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Delta Air Lines

Delta Air Lines, Inc.
IATA ICAO Call sign
DL DAL DELTA
FoundedMarch 2, 1925; 99 years ago (1925-03-02)
(as Huff Daland Dusters)
Commenced operationsJune 17, 1929; 95 years ago (1929-06-17)
AOC #DALA026A[1]
Hubs
Focus cities
Frequent-flyer programSkyMiles
Alliance
Subsidiaries
Fleet size993
Destinations311[4]
Traded as
ISINUS2473617023
HeadquartersAtlanta, Georgia, United States
Key people
FounderC.E. Woolman
RevenueIncrease US$58.1 billion (2023)[5]
Operating incomeIncrease US$5.5 billion (2023)[5]
Net incomeIncrease US$4.6 billion (2023)[5]
Total assetsIncrease US$73.6 billion (2023)[5]
Total equityIncrease US$11.1 billion (2023)[5]
Employees103,000 (2023)[5]
Websitedelta.com

Delta Air Lines is a major airline in the United States headquartered in Atlanta, Georgia.[1] It is the United States's oldest operating airline and the seventh-oldest operating worldwide.[6] Delta, along with its regional subsidiaries and contractors operating under the brand name Delta Connection, operate over 5,400 flights daily and serve 325 destinations in 52 countries on six continents.[7][8] Delta is a founding member of the SkyTeam airline alliance.[8] As of the end of 2023, it had 100,000 employees.[9]

Delta has nine hubs, with Hartsfield–Jackson Atlanta International Airport being its largest in terms of total passengers and number of departures.[8] It is ranked second among the world's largest airlines by number of passengers carried, passenger miles flown, and fleet size. It is ranked first by revenue for commercially owned airline companies as well as in brand value, and 113th on the Fortune 500.[10][11] Delta was ranked first in the annual rankings of top airlines by The Wall Street Journal in 2022, 2023, and 2024 and ranked first in the 2024 Readers’ Choice Awards of Best Airlines in the U.S. by Condé Nast Traveler.[12][13]

History

Early history

The history of Delta Air Lines began with the world's first aerial crop dusting operation called Huff Daland Dusters, Inc. The company was founded on March 2, 1925, in Macon, Georgia, before moving to Monroe, Louisiana, in the summer of 1925.[14] It flew a Huff-Daland Duster, the first true crop duster, designed to combat the boll weevil infestation of cotton crops.[15] C.E. Woolman, general manager and later Delta's first CEO, led a group of local investors to acquire the company's assets. Delta Air Service was incorporated on December 3, 1928, and was named after the Mississippi Delta region.[16][17][18]

Passenger operations began on June 17, 1929,[19] from Dallas, Texas, to Jackson, Mississippi, with stops at Shreveport and Monroe, Louisiana. By June 1930, service had extended east to Atlanta and west to Fort Worth, Texas.[20] Passenger service ceased in October 1930 when the airmail contract for the route Delta had pioneered was awarded to another airline, which purchased the assets of Delta Air Service. Local banker Travis Oliver, acting as a trustee, C.E. Woolman, and other local investors purchased back the crop-dusting assets of Delta Air Service and incorporated as Delta Air Corporation on December 31, 1930.[21]

Delta Air Corporation secured an airmail contract in 1934, and began doing business as Delta Air Lines over Mail Route 24, stretching from Fort Worth, Texas, to Charleston, South Carolina.[20][22][14] Delta moved its headquarters from Monroe, Louisiana, to its current location in Atlanta in 1941.[23] The company name officially became Delta Air Lines in 1945.[24] In 1946, the company commenced regularly scheduled freight transport. In 1949, the company launched the first discounted fares between Chicago and Miami. In 1953, the company launched its first international routes after the acquisition of Chicago and Southern Air Lines.[25] In 1959, it was the first airline to fly the Douglas DC-8. In 1960, it was the first airline to fly Convair 880 jets. In 1964, it launched the Deltamatic reservation systems using computers in the IBM 7070 series. In 1965, Delta was the first airline to fly the McDonnell Douglas DC-9.

Growth and acquisitions

By 1970, Delta had an all-jet fleet, and in 1972 it acquired Northeast Airlines. Trans-Atlantic service began in 1978 with the first nonstop flights from Atlanta to London. In 1981, Delta launched a frequent-flyer program. In 1987, it acquired Western Airlines, and that same year Delta began trans-Pacific service (Atlanta-Portland, Oregon-Tokyo). In 1990, Delta was the first airline in the United States to fly McDonnell Douglas MD-11 jets. In 1991, it acquired substantially all of Pan Am's trans-Atlantic routes and the Pan Am Shuttle, rebranded as the Delta Shuttle. Delta was now the leading airline across the Atlantic.[18][26]

In 1997, Delta was the first airline to board more than 100 million passengers in a calendar year. Also that year, Delta began an expansion of its international routes into Latin America.[27] In 2003, the company launched Song, a low-cost carrier.[18]

Bankruptcy and restructuring (2005–2007)

On September 14, 2005, the company filed for bankruptcy, citing rising fuel costs.[28][29][30] It emerged from bankruptcy in April 2007 after fending off a hostile takeover from US Airways and its shares were re-listed on the New York Stock Exchange.[31][32][33]

Acquisition of Northwest Airlines (2008–2010)

The acquisition of Northwest Airlines was announced on April 14, 2008. It was approved and consummated on October 29, 2008. Northwest continued to operate as a wholly-owned subsidiary of Delta until December 31, 2009, when the Northwest Airlines operating certificate was merged into that of Delta.[34] Delta completed integration with Northwest on January 31, 2010, when their computer reservations system and websites were combined, and the Northwest Airlines brand was officially retired.[35]

Department of Transportation investigation

In July 2024, The U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) opened an investigation into Delta Air Lines, after receiving hundreds of complaints over cancelled and delayed flights that started following the CrowdStrike outage caused technological chaos worldwide.[36]

Destinations and hubs

Destinations

Delta and its worldwide alliance partners operate more than 15,000 flights per day.[8] Delta is the only U.S. carrier that flies to Dakar, and along with competitors United Airlines and American Airlines, are the only two U.S. carriers that fly to Stockholm and Copenhagen, respectively.[37][38]

Hubs

Delta currently has nine hubs:[8][39]

  • Atlanta (ATL): The airline's largest hub serving the Southern and Eastern United States and as its main gateway to Latin America and the Caribbean. Home to Delta's corporate headquarters, as well as Delta TechOps, the airline's primary maintenance base.[40]
  • Boston (BOS): Delta's secondary transatlantic hub. It offers service to destinations in Europe and North America.
  • Detroit (DTW): One of Delta's two Midwest hubs. It is the primary Asian gateway for the Eastern United States and it also provides service to many destinations in the Americas and Europe.
  • Los Angeles (LAX): Delta's secondary hub for the West Coast. It offers service to cities in Latin America, Asia, Australia, Europe, and major domestic cities and West Coast regional destinations.
  • Minneapolis/St. Paul (MSP): One of Delta's two Midwest hubs. It is the primary Canadian gateway for the airline and also serves many American metropolitan destinations, many regional destinations in the upper Midwest, and some select destinations in Europe and Asia.
  • New York–Kennedy (JFK): Delta's primary transatlantic hub. The hub also offers service on transcontinental "prestige routes" to Los Angeles and San Francisco.
  • New York–LaGuardia (LGA): Delta's second New York hub. Delta's service at LaGuardia covers numerous East Coast U.S. cities and several regional destinations in the U.S. and Canada.
  • Salt Lake City (SLC): Delta's hub for the Rocky Mountain region of the United States. Delta's service covers most major U.S. destinations and several regional destinations in the U.S., emphasizing the Rocky Mountains and select destinations in Canada and Mexico, and select cities in Europe, Hawaii and Asia.
  • Seattle/Tacoma (SEA): Delta's primary West Coast hub. The hub serves as an international gateway to Asia for the Western United States. Delta service also includes many major U.S. destinations as well as regional destinations in the Pacific Northwest.[41]

Alliance and codeshare agreements

Delta is a member of the SkyTeam alliance and has codeshare agreements with the following airlines:[42][43]

Fleet

Many in-line airplanes with the Delta Air Lines logo on the tail, parked on the pavement behind a fence.
Delta Air Lines aircraft parked on a taxiway at Kansas City International Airport.

As of December 2024, the Delta Air Lines fleet consists of 986 mainline aircraft, making it one of the two largest commercial airline fleets in the world, along with United Airlines.[61][62][63] Delta Air Lines operates a fleet manufactured by Airbus and Boeing.[64]

Delta operates the world's largest fleets of the Airbus A220, Boeing 717, and Boeing 757, the largest passenger fleet of the Boeing 767, and the largest Airbus A330 fleet of any US airline.

Delta has historically preferred purchasing or leasing used aircraft or using older-generation models to keep initial acquisition costs down. To support this business model, Delta has also invested in an extensive MRO (maintenance, repair, and overhaul) organization called TechOps. However, Delta has acquired lower-priced newer aircraft via discounts on slower-selling models and as aircraft manufacturers transition to newer designs. As a result, as of 2023, Delta flies the second-oldest fleet among the legacy carriers, and the average fleet age has been reduced to 15.3 years.[65][66]

Before its 2008 merger with Northwest Airlines, Delta's fleet was made up solely of American manufacturers' aircraft (except the Airbus A310, which was acquired from the collapsed Pan American World Airways). Aircraft from overseas manufacturers like Airbus joined the fleet after the merger with Northwest, and more have since been added.

Cabin

Delta underwent a cabin branding upgrade in 2015.[67] Availability and exact details vary by route and aircraft type.

Delta One
Delta One Suite

Delta One is the airline's premier business class product, available on long-haul international flights, as well as transcontinental service from New York–Kennedy to Los Angeles and San Francisco.[67]

Delta One features lie-flat seating on all aircraft types and direct aisle access from every seat on all types except the Boeing 757-200 (in which only a special sub-fleet of approximately 20 aircraft feature lie-flats) and in their 'type 35L' ex-LATAM A350s (which use a 2-2-2 layout).[68][69] The Boeing 767-300ER seats, designed by James Thompson, feature a space-saving design whereby the seats are staggered such that when in the fully flat position, the foot of each bed extends under the armrests of the seat in front of it. On the Airbus A330 cabins, Delta One features the Cirrus flat-bed sleeper suite by Zodiac Seats U.S., configured in a reverse herringbone pattern.[70]

All seats are also equipped with a personal, on-demand in-flight-entertainment (IFE) system, universal power-ports, a movable reading light, and a folding work table. Passengers also receive meals, alcoholic beverages, an amenity kit, bedding, and pre-flight Delta Sky Club access.[71]

In August 2016, Delta announced the introduction of Delta One Suites on select widebody fleets. The suites will feature a door to the aisle for enhanced privacy, as well as improved storage space, a larger IFE screen, and an updated design. The suites rolled out on the Airbus A350 fleet, first delivered in July 2017, followed by installation within the Boeing 777 fleet.[72][73] Delta's Airbus A330-900, which began revenue service for the airline in July 2019, also features Delta One Suites.[74] Also in July 2019, Delta began retrofitting a new seat on the 767-400ER, which featured increased privacy and design similar to Delta One Suites, though without a privacy door.[75] These seats lack a door due to the 767's smaller cabin width.

First Class
Delta First class on a Airbus A220

First Class is offered on mainline domestic flights (except those featuring Delta One service), select short- and medium-haul international flights, and Delta Connection aircraft. Seats range from 18.5 to 20.75 inches (47.0 to 52.7 cm) wide and have between 37 and 40 inches (94 and 102 cm) of pitch. Passengers in this class receive a wider variety of free snacks compared to Main Cabin, as well as free drinks and alcohol, and full meal service on flights 900 miles (1,400 km) and longer. Certain aircraft also feature power ports at each seat and free entertainment products from Delta Studio. First Class passengers are also eligible for priority boarding.[71]

Premium Select
Delta Premium Select on an Airbus A350-900

In April 2016, Delta CEO Ed Bastian announced that a new Premium Economy cabin would be added. Since renamed to Premium Select, this cabin will feature extra legroom; adjustable leg rests; extra seat pitch, width, and recline; and a new premium service. Delta introduced it on its new Airbus A350, first delivered in fall 2017, to be followed by the now-retired Boeing 777.[76] In October 2018, Delta announced that it would be selling first class seats on domestically configured Boeing 757 aircraft flying transatlantic routes as Premium Select.[77] Delta's A330-900, delivered in 2019, also offers Premium Select.[78] In 2021, Delta began retrofitting many of its 767-300ER and older A330 aircraft with Premium Select.[79]

Delta Comfort+
Delta Comfort+ on an Airbus A321

Delta Comfort+ seats are installed on all aircraft and feature 34–36 inches (860–910 mm) of pitch; on all Delta One configured aircraft, 35–36 inches (890–910 mm) of pitch and 50 percent more recline over standard Main Cabin seats.[80] Additional amenities include: priority boarding, dedicated overhead space, complimentary beer, wine, and spirits on flights 250 miles (400 km) or more, and complimentary premium snacks on flights 900 miles (1,400 km) or more. Complimentary premium entertainment is available via Delta Studio, with free headsets available on most flights.[71] On transcontinental flights between JFK-LAX/SFO, Delta Comfort+ passengers also get Luvo snack wraps. Certain Medallion members can upgrade from Main Cabin to Comfort+ for free right after booking, while other customers can upgrade for a fee or with SkyMiles.[81]

Main Cabin
Main Cabin on an Airbus A350-900

Main Cabin (Economy Class) is available on all aircraft with seats ranging from 17 to 18.6 inches (43 to 47 cm) wide and 30 to 33 inches (76 to 84 cm) of pitch. The main cabin on some aircraft has an articulating seat bottom where the seat bottom moves forward in addition to the seat back tilting backwards when reclining.[72][82]

Main Cabin passengers receive complimentary snacks and non-alcoholic drinks on all flights 250 miles (400 km) or longer. Alcoholic beverages are also available for purchase. Complimentary meals and alcoholic drinks are provided on long-haul international flights as well as selected transcontinental domestic flights, such as between New York–JFK and Seattle, San Francisco, Los Angeles, and San Diego.[83][84] As part of Delta's Flight Fuel buy on board program, meals are available for purchase on other North American flights 900 miles (1,400 km) or longer.[83]

Delta operated a different buy-on-board program between 2003 and 2005.[85][86] The previous program had items from differing providers, depending on the origin and destination of the flight.[87][88] Prices ranged up to $10 ($16.13 when adjusted for inflation). The airline started the service on a few selected flights in July 2003, and the meal service was initially offered on 400 flights.[89] Delta ended this buy-on-board program in 2005; instead, Delta began offering snacks at no extra charge on flights over 90 minutes to most U.S. domestic flights and some flights to the Caribbean and Latin America. Beginning in mid-March 2005 the airline planned to stop providing pillows on flights within the 48 contiguous U.S. states, Bermuda, Canada, the Caribbean, and Central America. In addition, the airline increased the price of alcoholic beverages on Delta mainline flights from $4 ($6.24 when adjusted for inflation) to $5 ($7.8 when adjusted for inflation); the increase in alcohol prices did not occur on Song flights.[89]

Basic Economy

Basic Economy is a basic version of Main Cabin, offering the same services with fewer flexibility options for a lower price.[67] Examples of fewer flexibility options include no ticket changes, no paid or complimentary upgrades regardless of frequent-flier status, and only having a seat assigned at check-in.[90] As of December 2021, Basic Economy travelers no longer earn award miles (used for redeeming free travel, for example) or medallion qualifying miles (which count towards elite status).[91]

Reward programs

SkyMiles

SkyMiles is the frequent flyer program for Delta Air Lines. Miles do not expire but accounts may be deactivated by Delta in certain cases, such as the death of a program member or fraudulent activity.[92]

Delta Sky Club

A Sky Club in Concourse B at Hartsfield–Jackson Atlanta International Airport

Delta Sky Club is the branding name of Delta's airport lounges. Membership is available through an annual membership that can be purchased with either money or miles. International passengers travelling in Delta One class get free access. Membership can also be granted through top-level Delta status or by being an American Express cardholder with certain exceptions. As of January 2019, Delta no longer offered single-day passes.[93]

Originally, Delta's membership-based airport clubs were called Crown Room lounges, with Northwest's called WorldClubs.

Exclusive Delta One Clubs for customers travelling in business class are slated to open at New York–Kennedy, Los Angeles, and Boston in 2024.[94][95]

In February 2024, Delta announced a new, more exclusive or premium level of Sky Club lounge aimed at high-spending travellers. The first would be at New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport, followed by those in Boston's Logan International Airport and Los Angeles International Airport later in the year. In addition to wellness areas, the lounge would offer a full-service brasserie and a marketplace influenced or assisted by a chef that would feature an open kitchen. The move represented a shift away from a standard offering to something closer to a unique experience for each airport and the city in which the lounge was located.[96][97][98]

SkyBonus

On November 27, 2001, Delta Air Lines launched SkyBonus,[99] a program aimed toward small-to-medium businesses spending between $5,000 and $500,000 annually on air travel.[100] Businesses can earn points toward free travel and upgrades, as well as Sky Club memberships and SkyMiles Silver Medallion status. Points are earned on paid travel based on various fare amounts paid, booking codes, and place origin or destination.[101] While enrolled businesses are able to earn points toward free travel, the travelling passenger is still eligible to earn SkyMiles during his or her travel.[101]

In early 2010, Delta Air Lines merged its SkyBonus program with Northwest's similar Biz Perks program.[101]

Corporate affairs

The key trends for Delta Air Lines are (as of the financial year ending December 31):[102]

Year Revenue
in billion US$[a][b]
Net income
in billion US$[b]
Total assets
in billion US$[b]
Price per share
in US$
[citation needed]
Employees[b] Passenger
load factor
(%)[b]
Fleet

size[c]

Refs.
2005 16.4 −3.8 20.0 76.5 [103]
2006 17.5 −6.2 19.6 78.5 [104]
2007 19.1 1.6 32.4 18.56 [105]
2008 22.6 −8.9 45.0 9.47 81.4 [106]
2009 28.0 −1.2 43.7 7.53 81,106 82.0 983 [107]
2010 31.7 0.6 43.1 12.60 79,684 83.0 815 [108]
2011 35.1 0.9 43.4 9.29 78,400 82.1 775 [109]
2012 36.6 1.0 44.5 10.07 74,000 83.8 717 [110]
2013 37.7 10.5 52.2 20.00 78,000 83.8 743 [111]
2014 40.3 0.7 54.0 37.61 80,000 84.7 772 [112]
2015 40.7 4.5 53.1 46.11 83,000 84.9 809 [113]
2016 39.6 4.3 51.2 43.11 84,000 84.6 832 [114]
2017 41.2 3.5 53.2 49.98 87,000 85.6 856 [115][116]
2018 44.4 3.9 60.2 54.50 89,000 85.5 871 [117][118][119]
2019 44.0 4.7 64.5 55.30 91,000 86 898 [120][121]
2020 17.0 −12.3 71.9 34.97 74,000 55 750 [122][102]
2021 29.8 0.3 72.4 42.82 83,000 69 816 [123][102]
2022 50.5 1.3 72.2 32.86 95,000 84 902 [124][125]
2023 58.0 4.6 73.6 103,000 85 958 [126]

Personnel

Between its mainline operation and subsidiaries, and as of March 2015, Delta employs nearly 80,000 people.[8] Ed Bastian is the current chief executive officer and has served in this position since May 2, 2016.[127] Joanne Smith is Executive Vice President and Chief People Officer responsible for the oversight and support of personnel needs at Delta. She was appointed on October 1, 2014, replacing Mike Campbell.[128]

Delta's 14,500 mainline pilots are represented by the Air Line Pilots Association, International and are the union's largest pilot group.[129][130] The company's approximately 180 flight dispatchers are represented by the Professional Airline Flight Control Association (PAFCA).[131] Not counting the pilots and flight dispatchers, Delta is the only one of the five largest airlines in the United States, and one of only two in the top 9 (the other being JetBlue), whose non-pilot USA domestic staff is entirely non-union.[129] In August 2020, as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, Delta Air Lines announced that it would be cutting 1,941 pilot job positions if it could not conclude a cost reduction deal with its union.[132] In January 2021, Delta said that, thanks to the federal support, it will be able to bring back 400 pilots in full time.[133]

Delta Global Staffing

Delta Global Staffing (DGS) was a temporary employment firm located in Atlanta, Georgia. Delta Global Staffing was a wholly owned subsidiary of Delta Air Lines, Inc., and a division of the internal company DAL Global Services.

Delta Air Lines sold majority ownership of DAL Global Services to Argenbright Holdings on December 21, 2018. As part of the sale, Delta dissolved the staffing division of DGS.[134]

It was founded in 1995 as a provider of temporary staffing for Delta primarily in Atlanta. DGS has since expanded to include customers and businesses outside the airline and aviation industries. DGS now supports customers in major US metropolitan areas.

Delta Global Staffing provided contract workers for short and long term assignments, VMS partnering, VOP on-site management, temp-to-hire, direct placements, and payroll services. DGS services markets such as call centers, customer services and administrative placements, IT & professional recruiting, logistics, finance & accounting, hospitality, and aviation/airline industry.[135]

Delta Air Lines headquarters in Atlanta

Headquarters and offices

Delta's corporate headquarters is located on a corporate campus on the northern boundary of Hartsfield–Jackson Atlanta International Airport, within the city limits of Atlanta.[136][137][138] This location has served as Delta's headquarters since 1941, when the company relocated its corporate offices from Monroe, Louisiana, to Greater Atlanta.[139][140] The crop dusting division of Delta remained headquartered in Monroe until Delta ceased crop dusting in 1966.[18] Before 1981, the Delta corporate campus, an 80-acre (32 ha) plot of land in proximity to the old Hartsfield Airport terminal, was outside the City of Atlanta limits in unincorporated Fulton County. On August 3, 1981, the Atlanta City Council approved the annexation of 141 acres (57 ha) of land, an area containing the Delta headquarters. As of 1981 Delta would have had to begin paying $200,000 annually to the City of Atlanta in taxes. In September 1981, the airline sued the city, challenging the annexation on the basis of the constitutionality of the 1960 City of Atlanta annexation of the Hartsfield old terminal.[141] The City of Atlanta was only permitted to annex areas that are adjacent to areas already in the Atlanta city limits.[141]

In addition to hosting Delta's corporate headquarters, Hartsfield–Jackson is also the home of Delta TechOps, the airline's primary maintenance, repair, and overhaul arm and the largest full-service airline MRO in North America, specializing in engines, components, airframe, and line maintenance.[142]

Delta maintains a large presence in the Twin Cities, with over 12,000 employees[143] in the region as well as significant corporate support functions housed in the Minneapolis area, including the company's information technology divisional offices.[144]

Corporate identity

Tail of an A350 with the airline logo painted on it.
An Airbus A330-300 painted in Delta's current livery, "Upward & Onward"

Delta's logo, often called the "widget", was originally unveiled in 1959. Its triangle shape is taken from the Greek letter delta, and recalls the airline's early history operating in the Mississippi Delta.[145] It is also said to be reminiscent of the swept-wing design of the DC-8, Delta's first jet aircraft.[146]

Delta's current livery is called "Upward & Onward". It features a white fuselage with the company's name in blue lettering and a widget on the vertical stabilizer. Delta introduced its current livery in 2007 as part of a re-branding after it emerged from bankruptcy. The new livery consists of four colors, while the old one (called "colors in motion") uses eight. This meant the switch saved the airline money by removing one day from each aircraft's painting cycle. The airline took four years to repaint all of its aircraft into the current scheme, including aircraft inherited from Northwest Airlines.[145]

Environmental initiatives

In 2008, Delta Air Lines was given an award from the United States Environmental Protection Agency's Design for the Environment (DfE) program for its use of PreKote, a more environmentally friendly, non-hexavalent chromium surface pretreatment on its aircraft, replacing hazardous chemicals formerly used to improve paint adhesion and prevent corrosion. In addition, PreKote reduces water usage by two-thirds and reduces wastewater treatment.

PreKote is also saving money by reducing the time needed to paint each airplane. With time savings of eight to ten percent, it will save an estimated more than $1 million annually.[147]

Despite having purchased 9.7 million metric tonnes of carbon offsets in 2022, Delta was in the process of moving away from such investments to reduce the company's carbon footprint by the end of March of that year and was instead focusing on reducing emissions from company operations.[148] In May 2023, Delta Air Lines received a consumer class action lawsuit filed in Central California U.S. District Court over marketing claims that the company is the world's first carbon neutral airline.[149][150][151]

Deltalina

As part of the re-branding project, a safety video featuring a flight attendant was posted on YouTube in early 2008, getting over 1 million views and the attention of news outlets, specifically for the video's tone mixed with the serious safety message. The flight attendant, Katherine Lee, was dubbed "Deltalina" by a member of FlyerTalk for her resemblance to Angelina Jolie.[152][153] Delta had considered several styles for its current safety video, including animation, before opting for a video presenting a flight attendant speaking to the audience. The video was filmed on a former Song Airlines Boeing 757-200.[154]

On-time performance

In 2023, Delta flights arrived at their destination on time 84.72% of the time, compared to the North American industry average of 74.45% per Cirium. Delta completed 98.82% of its scheduled flights.[155]

Award and recognition

On June 24, 2024, Delta Air Lines was voted 2024 Best Airline in North America and Best Airline Staff Service in North America by Skytrax.[156]

Accidents and incidents

The following are major accidents and incidents that occurred on Delta mainline aircraft. For Northwest Airlines incidents, see Northwest Airlines accidents and incidents. For Delta Connection incidents, see Delta Connection incidents and accidents.

All told, in 14 fatal accidents involving at least one death, 299 passengers and crew died, 11 on two other aircraft died (in two collision accidents), and 16 persons on the ground died (in four accidents).[157]

For a more detailed list of the accidents:


1930s
  • Flight 4
1940s
  • Flight 10
  • Flight 705
  • NC49657
1950s
1960s
1980s
  • August 23, 1980, Hijacking
  • September 13, 1980, Hijacking
  • Flight 722
  • Flight 784
  • Flight 357
  • Flight 191
  • Flight 1141
  • Flight 1554
1990s
2020s

Controversies and passenger incidents

In July 2024, Delta canceled over 7,000 flights during a disruption following the 2024 CrowdStrike incident.[158] The incident closely resembled the 2022 Southwest Airlines scheduling crisis, where a factor outside of the airline's control triggered a resulting mass cancellation event.[158] On Tuesday July 23, 2024, United States Secretary of Transportation, Pete Buttigieg, announced the Department of Transportation would be launching an investigation into the events that prevented Delta Air Lines from swiftly recovering, as other airlines had.[159] Over the course of the event over 500,000 passengers were inconvenienced, according to Delta CEO Ed Bastian, and over 3,000 complaints had been lodged with the government according to the Department of Transportation.[160]

Delta has claimed to have lost $500 million due to the outages and associated costs.[161] The airline has hired David Boies in preparation for litigation against Microsoft and CrowdStrike.[161]

On November 26, 2024, a passenger without a boarding pass bypassed all security protocols and managed to stow aboard a flight from New York JFK airport to Paris.[162]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "Operating revenue"
  2. ^ a b c d e Airline group
  3. ^ Mainline

References

Notes
  1. ^ a b "Airline Certificate Information – Detail View". Washington: Federal Aviation Administration. September 30, 1988. Archived from the original on July 15, 2012. Retrieved September 26, 2007. Certificate Number DALA026A
  2. ^ Russell, Edward (July 11, 2023). "Delta's Expansion in Austin May Be Too Little, Too Late to Catch American and Southwest". Airline Weekly.
  3. ^ Leff, Gary (July 28, 2018). "Delta Names Raleigh-Durham Their Next Focus City (Mini-Hub)". View from the Wing. Archived from the original on June 22, 2021. Retrieved March 18, 2021.
  4. ^ "Delta Air Lines". ch-aviation. Retrieved May 2, 2024.
  5. ^ a b c d e f "US SEC: Delta Air Lines, Inc. Form 10-K". U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. February 12, 2024. Retrieved March 18, 2024.
  6. ^ Ros, Miquel (March 4, 2019). "10 oldest airlines in the world". CNN. Retrieved December 18, 2023.
  7. ^ "Deals & Destinations". Delta Air Lines. Archived from the original on July 27, 2019. Retrieved July 27, 2019.
  8. ^ a b c d e f "Corporate Stats and Facts". Delta Air Lines. Archived from the original on August 1, 2015. Retrieved August 7, 2015.
  9. ^ "Delta Air Lines Announces December Quarter and Full Year 2023 Financial Results". January 12, 2024. Retrieved June 4, 2024.
  10. ^ "Airlines 50 2023 | The Annual Brand Value Ranking | Brandirectory". brandirectory.com. Retrieved August 30, 2023.
  11. ^ "Delta Air Lines". Fortune. Archived from the original on February 24, 2023. Retrieved February 24, 2023.
  12. ^ Gilbertson, Dawn; Pohle, Allison; McAllister, Kevin (January 25, 2024). "The Best and Worst Airlines of 2023". The Wall Street Journal.
  13. ^ "The Best Airlines in the US: 2024 Readers' Choice Awards". Condé Nast Traveler. November 10, 2014. Retrieved November 8, 2024.
  14. ^ a b "Founding". www.deltamuseum.org. Archived from the original on October 1, 2019. Retrieved October 2, 2019.
  15. ^ "Huff Daland Duster, 1925-ca.1948". www.deltamuseum.org. Archived from the original on October 2, 2019. Retrieved October 2, 2019.
  16. ^ Lewis and Newton (1979). Delta: The History of an Airline. Athens, Ga.: University of Georgia Press. pp. 20–21.
  17. ^ "C.E. Woolman". Delta Flight Museum. Archived from the original on April 14, 2019.
  18. ^ a b c d Gay, Charles (April 4, 2019). "Delta's history: From dusting crops to connecting the world". Delta News Hub. Archived from the original on July 17, 2019. Retrieved October 18, 2023.
  19. ^ Norwood, Tom; Wegg, John (2002). North American Airlines Handbook (3rd ed.). Sandpoint, Idaho: Airways International. p. 40. ISBN 0-9653993-8-9.
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