Spirit and Frontier aircraft
Spirit and Frontier aircraft
Air Transport

Frontier seeks new merger, but Spirit Airlines rejects proposal

Low-cost airline in bankruptcy said the offer would not be advantageous and would carry too many risks
Ricardo Meier

Pressured by high debt, ultra-low-cost airlines Frontier and Spirit Airlines have resumed talks about a possible merger, but again they have not reached an agreement.

In a regulatory filing filed with the U.S. Stock Exchange, Spirit said it had rejected a proposal from Frontier Airlines that involved paying $400 million plus 19% of its equity to its shareholders.

Instead, Spirit expects to emerge from Chapter 11 in March and seek a financial restructuring on its own two feet.

Presentation sheet shows the size of the Frontier-Spirit merger (Frontier Airlines)

The potential merger could create the 5th largest airline in the U.S., behind only United, American, Delta and Southwest and just above Alaska/Hawaiian.

Together, the two carriers would have about 100 million passengers per year and a fleet of more than 400 aircraft.

But Spirit considered that the merger of the businesses would imply more investments and lengthy regulatory approvals.

JetBlue Embraer E190 (Andrew E. Cohen)

Frontier and Spirit had announced a preliminary merger agreement in 2022, but it was ‘run over’ by JetBlue, which made a better offer for the Florida-based airline.

However, the merger was blocked by the US courts, which considered the agreement harmful to the competitiveness of the country’s air travel market.

About the Author

Ricardo Meier

Ricardo Meier

Creator of the website that started in 1996 as a magazine. He also writes on Brazilian websites AUTOO, MOTOO and MetrôCPTM.

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