Coronavirus

Holiday Weekend Air Travel Surges to Highest Levels Since Thanksgiving as Covid Cases Continue to Drop

Lines of people wait to get through TSA airport screening.
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  • TSA data show some of the busiest days since the year-end holidays.
  • Airline executives have said spring break bookings have been strong.
  • Higher costs for fuel and labor are expected to push up fares.

U.S. airports were the busiest since Thanksgiving over Presidents Day weekend, a sign that leisure travel continues to recover as Covid cases fall further.

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The Transportation Security Administration screened nearly 8.4 million people from Friday through Monday, more than double the number from a year ago but down 7.5% from the 9 million people the TSA screened in 2020, a month before Covid-19 was declared a pandemic.

U.S. airline executives have recently said that leisure travel continues to recover or surpass pre-pandemic levels, particularly for domestic trips. Fares are likely to rise along with stronger demand this spring as well as amid a surge in airline costs, including for fuel and labor.

Corporate and long-haul international travel has been slower to recover as companies and individuals navigate a host of travel restrictions and many offices haven't fully reopened.

Some countries, including the U.K., France and Israel have loosened entry requirements. U.S. airlines and several other travel industry groups earlier this month urged the Biden administration to drop predeparture Covid testing requirements for vaccinated travelers headed to the U.S.

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