Spirit Airlines could dissolve as soon as tonight and leave passengers who already booked tickets stranded at airports around the country.
Spirit filed for bankruptcy twice between November 2024 and August 2025, and it currently remains under Chapter 11 protection.
The company was able to survive based on the assumption that jet fuel prices would remain stable and that it would be able to maintain its passenger capacity at 80 percent, hoping to exit restructuring in early summer 2026.
But since the war with Iran, jet fuel prices have nearly doubled in large cities such as New York, Houston, Chicago and Los Angeles, and the airline operated at an average capacity closer to 74 percent in the last fiscal quarter.
Spirit’s creditors are thus worried about the long-term survivability of the company and are set to dissolve the airline at any moment.
When other airlines have gone out of business in the past, they tend to essentially disappear overnight. If Spirit’s creditors tell the company to cease operations and liquidate, the same could happen.
At the moment, Spirit says it is operating normally, continuing to serve passengers and operating its flights. Although there is imminent risk of the company being dissolved, no specific date has been shared, leaving travelers in limbo.
People who have already booked tickets with the airline and are expecting to fly in the immediate future could be caught off guard with no way to get home.

Spirit Airlines could dissolve as soon as tonight and leave passengers who have already booked tickets with no way to get home. A Spirit jet is pictured

Other airlines are prepared to offer ‘rescue fares’ to stranded passengers, which are discounted one-way flights, but there is no guarantee of securing one. Passengers are pictured waiting at an airport (stock image)
In such a scenario, other airlines are prepared to offer ‘rescue fares,’ which are discounted one-way flights that allow people to get to their destination.
But there is no guarantee that everyone who booked a Spirit flight will be able to secure a rescue fare.
As a result, Spirit customers have been advised to be prepared with backup plans to get home in the coming days, just in case the airline suddenly stops operating.
In recent months, pilot and flight attendant unions have made concessions in an attempt to help the airline survive, but combined pressures of increased competition and increased cost of operation have made the company’s situation dire.
JP Morgan released a note stating that if jet fuel remains at $4.60 this year, Spirit’s forecast operating margin for the 2026 fiscal year would drop from negative seven percent to negative 20 percent.
On top of that, the company’s competitors have added flights going to Spirit destinations. JetBlue Airways and Frontier Airlines currently have a destination overlap with Spirit of 21 percent and 32 percent, respectively.
In December 2024, Spirit projected that it would make a net profit of $252 million in the next fiscal year, but in August 2025, the airline reported that it had actually lost a total of $257 million between just March 13 through the end of June.
The company had emerged from its first bankruptcy filing on that March 13 date and made its second Chapter 11 filing shortly before reporting its nearly $260 million loss.

Spirit is facing combined pressured of higher operating costs and greater competition, which have made the company’s situation dire. A Spirit jet is pictured in flight
Spirit’s potential imminent dissolution marks a fall from grace for the airline which was once enormously profitable and operated with high margins.
The company, like all airlines, began taking a turn for the worse during the COVID pandemic, but it was unable to recover afterwards due to changing customer tastes and increased competition.
An increased supply of domestic flights drove down prices, and the airline’s lack of international flights meant it did not have a buffer of high-paying customers purchasing first-class tickets.
A federal judge also blocked JetBlue’s planned $3.8 billion merger with Spirit in January 2024 following a lawsuit filed by the Department of Justice, which claimed that the move would have been anti-competitive and cause the price of low-cost airfares to rise.
Some people on social media have shared anxiety about the potential of getting stranded and expressed disdain at Spirit, both for going out of business and for the general quality of service the airline has historically provided.
‘Anybody flying Spirit Airlines over the weekend?’ one user on X wrote in response to a post about the airline potentially dissolving in the near future.
‘Most Cheap airlines don’t make it very long. Spirit was a total Nightmare,’ another user said.
Some people also preemptively mourned the loss of the airline. One wrote, ‘IDC (I don’t care) what anyone else says, Spirit Airlines is one of those things where we won’t know what we’re missing til it’s gone.’


