.
Individual carriers report differing degrees of pass-through. Alaska Air has said it was recovering about one-third of the fuel-cost increase. Delta Air Lines, United Airlines and American Airlines put second-quarter recovery at roughly 40% to 50%. JetBlue Airways and Frontier Group indicated they expect to recoup less than half of the additional fuel expense. United Chief Executive Scott Kirby said his airline was "on a path to recovering 100% by the end of the year."
Measured consumer prices illustrate the strain. Raymond James data show average domestic fares booked one week before travel were up 34.1% year-on-year as of June 8. The question now is whether airlines can sustain those higher fares as jet fuel pressures ease. Several analysts note that the answer hinges on carriers' ability to hold price and on the strength of consumer demand.
Regional differences and route types are likely to determine how quickly, and how evenly, any relief reaches passengers. In some regions and on particular route types, lower crude prices will take longer to translate into cheaper jet fuel. Dublin-based Goodbody’s head of aviation and travel research, Dudley Shanley, observed that unless jet fuel returns to levels seen at the start of the year, many airlines will prefer to keep fares firm or raise them where demand permits.
Europe could see mixed outcomes across long-haul and short-haul services. RBC analyst Ruairi Cullinane noted that long-haul fares are more likely to ease because carriers were better able to pass higher fuel costs onto those routes earlier. Short-haul fares, however, may remain elevated if the peace deal supports bookings and keeps demand robust.
Across Asia, HSBC analysts described a split among carriers. China’s largest carriers face weak pricing power and declining aircraft utilization, creating pressure on fares. By contrast, Hong Kong’s Cathay Pacific is comparatively well placed: higher yields from premium passengers, stronger cargo revenues and elevated fares could offset continued fuel expense pressures.
The Middle East remains an outlier. After wartime disruptions to traffic flows, fuel continues to be costly enough to discourage broad discounting. Some carriers in the region may promote fares selectively to regain traffic, but widespread price cuts are unlikely while fuel remains expensive. United Arab Emirates carriers could pursue more aggressive pricing and benefit from stronger government backing, according to aviation analyst John Strickland.
How much airlines ultimately benefit from lower fuel prices depends on the duration of the decline. Fuel expense is driven by a mix of long-term purchase contracts and spot purchases, which means short-term spot moves do not instantly reset carriers’ overall fuel bills. Industry data show that, even after the recent declines, jet fuel still costs 54% more than a year earlier, according to the International Air Transport Association.
Executives point to that lingering expense as a key constraint on fare reductions. Southwest Airlines Chief Operating Officer Andrew Watterson summarized the dynamic bluntly when asked about a return to pre-pandemic margin levels: "When’s fuel going to go down?" That line of thinking creates a strong incentive for carriers to rebuild earnings before entertaining broad fare cuts.
Financial firm Jefferies provided a quantification of the sensitivity of earnings to fuel costs: each 5% drop in its roughly $3-per-gallon 2027 fuel-cost forecast would raise projected earnings per share by 10% to 15% for Delta, Southwest and United, and could increase projected EPS for American Airlines by as much as 50%.
The prospect of a renewed, industry-wide fare war is limited by capacity and delivery constraints. Historically, falling oil prices have sometimes sparked a capacity expansion that suppresses fares. Those conditions are not broadly present now. Aircraft delivery delays, constrained airport capacity and retrenchment among lower-cost carriers reduce the risk of a large-scale domestic capacity surge.
Industry scheduling data show U.S. domestic seats are slated to grow just 0.4% year-on-year in the third quarter, a marked reduction from the 4.6% expansion that was forecast before the recent Middle East tensions. Analysts at J.P. Morgan flagged limited aircraft deliveries and pullbacks by budget carriers as factors curbing the threat of "meaningful capacity creep," which in turn bolsters carriers' ability to sustain elevated fares.
For travelers, the timing and magnitude of any fare relief may be shaped as much by consumer resilience as by the trajectory of fuel prices. Goodbody’s Dudley Shanley emphasized that passenger demand will be pivotal: if consumer spending on travel remains strong, carriers will have less pressure to lower fares even as fuel costs moderate.
Bottom line: a meaningful drop in jet fuel provides airlines with an opportunity to shore up profitability. But limited capacity growth, the still-high baseline for fuel costs, and a patchwork of regional dynamics point toward a period in which carriers are more likely to consolidate margin gains than pass significant savings immediately to passengers.