Breeze has quietly axed nine nonstop connections — including Raleigh-Durham to L.A. — while simultaneously launching 79 new routes. Here’s every cut, why it happened, and what travelers can expect next.
Breeze Airways terminated nine nonstop routes, shedding connections from Raleigh-Durham to Los Angeles and Tampa to Southern California’s John Wayne Airport, among others, according to a comparative analysis of OAG schedule data for Q2 and Q3 2025 versus the same period in 2026.
The Breeze Airways route cuts reflect calculated network discipline rather than financial distress. While the carrier, which launched in May 2021, retired nine city pairs, it introduced or resumed 79 airport pairs in the same period — maintaining the expansion strategy that has carried more than 15 million passengers since then.
Domestic traffic growth has stalled. IATA reported that U.S. Revenue Passenger Kilometers rose just 0.1% year-on-year in January, a “stagnant” market that is forcing low-cost carriers to be selective about where they deploy capacity. Breeze’s 2025 seat load factor of 77.3% trailed the 81.8% U.S. domestic average, according to industry data — a figure the carrier attributes to its focus on developing new, unproven routes rather than competing on established corridors.
The Routes Breeze Discontinued
OAG data identifies six of the nine terminated connections specifically. The most prominent Breeze Airways route cut came on the Raleigh-Durham International Airport (RDU) to Los Angeles International (LAX) corridor, which ended in January 2026. Despite filling 82.1% of its seats — well above the airline’s own 77.3% system average — Breeze held just 7.8% of the overall RDU-LAX market. Delta Air Lines controlled 50.6% of the route and American Airlines held 41.4%. Breeze’s strategy centers on markets where it operates as the sole nonstop carrier and commands greater pricing power; the heavily contested transcontinental corridor offered neither advantage.
The Tampa to John Wayne Airport (SNA) service — flights MX532 and MX533 — ended in August 2025, the victim of compounding operational constraints. SNA’s primary commercial runway stands at just 5,700 feet, among the shortest of any major U.S. commercial airport, imposing payload-range penalties on transcontinental departures that force tradeoffs between fuel load and passenger capacity. The Airbus A220-300 operating the route was based in Hartford, Conn. (BDL), requiring a four-sector daily rotation: departing Hartford at 6:00 a.m. for Tampa; flying Tampa to SNA as MX532, departing at 9:56 a.m.; returning SNA to Tampa as MX533, departing at 12:53 p.m. and arriving at 8:44 p.m.; then deadheading Tampa back to Hartford, touching down at 12:19 a.m. the following morning. The rotation accumulated “considerable” block hours — the industry measure of time from pushback to engine shutdown — for limited revenue return.
The four remaining identified route cuts were concentrated in August and September 2025. Akron/Canton to Los Angeles ended in August 2025, with Breeze reallocating the capacity to more profitable transcontinental operations. Huntsville to Los Angeles and Norfolk to Syracuse both ceased in September 2025 through resource reallocation and East Coast network rationalization, respectively. Greenville/Spartanburg to Westchester also ended in September 2025, as part of a regional optimization of short-haul Embraer E-Jet flying.
What Load Factors Don’t Tell You
Not every low-performing Breeze route has faced the same fate. The Washington Dulles to Ogdensburg, N.Y., connection — supported by Essential Air Service (EAS) funding — filled only 24.7% of its seats in the year ending November 2025, a figure characterized in DOT data analysis as “laughably poor.” Yet $18 million in federal EAS funding through September 2026 keeps the route in service, albeit at reduced frequency. The contrast underscores a central truth in aviation economics: viability is not solely a function of passenger demand.
Where Breeze Goes Next
Even as Breeze trims its domestic network, it is accelerating on the international front. In early 2026, the carrier launched its first-ever international services: nonstop flights to Cancún, Mexico, in January, with gateways including Norfolk, Charleston, Raleigh-Durham, and Providence; Montego Bay, Jamaica, in February from Tampa and Raleigh-Durham; and Punta Cana in the Dominican Republic in March from Charleston and Orlando. The international push followed a three-year FAA certification process that made Breeze the first new U.S. flag carrier to receive that approval since Virgin America in 2016.
Breeze founder and CEO David Neeleman has indicated there are as many as 1,500 U.S. city pairs that Breeze could potentially serve without competing against a major airline — a figure that suggests the network build-out is far from complete. The airline reached its first quarterly operating profit in the fourth quarter of 2024 and its first net profit in the second quarter of 2025, with full-year GAAP profitability targeted for year-end 2025. Revenue exceeded $680 million in 2024, a 70% increase over the previous year.
Breeze is completing a transition to an all-Airbus A220-300 fleet; its remaining Embraer E-Jets are scheduled to exit operations by mid-2026. The A220-300 carries 130 to 160 passengers, flies up to 3,600 nautical miles, and burns 25% less fuel per seat than previous-generation aircraft — the range and efficiency that underpin the carrier’s ability to connect secondary markets across transcontinental and international distances.
The Broader Picture: Avelo’s Contraction
Not every startup low-cost carrier is on the same trajectory. Avelo Airlines announced in January 2026 a plan to “simplify its network amidst a 2026 balance sheet transformation,” cutting second-quarter 2026 flights by 29% and removing more than 3,000 scheduled operations. The carrier shuttered crew bases at Wilmington International Airport (ILM) and Raleigh-Durham (RDU) effective March 6 and exited the West Coast entirely, closing operations at Hollywood Burbank (BUR), Sonoma County (STS), and Redmond (RDM). CEO Andrew Levy had initially defended the airline’s participation in ICE deportation flights as “too valuable not to pursue” before the airline announced it would no longer operate those missions — a decision that directly led to its exit from Phoenix-Mesa Gateway Airport (AZA).
Avelo reported an operating loss of $6.4 million in the third quarter of 2025 and a net loss of $35.6 million through the first three quarters of the year. Brett Snyder of the Cranky Flier blog noted that while Avelo now has a “coherent strategy,” its long-term viability remains unproven.
Both carriers face a national pilot shortage that threatens schedule reliability at smaller airlines. Industry estimates for 2025-26 place thousands of cockpit positions unfilled — a constraint that poses a meaningful risk to Breeze as it targets 20% annual capacity growth over the next three years.

Key Takeaways
- Breeze Airways terminated nine nonstop routes through January 2026 while adding 79 new airport pairs in the same period.
- The Raleigh-Durham to Los Angeles route ended despite an 82.1% load factor; Breeze held only 7.8% market share against Delta’s 50.6% and American’s 41.4%.
- SNA’s 5,700-foot runway and a Hartford-based aircraft rotation made the Tampa–John Wayne service unviable; it ended in August 2025.
- Breeze launched its first international routes — Mexico, Jamaica, the Dominican Republic — in early 2026, completing a three-year FAA certification process.
- Avelo Airlines cut Q2 2026 flights by 29% and posted a $35.6 million net loss through the first three quarters of 2025.