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Home » American Airlines » American Airlines Adds Nonstop Summer Flights To Budapest And Prague
American AirlinesNews

American Airlines Adds Nonstop Summer Flights To Budapest And Prague

Matthew Klint Posted onAugust 7, 2025August 7, 2025 15 Comments

an airplane parked at an airport

Summer 2026 looks more exciting for American Airlines passengers hoping to visit Central Europe. Today, the airline announced seasonal service to Budapest and Prague from its Philadelphia hub, along with a handful of other new or extended routes.

American Airlines Expands Central Europe Network With Seasonal Flights to Budapest and Prague

American Airlines has just announced two new European routes launching in summer 2026: Philadelphia (PHL) to Budapest (BUD) and Philadelphia to Prague (PRG). Both destinations will be served with Boeing 787‑8 aircraft beginning May 21, 2026. American will be the only U.S. carrier offering nonstop service to Budapest, and it will also mark a return to Prague after an eight-year route suspension.

Conservative European Growth In Summer 2026

These flights are part of a broader network expansion announced today that includes:

  • Philadelphia to Budapest (new seasonal service) – summer seasonal service starts May 21, 2026 on 787-8
  • Philadelphia to Prague (return of seasonal service) – summer seasonal service starts May 21, 2026 on 787-8
  • Dallas-Fort Worth to Athens (new) – summer seasonal service begins May 21, 2026 on 787-8
  • Dallas-Fort Worth to Zurich (new) – Summer seasonal service from May 21 to August 4, 2026 on 777-200
  • Miami to Milan (new) – year-round service starts March 29, 2026 on 787-8
  • Dallas-Fort Worth to Buenos Aires (extended) – service extended from May 21 to August 3, 2026 on 787-8

AA also announced it would upguage Tokyo Haneda service from both Los Angeles (LAX) and Dallas (DFW) from 787-9s to 777-200s (from LAX) and a 777-300ER (from DFW), representing a 45% increase in premium seating.

Brian Znotins, American’s Senior Vice President of Network and Schedule Planning, explained:

“Customers continue to tell us that Europe is where they want to go each summer and these new routes make it even easier to cross the Atlantic in 2026. We are excited to grow our network to new destinations like Prague and Budapest and offer even more premium travel experiences on our flights to Tokyo.”

The limited route additions reflect the reality that AA is still uncertain over aircraft deliveries in 2026. AA is due to receive more 787 Dreamliners, but its Airbus A321XLR is delayed. I also find it surprising that in the battle over Chicago O’Hare, AA is not adding any new longhaul routes. We also see no new routes from New York JFK, reflecting the difficulty and capacity constraints in that market.

CONCLUSION

American Airlines is deepening its transatlantic network with a logical expansion into Central Europe. With Budapest and Prague coming online for summer 2026, American is trying to find (or perhaps stimulate) demand in markets that are not saturated. At the same time, the limited expansion reflects the frustration of aircraft delivery delays that have hindered more robust growth.

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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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15 Comments

  1. Dave Edwards Reply
    August 7, 2025 at 10:43 am

    Dude the site may have a virus, keep getting pop ups for a scan.

    • Matthew Klint Reply
      August 7, 2025 at 10:49 am

      I’ll alert Boarding Area folks. I hope not!

      • Connor Reply
        August 7, 2025 at 12:04 pm

        I’ve been getting the same. It’s really really bad and not just on this website. I’ve been starting to wonder if it’s an issue with my phone, or perhaps google adsense or something similar. It’s really really pervasive in a way I’ve never seen before.

    • Christian Reply
      August 7, 2025 at 3:18 pm

      +1

      I get it from various BA sites but only on my Iphone. It tarted back up a week or two ago after a long hiatus.

  2. MeanMeosh Reply
    August 7, 2025 at 11:05 am

    My son has demanded a trip to Switzerland next summer (he’s obsessed with Ticket to Ride Switzerland – check it out, Augustine might enjoy it), so the DFW-ZRH route is timely. Assuming, of course, I can find J space for something less than 450,000 miles each way…

  3. Raul Hernandez Reply
    August 7, 2025 at 11:41 am

    You know what would be really helpful? When airlines share marketing stuff that contains incomplete details like “summer seasonal service begins May 21, 2026” please ask them when that “summer seasonal service” ENDS, too. Some people make their plans well in advance, and for many of us, traveling at the END of “summer season” (like September into early October) is a great time to beat the crowds and high prices (and intense heat wave) that make visiting much of Europe so unappealing in mid-summer. But who the frack knows if AA will be flying there or be able to get me home after Labor Day.

    So thanks for passing along the marketing material that breathlessly hypes the start date of their “seasonal service.” But without knowing the end date too, it’s a lot less exciting (and useful) to many of us. Please pass this question along to those shoveling out the marketing announcements and share their response if you can. Thank you.

    • Matthew Klint Reply
      August 7, 2025 at 12:22 pm

      Fair enough.

    • bossa Reply
      August 7, 2025 at 9:35 pm

      Agreed. It regularly pisses me off when they do this. Short of doing tedious ‘guess work’ research I haven’t found resolution. A really simple/couteious concept but maybe too advanced for the marketing department or maybe they’re just too traumatized to mention that a seasonal scheduled service actually has a TERMINATION date !

    • Tim Dunn Reply
      August 7, 2025 at 10:28 pm

      part of the reason is that the end date is more than one year from now. Airlines sell flights up to 11 months in advance.

      They do not generally publish an end date that is beyond the date that their inventory is on sale.

      If this is a summer seasonal route, it will likely end by the end of September 2026; if it runs until the end of the summer IATA season, it will be late Oct.

      When your intended return date is 11 months away from “today” you will know whether they have loaded schedules to operate.

  4. Grzegorz Reply
    August 7, 2025 at 1:22 pm

    Shame that Krakow (KRK) is missed yet again. It’s a beautiful, underrated city – though tourism is growing and new hotels are being opened (JW Marriott, Nobu, Le Meridien will open next year and there are talks of Waldorf-Astoria and Ritz-Carlton coming too). AA was planning on doing a 5x weekly in 2020, due to obvious reasons it never materialised – and never came back. Actually it’s pretty weird that there’s no competition for LOT on TATL routes from WAW and KRK – I think the last airline that that flew one of those routes was AC Rouge on WAW-YYZ and before that…Pan-Am? Or Delta on one of their flights via Frankfurt?

    • Jerry Reply
      August 7, 2025 at 2:22 pm

      I flew WAW-JFK on Delta L-1011s many times when I lived in Warsaw in the 1990s and early 2000s. At the end of the 1990s, Delta had a nonstop to JFK and a flight to AMS. Interestingly, AA partnered with LOT, but did not serve WAW. There was AA signage up in the LOT check-in area at the airport.

      • Tim Dunn Reply
        August 7, 2025 at 10:31 pm

        WAW was part of the FRA hub operation that DL inherited from Pan Am.
        DL had WAW based FAs and DL sponsored visas for them for a time, IIRC. I am not sure if the US said it wouldn’t allow visas for foreign FAs or if the market conditions were not good enough for the route even w/ lower cost FAs.

        Many of the Eastern European routes from FRA did transition to nonstops to the US including PRG but WAW was not one of them.

  5. Christian Reply
    August 7, 2025 at 3:27 pm

    I’m wondering where all these planes are going to come from. Unless American expects a bunch of new 787’s in May 2026 they’re going to have to pull these from somewhere and they almost never tell you from where.

    There’s also the concern about whether AA can pull this off on schedule. They were supposed to have the new premium configuration flying to ZRH starting in September so I booked flights in November just to be safe but they’re still showing the worse older version.

    Also on the Zurich front, American is killing off the DFW-ZRH flight super early. I would have figured they would have ended it in September or later.

    Lastly I’d like to know when American plans on discontinuing or reducing the new seasonal services. How do you plan with only half the information?

  6. Tevi Reply
    August 7, 2025 at 3:40 pm

    Why not Istanbul? Gets a lot more tourists than PRG and BUD, and can benefit from AA’s connectivity across the US.

    • Aaron Reply
      August 7, 2025 at 4:50 pm

      Turkish and United probably beat them to it.

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