Hawaiian Airlines Will Be Acquired By Alaska Airlines This Week!

The long-awaited deal between Alaska Airlines and Hawaiian Airlines has been cleared by the DOT, and is now poised to revolutionize air travel across the Pacific. With first-time strict consumer protections mandated, including guaranteed inter-island routes and loyalty systems, this will stabilize Hawaiian’s struggling financials. This is a crucial moment for aviation.

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49 thoughts on “Hawaiian Airlines Will Be Acquired By Alaska Airlines This Week!”

  1. I looked at the stocks today and noticed that there is now No Trading for HA stock. I think it must be a done deal.

    Please Alaska, don’t F—up this important part of Hawaiian culture. One of the nation’s oldest and it means a great deal to the people of the state.

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  2. I have been a flight attendant for over 30 years and a proud AS employee. No company is perfect, but of all the US airlines I could have worked for, AS was always and continues to be my first choice as a flight attendant. HA is in Very good hands. Will everything go smoothly, probably not, but we have amazing capable leaders that will welcome the HA family into the AS family with open arms! The family atmosphere of AS is very evident. We are kind hearted and always tasked to do the right thing. The emails and company news we have rcvd from our leaders over the last 24 hours have been very positive and very compassionate towards welcoming our new HA family members into the AS family. Our company culture is very similar to that of HA. The ohana runs deep at AS too. There will undoubtedly be changes but the future is very bright for a now larger HA/AS family. I and many of my AS coworkers are very excited for our combined future together as part of one great company. Aloha!

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  3. We had to ask for a refund on tickets Hawaiian could not honor for flights in November 2022. They policy was to refund all by $2000.00 which they d=said wasw a credit under our account number and could be used on an upcoming flight. Circumstances and health have prevented travel. Will we be able to use our credit after the merger?

    1. Your credit should be good. Some credits have an expiration date. Check yours! When a company buys another company it gets both assets (property) and liabilities (bills and credits owed)

  4. One question I would like to see answered is what type of aircraft will replace the 717’s, which are rapidly approaching their end of life?
    Alaska Airlines just removed the last of their Airbus planes from their fleet last year. So if the plan is to replace the 717’s with more 737’s, which are Alaska’s workhouse, what’s to prevent them from decreasing inter-island frequency by using a larger 737 with less frequent flights while still providing the same number of inter-island ‘seats’ they currently operate?
    The DOT ‘agreements’ I’ve read don’t specify whether they have to keep the same number of inter-island ‘flights’ or the same number of inter-island ‘seats’; an important detail.

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  5. Do we expect to see a return to the Brisbane to Honolulu route which was cancelled durning Covid. Many travellers have been put off travelling to Hawaii due the increased costs of having to spend 1 night of there holiday accommodation in Sydney

  6. Given that Alaska Airlines is an all Boeing 737 airline, what is to become of the aircraft types Hawaiian Airlines fly? Will we see Boeing 737s with Hawaiian or Alaska branding flying interisland?

    What will become of the Airbus fleet of HA planes? Retain, replace or retire? Boeing 737 Max replacing A321 Neo?

    What will become of HA’s 787s now flying and on order?

    Cargo planes for Amazon contract? Airbus or Boeing?

    Will the combined airline still dabble in the possibility of flying the Regent Sea Glider inter-island?

    1. Just a FYI – most of AS’s customer service calls are handled by AS employees at Sea-Tac, Boise and Chandler, AZ., with one exception…

      As you you are probably aware, AS has a robust offering of destinations to Mexico, Costa Rica and Guatemala. AS needs to serve those primarily Spanish speakers who originate from those destinations – as well as throughout the AS system. AS does use a contract call center somewhere in Central America, I believe Costa Rica.

      On a few occasions, I have been randomly connected to the Central America call center and they are helpful – but yet, not always up to speed on lounge questions, 100K upgrades, etc. – but that’s probably a small portion of their overall call volume.

      Just like any contract, I’m certain that AS will give an end date to the vendor in the Philippines and begin to bring back those english-speaking calls to the U.S.

      AS’s own call center reps (for me) have been pleasant and easy to work with.

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  7. Flew on AS twice out of LAX over the past week. A supervisor in the Board Room/AS Lounge said that even though the merger was not “approved” they were unofficially informed of plans for LAX. The supervisor said that HA will most likely not move from Bradley to T6 until after the first of the year into 2025.

    I found interesting that the supervisor said not to expect the HA A330’s to make the move over from Bradley, and that AS was going to use newly delivered MAX 8’s and 9’s and increase frequencies on the LAX-HNL/OGG routes to make-up for the loss of seats from the A330’s.

    The person said that once the 787’s start coming on-line, expect to see “tag” flights from LAX to SEA and other destinations – as HA’s 787’s maintenance will continue at LAX.

    AS definitely has the room at T6 to expand and add additional flights. With other airlines gone from T6, AS and AC now have that terminal to themselves.

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  8. Will BofA purchase Barclay’s “book of business” for the Hawaiian credit card program? I cannot imagine that AS will run two separate credit card programs – just too small as compared to AA and US Air from their respective Citibank and Barclays credit card programs that continue to this day.

    When will Mileage Plan elite benefits become available on HA metal – especially for the 100k’s and any new benefits on international routes? Also BofA credit card holders – when will those benefits extend to HA metal? Alaska and BofA’s relationship with credit and debit cards goes back to the SeaFirst days.

    Will AS offer a “Club 50” program for Hawaii – similar to the Club 49 program for the state of Alaska?

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