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Home » Alaska Airlines » Alaska Airlines Expands West Coast Network With 13 New Routes, Two New Cities, And More Hawaii Flights
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Alaska Airlines Expands West Coast Network With 13 New Routes, Two New Cities, And More Hawaii Flights

Matthew Klint Posted onOctober 24, 2025 14 Comments

an airplane flying over water

Alaska Airlines is growing again, this time with focus on San Diego, Portland, and Hawaii.

Alaska Airlines Expands With 13 New Routes, Two New Cities, And More Hawaii Flights

Alaska Airlines has announced 13 new routes set to begin in 2026, including service to two new destinations, Tulsa, Oklahoma and Arcata-Eureka, California. The additions strengthen its network on the U.S. West Coast and add more links to Hawaii, with particular focus on San Diego and Portland.

New Alaska Airlines 2026 Routes

The new routes begin rolling out in March 2026 and continue through next summer. San Diego and Portland are the biggest winners, with five and four new routes, respectively.

From San Diego (SAN), Alaska will add daily service to:

  • Tulsa (TUL)
  • Dallas/Fort Worth (DFW)
  • Raleigh-Durham (RDU)
  • Oakland (OAK
  • Santa Barbara (SBA)

The carrier says this represents a 35% increase in San Diego capacity next spring compared to 2025, bolstering the city’s hub status.

Portland (PDX) sees new flights to:

  • Baltimore (BWI)
  • Idaho Falls (IDA)
  • Philadelphia (PHL)
  • St. Louis (STL)

Portland will also see a second flight to Newark, increased service Lihue, Kauai (LIH), and a third daily flight to Santa Rosa-Sonoma.

Seattle gains new service to both Tulsa and Arcata-Eureka. On the leisure side, a new Honolulu–Burbank nonstop will launch next May, along with a new Ontario–Santa Rosa-Sonoma connection in California wine country.

Los Angeles-Kahului, Maui (OGG) goes to two daily nonstops with an additional seasonal flight, and San Francisco-Kona (KOA) and San Francisco-Lihue (LIH) will increase in June 2026 to daily nonstops.

In total, Alaska says it will serve 142 destinations by 2026, the most in company history.

Here’s a summary of the new routes:

Route Start Date Frequency Aircraft
San Diego – Tulsa March 18, 2026 Daily E175
San Diego – Dallas/Fort Worth April 22, 2026 2x Daily 737
San Diego – Oakland April 22, 2026 4x Daily E175
San Diego – Raleigh-Durham April 22, 2026 Daily 737
San Diego – Santa Barbara April 22, 2026 2x Daily E175
Seattle – Arcata-Eureka April 8, 2026 Daily E175
Seattle – Tulsa March 18, 2026 Daily E175
Portland – Baltimore May 13, 2026 Seasonal 737
Portland – Idaho Falls May 13, 2026 Seasonal E175
Portland – Philadelphia May 13, 2026 Seasonal 737
Portland – St. Louis May 13, 2026 Seasonal 737
Honolulu – Burbank May 13, 2026 Seasonal 737
Ontario – Santa Rosa-Sonoma March 18, 2026 Daily E175

 Conservative Growth Focuses On West Coast Strength

The San Diego growth is especially interesting. Alaska already commands a strong position up and down the West Coast, but its San Diego expansion works to further make San Diego an alternative to Los Angeles as a southern California base. With a mix of East Coast, Hawaii, and regional routes, Alaska is focusing not just on local traffic in SAN, but pushing connecting traffic as well, the biggest indicator of a hub. For example, it says its new flights from Santa Barbara – San Diego service are timed for onward connections from SAN to East Coast and Hawaiian destinations.

For Portland, the new routes are less about breaking new ground and more about restoring breadth. The city’s connectivity slipped a bit during the pandemic years, and these additions, especially to Philadelphia and St. Louis, suggest a return to form as Alaska rebuilds its midcontinent reach.

The Hawaii expansion is consistent with Alaska’s long-running strategy: own the West Coast-to-Islands market. Adding Burbank–Honolulu is a smart move given pent-up demand and the convenience of bypassing LAX, a route that was last served by Aloha Airlines (also by a 737) 20 years ago.

Overall, this announcement is conservative, but logical: Alaska is filling gaps in the network, deepening existing markets, and preparing for a future in which its pending merger with Hawaiian Airlines could reshape the West Coast landscape even further.

Alaska remains quite weak on the East Coast, but I’m hoping that one day it will be Alaska and JetBlue and that merge, not JetBlue and United.

CONCLUSION

Alaska’s latest expansion shows a disciplined approach to growth. The routes make sense geographically and commercially, and the emphasis on San Diego and Portland signals where the airline sees opportunity. For frequent Alaska flyers in Southern California like me, the schedule next spring brings more nonstop options and fewer connections through Seattle.


image: Alaska Airlines

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About Author

Matthew Klint

Matthew is an avid traveler who calls Los Angeles home. Each year he travels more than 200,000 miles by air and has visited more than 135 countries. Working both in the aviation industry and as a travel consultant, Matthew has been featured in major media outlets around the world and uses his Live and Let's Fly blog to share the latest news in the airline industry, commentary on frequent flyer programs, and detailed reports of his worldwide travel.

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14 Comments

  1. Gene Reply
    October 24, 2025 at 9:15 am

    @ Matthew — Alaska’s operation at SAN already seems strained. All these additional flights are a disaster in the making.

    • 1990 Reply
      October 24, 2025 at 12:53 pm

      For real, Gene. Last night they had an IT outage that lead to a lot of cancellations and delays.

      • Güntürk Üstün Reply
        October 24, 2025 at 6:05 pm

        That’s right… Hundreds of Alaska Airlines flights were canceled after a technical systems outage Thursday night triggered a seven-hour grounding of the carrier’s flights nationwide, an apparent repeat of a similar outage and grounding ASA faced earlier this year.

        Dr. Güntürk Üstün

        • Güntürk Üstün Reply
          October 24, 2025 at 6:33 pm

          * Corrected Comment *

          That’s right… Hundreds of Alaska Airlines flights were canceled after a technical systems outage Thursday night triggered a seven-hour grounding of the carrier’s flights nationwide, an apparent repeat of a similar outage and grounding AS faced earlier this year.

          Dr. Güntürk Üstün

  2. Dick Bupkiss Reply
    October 24, 2025 at 9:45 am

    Looking forward to hearing from them their next new international routes.

  3. Sam Reply
    October 24, 2025 at 9:51 am

    “…. preparing for a future in which its pending merger with Hawaiian Airlines could reshape the West Coast landscape even further.”

    The merger isn’t pending.

  4. Southworst Airlines Reply
    October 24, 2025 at 10:11 am

    “Alaska remains quite weak on the East Coast, but I’m hoping that one day it will be Alaska and JetBlue and that merge, not JetBlue and United”. I hope so, too, Matthew. JetBlue and Alaska-Hawaiian are in the top 5 of my favorite airlines.

  5. Steve Reply
    October 24, 2025 at 10:52 am

    Tulsa gets new non-stop daily flights via regional jets to two new locations, but yet AS continues to ignore expansion in OKC where they have just one daily non-stop on a mainline aircraft. Sad.

    • Trey Reply
      October 24, 2025 at 1:10 pm

      People in OKC are more than welcome to drive up to Tulsa and fly out of there. We’ve done it multiple times to take the OKC nonstop to Seattle.

      OKC is not the only city in Oklahoma.

      • 1990 Reply
        October 24, 2025 at 10:03 pm

        I tell folks that Oklahoma is actually quite an interesting place to visit, too. Like, y’all have the new museum on the Greewood district in Tulsa; the Native Americans museum in OKC, and the national memorial and museum is incredibly well done. And FRIDA in OKC is an excellent restaurant. Anyway, I enjoyed my visit to the state.

        • Mirza Reply
          November 6, 2025 at 8:35 pm

          Yeah, but there are tolls everywhere.

  6. Güntürk Üstün Reply
    October 24, 2025 at 6:08 pm

    Ambitious AS plans for 2026…

    Dr. Güntürk Üstün

  7. Jeff Reply
    October 25, 2025 at 12:51 am

    Alaska is the GSA city pair contract holder between Burbank and Honolulu for FY26. Now it makes sense why.

  8. Mirza Reply
    November 6, 2025 at 8:34 pm

    Is there any rationale to this? Who’s flying San Diego to Tulsa (I get the Texas route, given the number of Californians who moved there, but Oklahoma)?

Leave a Reply to Mirza Cancel reply

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