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JetBlue Moves Fast After Spirit's Collapse
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. - Spirit Airlines ceased operations early this morning after seven years of losses and two Chapter 11 bankruptcy filings, according to Skift. And JetBlue? Well, they're not wasting any time filling the gap. The airline is moving aggressively to expand at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport, Spirit's largest base where the defunct carrier held roughly 30% market share in 2025. JetBlue, which previously commanded about 20% of the FLL market, sees a rare opportunity to establish the South Florida airport as its third major hub alongside JFK and Boston. The numbers tell the story. JetBlue plans to double its Fort Lauderdale flight attendant base from 682 to approximately 1,364 crew members, according to Skift. That's not a tweak; that's a wholesale expansion that signals JetBlue's intention to become the dominant carrier at FLL.Where the Crews Are Coming From
But here's the thing: you can't just conjure up flight attendants overnight. JetBlue is making some tough calls at underperforming bases to fuel this growth. The airline wants to shrink its Orlando base by 30%, which currently has 1,106 flight attendants, Skift reported. Newark and Los Angeles are also facing 30% cuts, while even JFK, JetBlue's flagship hub with 1,245 flight attendants, will see a 10% reduction in its Boston base. It's a classic case of robbing Peter to pay Paul, except in this scenario, Paul might actually turn a profit. Those crew reassignments underscore just how seriously JetBlue is taking the Fort Lauderdale opportunity.New Routes and Rescue Fares
JetBlue already grew its FLL capacity by 23% year over year in the first quarter of 2026, according to One Mile at a Time, while managing to achieve 5% revenue per available seat mile growth. That's the kind of math airlines dream about: more flights and higher fares. The expansion includes nonstop service to 21 new cities from Fort Lauderdale and additional frequencies on 20 existing routes, One Mile at a Time reported. And for passengers stranded by Spirit's shutdown, JetBlue is capping Blue Basic fares at $299 on competing nonstop routes from FLL and San Juan, according to The Points Guy. San Juan is getting similar treatment, by the way. JetBlue plans to double its flight attendant base there from 228 crew members, Skift reported, positioning the Puerto Rican hub for growth alongside Fort Lauderdale.The Lounge Question
If you've flown through Fort Lauderdale recently, you know it's not exactly drowning in premium amenities. JetBlue knows this too, and the airline is actively pursuing space for a BlueHouse lounge in Terminal 3. "We are looking at trying to find space for a BlueHouse facility in Fort Lauderdale... that's the natural, next, third step," said Marty St. George, JetBlue president, according to The Points Guy. That would give JetBlue lounges in New York, Boston and Fort Lauderdale, cementing FLL's status as a true focus city rather than just a sun-and-fun destination market.The New Fort Lauderdale Math
Spirit's collapse changes the competitive landscape at FLL almost overnight. With the ultra-low-cost carrier out of the picture, JetBlue has room to grow without simply cannibalizing Spirit's rock-bottom fares. The airline's Q1 performance at Fort Lauderdale suggests it's already finding that sweet spot: more seats in the market but higher revenue per seat. For travelers, this could mean more flight options from Fort Lauderdale, especially to destinations Spirit served. But don't expect JetBlue to match Spirit's bare-bones pricing on every route. Those $299 rescue fare caps are a short-term olive branch; JetBlue's long-term play is about offering more legroom and free snacks at prices somewhere between Spirit's old fares and legacy carrier premiums. The crew base doubling is the real tell here. You don't move 700-plus flight attendants to a city unless you're planning to park a lot more aircraft there. And with JetBlue pulling back from Orlando, Newark and Los Angeles, those planes have to go somewhere. Fort Lauderdale is the answer.What Comes Next
JetBlue executives remain undeterred by the carrier's earlier interest in bailing out Spirit, emphasizing Fort Lauderdale's strategic value, according to Travel Weekly. That confidence looks justified now. Spirit's shutdown hands JetBlue a growth opportunity that would've taken years to build organically. The question is whether JetBlue can execute without overextending itself. The airline has struggled financially in recent years, and rapid expansion comes with risks. But Fort Lauderdale offers something JetBlue needs: a warm-weather market with business and leisure demand where it can actually charge sustainable fares now that Spirit's no longer in the picture. For frequent Fort Lauderdale flyers, expect to see a lot more JetBlue tail fins on the tarmac in the coming months. Whether that translates to better fares or just fewer ultra-cheap options depends on how much competition Southwest, Frontier and the legacy carriers bring to the fight.More travel news
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