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Home » Etihad » Etihad Adds Atlanta Flight: Is A Delta Partnership Imminent?
Delta Air LinesEtihad

Etihad Adds Atlanta Flight: Is A Delta Partnership Imminent?

Matthew Klint Posted onNovember 25, 2024November 25, 2024 7 Comments

a row of monitors in an airplane

Etihad unveiled 10 new routes today, but the one that most caught my eye was new service to Atlanta starting in 2025, which is a mega-hub for Delta Air Lines. Did Etihad simply see an opening in Atlanta to earn money or might a new partnership with Delta be coming soon?

In This Post:

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  • Etihad Announces New Service To Atlanta – Is A Delta Partnership Coming?
    • A Delta – Etihad Partnership Would Make Sense
    • A Delta – Eithad PArtnership is Not Necessary
    • CONCLUSION

Etihad Announces New Service To Atlanta – Is A Delta Partnership Coming?

Etihad will launch a new 4x weekly flight between Abu Dhabi (AUH) and Atlanta (ATL) starting on July 2, 2025. The flight will operate with the following schedule:

  • EY13 Abu Dhabi (AUH) – Atlanta (ATL) dep 9:30 AM arr 4:30 PM
  • EY14 Atlanta (ATL) – Abu Dhabi (AUH) dep 10:00 PM arr 7:30 PM+1

This new service will be operated by an Airbus A350-1000 aircraft (review here) and run in both directions on Sundays, Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays. The 7,609-mile flight is scheduled for 15 hours traveling from Abu Dhabi to Atlanta and 13.5 hours in the other direction.

The obvious question is whether Etihad’s choice to operate to Atlanta may be linked to a partnership with Delta Air Lines? I’ll make an argument why the answer may be yes and why the answer may be no.

A Delta – Etihad Partnership Would Make Sense

Atlanta offers a wealth of connecting traffic that could make Etihad’s service even more profitable and help to fill planes without having to discount pricing. More importantly, Delta does not have a partnership with one of the “Big 3” in the Middle East. United Airlines partners with Emirates and American Airlines partners with Qatar Airways, but Etihad currently is merely just a secondary partner of American.

While Delta has announced its intention to fly to Saudi Arabia and work more closely with Riyadh Air and Saudia, a partnership with Etihad would not inhibit that and could instead open many new destinations for both Etihad and Delta passengers via codeshare flying.

The fact that Etihad chose Atlanta of all places in the USA does make me wonder whether we will soon hear about a partnership with Delta.

A Delta – Eithad PArtnership is Not Necessary

But Qatar Airways’ own service to Atlanta demonstrates that Atlanta itself is a growing and promising stand-alone market and suggests that even without a Delta partnership, Etihad sees a profitable path forward. Qatar Airways’ load factors are thought to be above 90% on its Atlanta – Doha route and it certainly charges a fare premium for nonstop flights to the Middle East.

Sensing that opening and noting that Emirates does not fly to Atlanta, perhaps Etihad just determined that it could make money on this route from Abu Dhabi connections, even without Atlanta connections. That strategy has worked for Turkish Airlines as well…

Think about it: you can get to nearly anywhere in the world with one-stop if flying Etihad (or Emirates or Doha). That is going to be attractive for a whole lot of people in the US Southeast trying to reach Africa, the Middle East, Asia, and even Australia.

I don’t think a partnership with Delta is necessary in order for the new route to be successful.

CONCLUSION

Etihad will launch service to Atlanta on July 2, 2025 and the flights are already for sale (though there is no saver award space yet). Let the speculation begin on whether Delta and Etihad will announce a closer partnership. I tend to think that an announcement is coming, though I also acknowledged (as I explained above) that this partnership need not happen for Etihad to succeed in Atlanta.

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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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7 Comments

  1. Greg Reply
    November 25, 2024 at 11:51 am

    Please no why would we want that currency to be associated with Etihad

    Maybe it’s preemptive against the Delta / Saudi relationship

    • Matthew Klint Reply
      November 25, 2024 at 12:03 pm

      Perhaps the only major carrier that has a worse FQTV program than Delta is Eithad with its absolutely punitive cancellation fees assessed in miles.

  2. Antwerp Reply
    November 25, 2024 at 12:28 pm

    So much for the clue of the “Liberty Bell” in their clue teaser, lol. Everyone thought that was the obvious one.

  3. Howard Miller Reply
    November 25, 2024 at 1:13 pm

    With USA Customs Preclearance available in Abu Dhabi (AUH), imagining the possibilities & extraordinary advantage of being able to arrive & connect without the hassle of clearing customs & rechecking bags in Atlanta by having a code-share alliance with Delta at its fortress hub, which just so happens to also be the world’s busiest airport is super exciting & tantalizing!

    We shall see.

  4. Jason Reply
    November 25, 2024 at 2:21 pm

    Never say never, but Air France just withdrew their flight from Paris to Abu Dhabi because the partnership with Etihad didnt work.

    Delta really wouldnt get anything from feeding people to this flight. All they would do is dilute revenue on their own metal flights to Europe, for those who would then connect on partner flights to India, etc. Delta wouldnt get a penny of the revenue associated with the overwater or beyond segments.

    You say “Atlanta offers a wealth of connecting traffic that could make Etihad’s service even more profitable and help to fill planes without having to discount pricing.” No, you have this backwards. This WOULD represent a dilution of revenue going to Etihad. If they can fill the entire plane with people originating and deplaning in Atlanta, they keep all the revenue associated with that traffic. If they have to add a Delta leg before/ after Atlanta, they have to pay Delta a negotiated pro rate or just eat the fare for the Delta-operated leg. That’s dilutionary.
    OF course, this is all dependent on whether Etihad can fill up their planes locally. I think they can.
    Per your point, load factors, which are publicly available through DOT, ARE high on QR and TK from Atlanta.
    Atlanta is a growing market, has lots of people who go to/ from the destinations Etihad serves, and should have no trouble filling up a plane on a less-than-daily basis. Delta would maybe be nice, but only necessary, should they not be able to capitalize on the strength of this expanding market.

  5. PM1 Reply
    November 25, 2024 at 7:42 pm

    Etihad doesn’t need Delta. QR & TK flights are going completely full to India with most of the traffic originating from the Atlanta metro area. Plus fares from Atlanta are higher than many major cities like NYC, IAD, ORD etc.

    • Matthew Klint Reply
      November 25, 2024 at 8:02 pm

      I certainly hope you are correct.

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