It's the Busiest Flight Route Between Europe and the U.S. Is There Room for JetBlue?

As one door closes, another one opens.

Hot on the heels of the March 28 collapse of low-cost, trans-Atlantic carrier WOW Airlines, New York-based airline JetBlue announced Wednesday that it intends to launch multiple daily flights on one of the world’s busiest routes between the U.S. East Coast and London in 2021.

The routes—JetBlue’s first to Europe—will be served by long-range versions of the Airbus A321 from New York and Boston with a reimagined version of the airline’s premium economy service called Mint that offers lie-flat seats on domestic U.S. flights, plus extras such as free high-speed wi-fi, Amazon TV and tapas-style dining. JetBlue believes its history of providing a premium service at a lower cost than rivals will be enough to entice trans-Atlantic business travelers away from major carriers such as American and Delta, whose fares JetBlue CEO Robin Hayes called “obscene” last year.

“To fly next week on a business class ticket to go to Boston or New York from here would cost you at least £6,000 ($7,800) [roundtrip] buying a published fare,” Hayes said in a speech about the new flights in London on Thursday. “The opportunity we have to drastically—and I mean drastically—lower the fares in the premium cabin is very significant.”

JetBlue is still in the process of evaluating the number of flights it will offer and the exact London airports it will serve, but Hayes says he is confident the airline will have a path into “more than one” of the British capital’s runways.

Opportunity overhead

The expansion forms part of a wider move into Europe that’s viewed as the airline’s “next natural step,” JetBlue said in a statement following a party—complete with Queen tribute act and Union Jack bunting—to celebrate the new routes. Hayes confirmed on Thursday that the airline also has Schiphol Airport in Amsterdam on its radar.

After long considering a move into Europe, JetBlue has finally committed to a route to London. (Monica Garcia—Getty Images)
After long considering a move into Europe, JetBlue has finally committed to a route to London. (Monica Garcia—Getty Images)

In the past 20 years, JetBlue has grown from a start-up to controlling 5% of the U.S. air market. (Southwest and American each control 17.8%, for comparison.) It’s also the largest airline in Boston, flying to 70 cities with 150 daily flights. It has 253 airplanes, 23,000 crew members and operates 1,050 flights a day flying to 22 countries. Its evolution has coincided with tremendous growth in U.S. air travel. In 1998, the year before it was founded, 30 million passengers flew through New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport. Today, that number is 62 million.

But there’s a wrinkle in JetBlue’s upward trajectory. The U.S. air market is now hugely consolidated, with four airlines controlling 80% of the air travel, an effect of a series of mergers involving the likes of Northwest, Continental and U.S Airways that began in 2005. Today, four out every five U.S. passengers flies on Delta, United, American or Southwest. So to expand, JetBlue needs to look further afield and, with Iceland’s WOW Airlines having collapsed and rival low-cost, long-haul rival Norwegian facing financial difficulties, the airline senses an opportunity to stake a claim as the go-to low-cost, trans-Atlantic airline. So, after long considering an expansion into Europe, JetBlue has decided that the time is now.