Latest News

Air Canada anticipates record labor costs and a record number of new aircraft in 2026

Air Canada executives said on Wednesday that the company will have to deal with increased labor costs in 2026 and a sluggish leisure travel market in the United States. The country's largest airline plans to add 35 new planes to its fleet. Canada's largest airline reported a lower third quarter profit late on Tuesday, as striking cabin crew forced thousands of cancelled flights and the waning demand of travel to and from the U.S. affected results. In early Wednesday trading, shares were down 2.9%.

The airline stated that capacity in seat miles would increase by 0.75% compared to a year ago.

The amount of leisure travel that crosses the border between Canada and America has decreased significantly in recent years. This is due to President Donald Trump's high tariffs on Canadian imports, which sparked widespread protests. Transatlantic travel revenues were flat quarterly on an annualized basis.

Air Canada executives expect double-digit revenue growth for the entire company in the final three months of 2025.

Air Canada CEO Mike Rousseau stated that the carrier expects to receive 35 new planes in 2026. This is the largest number of aircraft it has ever received in one year. The airline will also be retiring some older planes. Air Canada will be able to benefit from Canadian government efforts to diversify its trade away the U.S. by using new Boeing 787 wide body aircraft.

Rousseau stated, "You know Canada diversifies trade around the globe and we believe we can play an important role."

Air Canada also works on fleet changes that will enable its leisure carrier Rouge, to only operate Boeing 737 aircraft until the end of 2026. (Reporting from Allison Lampert, in Montreal, and Nandan Mandayam, in Bangalore; editing by Paul Simao).

(source: Reuters)