Anyone who has booked a flight lately knows fares are not cheap. The airlines’ pricing data pattern over the last few months is unmistakable. Oil goes up, fuel costs surge, and airlines pass the pain to you.
Now, the only question is how much of it they can absorb before it lands on your seat. And on July 15, United Airlines (UAL) answered that question with unusual transparency.
The 95-year-old United Airlines (UAL) disclosed it expects nearly $6 billion in additional fuel expense for full-year 2026 compared to what it had modeled at the start of the year, according to the company’s July 15 Q2 earnings release.
Oil prices have risen approximately 15% since the start of July alone, following renewed U.S.-Iran hostilities. West Texas Intermediate crude sat near $67 per barrel on July 2. As of this writing on July 16, it is at $80, according to Trading Economics data.
Yahoo Finance data shows UAL closed July 15 at $120.97, up slightly on the session. However, shares fell roughly 3% in premarket trading on July 16 as the market processed the Q3 earnings miss compared to expectations.
The fuel math and what it means for the price of your next ticket
Fuel typically consumes about a third of an airline’s total operating costs, according to the International Air Transport Association (IATA) June 2026 data.
When that cost doubles, as jet fuel essentially has since the Strait of Hormuz closure on February 28, 2026, of course, the economics of running an airline change fundamentally and quickly.
IATA forecasts jet fuel to average $152 per barrel in 2026, a 68.8% increase from the 2025 average of $90, according to its June 2026 Global Outlook for Air Transport.
More Airlines:
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Total airline fuel spending globally is projected to reach $350 billion, up 39.3% year over year. Fuel now accounts for 31.4% of total airline operating expenses, up from 25.4% in 2025, according to IATA data.
Airlines are passing those costs through directly to your fares. The IATA projects the average nominal one-way fare to rise to $193 in 2026, a 7.1% increase from $180 in 2025.
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Including baggage fees and ancillary charges, the average return fare is expected to reach $462, up 7.7%, according to the same IATA report. Passenger ticket yields are forecast to grow 7% year over year, reversing years of flat or declining yield trends.
In fact, United’s own Q2 data backs that pricing dynamic. Total revenue per available seat mile grew 12.1% year over year in the second quarter.
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Yields were up 12% during Q2. The airline recovered approximately 50% of its $2.3 billion year-over-year fuel cost increase during the quarter, and it expects to recover 80% to 90% in Q3, with full recovery by Q4, according to United‘s guidance commentary.
My obvious interpretation of the math is that what United cannot absorb, you will pay as a traveler.
United’s Q2 results and Q3 guide, strong revenue, clouded by fuel
The Q2 results themselves were genuinely strong by most measures.
- Total operating revenue reached $17.7 billion, up 16% year over year.
- Adjusted diluted EPS came in at $1.99, topping the analyst estimate of $1.88.
- Premium revenue grew 16%
- Basic economy and loyalty revenue each grew 11%, cargo revenue rose 23%, and contracted business revenue jumped 27%.
- The second-quarter on-time departure rate was United’s best for a Q2 since 2021.
Source: United Q2 Results
One key number caught my attention. United flew a company record of 640,717 customers in a single day on June 18. I think that’s impressive for a company that once filed for bankruptcy 24 years ago, according to TheStreet.
All of that, and more, is genuinely and massively impressive. But Q3 guidance missed. United forecast Q3 adjusted EPS of $2.50 to $3.50, a midpoint of $3.00, against the analyst consensus of $3.60, according to TheStreet.
The $575 million in added fuel cost from July’s oil spike alone, equivalent to $1.12 per share in adjusted earnings, is the reason for that gap. The average fuel price per gallon is expected to run at $3.69 in Q3. AAA Fuel Prices reports that on July 16, prices were at $3.94 per gallon.
TheStreet confirms that for the full year, United raised the floor of its EPS guidance to $9 from $7, now guiding $9 to $11, with a midpoint of $10 versus the analyst consensus of $10.46. The company noted it would exceed the high end of both Q3 and full-year guidance if fuel returns to early July levels.
How United is managing through the shock and what it signals to you
CEO Scott Kirby was direct about the strategy.
“When oil prices spiked in March, we quickly and decisively acted to adjust our schedules, while simultaneously doubling down on our customer investments,” he said in the earnings release.
United raised $3.7 billion in new liquidity through private bank transactions during Q2, framing it as “low-cost insurance from geopolitical uncertainty and the possibility of an extreme spike in oil prices.”
The airline also expects Q4 capacity to be lower than the currently published schedules, with further reductions possible if fuel stays elevated.
My interpretation of that capacity-management signal is important for every traveller. Fewer seats available plus strong demand equals higher fares. Both you and I now know that it is not speculation. That is basic airline economics playing out in real time across every major U.S. carrier simultaneously.
The demand side remains genuinely strong. United’s best-ever customer satisfaction scores for check-in, food and beverage, and in-flight entertainment suggest travelers are not yet pulling back despite higher prices.
Even Starlink Wi-Fi is installed on 450 aircraft, with nearly 1,000 expected by year-end. That delivers satisfaction scores twice as high as other connected flights. The first Airbus A321XLR enters domestic service this fall, as United reported.
My final take is this. Unless oil retreats from its current $80 level back toward the $67, where it started in July, it’s fair to say that the pricing pressure on your next flight itinerary will only continue to build.
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