Stock Markets April 14, 2026 01:20 PM

Delta Seeks to Shift $2.5 Billion Fuel Surge onto Passengers as Iran Conflict Pushes Costs Higher

Airline chief cites doubling of jet-fuel prices over the past month and says fare increases and capacity moves are under review

By Marcus Reed DAL
Delta Seeks to Shift $2.5 Billion Fuel Surge onto Passengers as Iran Conflict Pushes Costs Higher
DAL

Delta Air Lines told investors and industry attendees that a spike in jet-fuel costs tied to the Iran war will add about $2.5 billion to its fuel bill this quarter. CEO Ed Bastian said the carrier intends to pass much of that expense on to customers while evaluating temporary route suspensions, spending deferrals and capacity adjustments.

Key Points

  • Delta forecasts an additional $2.5 billion in jet-fuel expenses this quarter due to the Iran war; fuel costs have doubled in the past month.
  • The airline plans to pass those higher fuel costs to customers and is considering temporary halts to unprofitable routes, deferral of spending and capital expenditures, and further fare increases.
  • Delta previously announced capacity reductions of about 3.5% from planned levels, while reporting strong bookings for Q2 and the summer and noting that its premium-focused strategy offers some protection.

Delta Air Lines expects to incur roughly $2.5 billion in additional jet-fuel expenses this quarter as a consequence of the Iran war, Chief Executive Officer Ed Bastian said on Tuesday. The statement came during a videoconference at the Marsh Aviation Summit in London.

According to Bastian, the airline has seen its fuel costs roughly double within the past month. Faced with that rapid rise, he said Delta plans to seek ways to transfer the higher expense burden to travelers, while acknowledging that the process will take time.

"We have to find ways to get that cost passed through to consumers," Bastian said, adding that "it won’t happen overnight." He indicated the carrier is exploring a number of operational and financial responses to blunt the impact of the price surge.

Among the measures under consideration are temporary suspensions of routes that are currently unprofitable and deferring certain spending and capital expenditure plans. Those options are intended to limit near-term cash outflows while the airline works to adjust pricing and capacity.

The comments expand on remarks Bastian made about a week earlier, when he disclosed that Delta was trimming capacity by about 3.5% from levels it had planned at the start of the quarter. At that time, he also said the airline was implementing fare increases and was prepared to apply further increases beyond those already in place.

Despite the cost pressures, Bastian noted that bookings across Delta’s network for the second quarter and the summer season were strong. He argued that the carrier’s focus on higher-yield, premium customers provides some insulation against the fuel-driven revenue headwinds.

Delta’s combination of potential route adjustments, capital spending deferrals and selective fare hikes forms the carrier’s near-term response to the sudden escalation in jet-fuel prices tied to geopolitical developments. How quickly those actions can offset the roughly $2.5 billion hit to fuel spending is uncertain, and Bastian emphasized that passing costs through to consumers will be a process rather than an immediate fix.

Risks

  • Fuel-price volatility could continue to raise operational costs for the airline sector and squeeze margins before fare adjustments fully take effect.
  • Temporary route suspensions and capacity reductions may disrupt travel markets and have near-term impacts on revenue and regional connectivity within the broader transportation sector.
  • Additional fare increases could dampen demand if consumers respond negatively, affecting travel and leisure sectors that rely on passenger traffic.

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