Economics & Energy

Airline Bankruptcy and Service Cessations

The early years of deregulation saw numerous filings amongst startup carriers that lacked viable business plans or sufficient capitalization. However, recession, fierce competition, rising costs, the Gulf War, and the September 11, 2001 tragedy prompted bankruptcy filings amongst several larger carriers.

View an unofficial compilation of airline bankruptcies or service cessations.

Many lay observers broadly equate bankruptcy with going out of business. However, the U.S. Bankruptcy Code and the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure are complex, affording companies different means of addressing their respective financial plights. The most common path, commonly known as Chapter 11 (or "Reorganization"), "ordinarily is used by commercial enterprises that desire to continue operating...and repay creditors concurrently through a court-approved plan of reorganization." Under more extreme circumstances, companies engage in Chapter 7 (or "Liquidation") proceedings, which entail "an orderly, court-supervised procedure by which a trustee collects the assets of the debtor’s estate, reduces them to cash, and makes distributions to creditors, subject to the debtor’s right to retain certain exempt property and the rights of secured creditors."

For more information on federal bankruptcy law, proceedings and terminology, please consult Bankruptcy Basics, published by the Bankruptcy Judges Division of the Administrative Office of the United States Courts. Other sources of bankruptcy research include BankruptcyData.com, the American Bankruptcy Institute, and the Cornell University Legal Information Institute.

Sources: ATA research; U.S. Department of Transportation; Administrative Office of the United States Courts.

Last Modified: 4/6/2009

  help desk