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US says airline jet fuel costs jumped $1.8 billion or 56% in March

By Thomson Reuters May 6, 2026 | 10:29 AM

By David Shepardson

WASHINGTON, May 6 (Reuters) – Major U.S. passenger airlines spent just over $5 billion on jet fuel in March, up $1.8 billion or 56% from ​what they spent in February, the U.S. Transportation ‌Department said on Wednesday.

The cost per gallon of fuel in March was $3.13, up 74 cents, and 31% over February. Fuel use rose 20% in March, USDOT added.

Since the U.S.-Israeli war with ‌Iran ​began, disruptions to shipping through the ⁠Strait of Hormuz have ⁠roiled global oil markets. Surging jet fuel prices have created the air travel industry’s biggest crisis since the COVID-19 pandemic.

Airlines spent $3.88 billion in March 2025 ​on jet fuel, far below the $5.06 billion they spent in March of this year.

Major U.S. carriers have ⁠hiked air fares and baggage ⁠fees, cutting some routes and making other ​cost cuts. Fuel accounts for up to a quarter ​of airline operating expenses.

Ultra-low cost carrier Spirit Airlines, which ‌ceased operations on Saturday, said this week it paid $100 million in additional fuel costs in March and April. It cited the fuel spike as the reason ⁠its restructuring plan failed and it was forced to end operatoins.

“Every airline is suffering from high fuel prices,” Southwest Airlines ⁠CEO Bob Jordan ‌told Reuters last week. “It’s your job ⁠to build your business in a way ​that ‌you’re resilient and you can survive these ​things because ⁠they happen.”

Low-cost carriers last month asked USDOT for a $2.5 billion government bailout to address higher fuel costs, but Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said he did not think that was necessary “at this point.”

(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing ​by David Gregorio)