
JetBlue’s transatlantic experiment is entering a new phase. After several years of steady expansion, the airline’s summer 2026 schedule suggests growth is slowing.
This is not entirely by choice. Structural limits in fleet availability, airport slot access, and competitive pressure are all shaping that outcome.
JetBlue disrupted the transatlantic market when it entered the fray in August 2021. In contrast to legacy players, it launched flights between New York JFK and London Heathrow using modern narrowbody planes to compete in one of the world’s busiest air corridors. In the years that followed, JetBlue expanded to more destinations, adding various European cities from both Boston and JFK.
Skift analysis of Cirium Diio data shows that for the upcoming summer season, it will operate 13 transatlantic routes – just one more than in 2025. For now, this appears to be the ceiling for JetBlue’s transatlantic network, driven by operational and
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