Business
Delta, Southwest raise checked bag fees $10 amid jet fuel price surge, joining other carriers
A Delta Air Lines Airbus A350 airplane lands at Los Angeles International Airport after arriving from Atlanta on March 7, 2026 in Los Angeles, California.
Kevin Carter | Getty Images
Delta Air Lines and Southwest Airlines are raising checked bag fees by $10, the third and fourth major U.S. carriers to increase prices as the industry grapples with a jump in jet fuel expenses this year.
“As part of an ongoing analysis of the business and against the evolving global backdrop, Southwest Airlines is increasing its fees on first and second checked bags by $10, effective on all reservations ticketed or voluntarily changed on or after April 9, 2026,” Southwest said in a statement.
Southwest Airlines ended its policy allowing all customers to check two bags for free less than a year ago.
The changes would bring the fee to check a first piece of luggage to $45, and $55 for a second bag on each airline.
Delta’s changes take effect with bookings starting Wednesday and apply to domestic flights and shorter flights abroad, but not to long-haul international travel.
“These updates are part of Delta’s ongoing review of pricing across its business and reflect the impact of evolving global conditions and industry dynamics,” the airline said in a statement Tuesday.
A third bag on Delta would cost $200 to check.
Last week, United Airlines and JetBlue Airways increased their checked bag fees. Other carriers often follow such pricing moves.
Jet fuel in major U.S. cities was going for $4.69 a gallon on Monday, according to Airlines for America, citing Argus data, up nearly 88% since the U.S. and Israel attacked Iran on Feb. 28. The key Strait of Hormuz shipping channel has remained effectively closed over the past month, choking off global crude and refined fuel supplies.
Delta reports first-quarter results before the market opens on Wednesday, and investors are likely to question executives on how well they are covering the surge in fuel, airlines’ biggest expense after labor. Analysts have pointed to strong demand as a salve for high fuel, but it’s not clear that carriers will be able to cover the entirety of the fuel price run-up.
Business
Oil jumps above $100 as US to blockade Iranian ports after peace talks fail
The failure of negotiations at the weekend has raised concerns that the global energy crisis will deepen.
Source link
Business
The Dutch village at risk of being demolished
Moerdijk has been earmarked for removal, to make way for a vast electricity substation.
Source link
Business
War in Gulf, layoffs hit discretionary spends – The Times of India
MUMBAI: Consumers seem to be cutting back on discretionary spends, allocating more budgets to essentials and value purchases as a mix of war-driven uncertainty and layoffs have nudged people to tighten their purse strings and save more. Even as the US and Iran agreed upon a two-week ceasefire last week, the prospects of a peace deal faded as talks between the two countries held in Pakistan failed to produce desired results. Analysts said that caution will prevail until there’s clarity on a full-fledged de-escalation. “Post mid-March, discretionary offtakes slowed down,” said Satyaki Ghosh, CEO at Raymond Lifestyle, pinning hopes on the upcoming wedding season to support demand going ahead. “We are running some value-based offerings but no direct discounts as yet,” Ghosh said. Consumers are not just curbing overall spending at stores, but are also gravitating more towards affordable options and value-driven choices, prioritising essentials over indulgences, said Tarun Arora, CEO & whole-time director at Zydus Wellness, maker of brands such as Complan and Glucon-D which is looking at smaller and more accessible formats where relevant. People are not necessarily trading down although there is some tightening of spends with simpler routines and fewer impulse additions, said Shankar Prasad, CEO at D2C beauty brand Plum. “What we are seeing is a gradual shift in consumer preference towards essential categories, with relatively higher spends on everyday, need-based products, while discretionary and indulgent purchases have softened a bit, which is typically the case during periods of uncertainty,” said Mayank Shah, chief marketing officer at Parle Products. For the time being, the company is focusing on pushing value packs of premium products so that even indulgent purchases remain accessible, said Shah. The war-led surge in crude oil has already pushed up costs for companies with firms pointing to inflationary pressures and looking to implement price hikes. Many firms across spaces such as edible oils, bottled water, beverages and consumer durables have already taken some price increases, straining middle class households. Analysts at Nuvama expect a post-election uptick in inflation across the country. “Footwear players shall likely face margin pressure as roughly 30% of their raw material inputs are crude-linked. QSRs may also experience cost headwinds from increased energy, packaging and secondary input expenses,” they said in a recent note. Alongside price hikes, the job market is also likely to see a slowdown as some companies freeze hiring amid uncertainty while AI-led tech layoffs continue to bruise the salaried class. Unilever, for instance, has frozen global hiring for three months due to the war.
-
Fashion6 days agoIndia’s exports face reset as EU links trade to carbon metrics: EY
-
Politics1 week agoTrump confirms rescue of airman whose F-15 was downed in Iran
-
Entertainment5 days agoQueen Elizabeth II emotional message for Archie, Lilibet sparks speculation
-
Tech6 days agoA Single Strike Won’t Shut Off the Gulf’s Desalination System
-
Tech4 days agoThis AI Button Wearable From Ex-Apple Engineers Looks Like an iPod Shuffle
-
Fashion6 days agoICE cotton hits 11-month high on drought concerns, demand boost
-
Sports1 week agoTransfer rumors, news: Arsenal eye Bayer Leverkusen forward
-
Tech4 days agoAs the Strait of Hormuz Reopens, Global Shipping Will Take Months to Recover
