Airlines

Frontier Airlines cuts flights after travel demand fell in March

Key Points
  • Frontier Airlines cut its first-quarter outlook and pulled its full-year forecast, citing a drop in demand and economic uncertainty.
  • The airline plans to reduce its capacity to match weaker-than-expected demand.
  • Frontier follows Delta Air Lines in cutting its capacity plans and pulling full-year guidance.
Frontier Airlines
Nurphoto | Nurphoto | Getty Images

Frontier Airlines joined Delta Air Lines in pulling its full-year outlook and cutting flights due to a drop in demand and an "uncertain environment."

The budget airline also lowered its first-quarter outlook. Frontier said its revenue growth likely rose 5% in the first quarter, with capacity up 5% over last year.

"Revenue growth is anticipated to be lower than expected due to weakened demand in March, resulting in fare discounting and promotions across the industry, amplified by the close-in nature of Frontier's bookings," Frontier said in a securities filing.

Frontier pointed to a drop in consumer confidence in March as evidence of weaker demand.

Airline executives have said they've seen lower demand due to President Donald Trump's trade war, a murky economic outlook, a drop in consumer confidence and mass government layoffs.

Frontier is scheduled to report results on May 1.