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American Airlines is suspending a half dozen routes out of California. And if Los Angeles International Airport (LAX) is your home airport, four of these are aimed squarely at you.
As KTLA’s Jocelyn Fiset reports, American confirmed Wednesday that it’s temporarily suspending six North American routes, pinning the blame on jet fuel prices. The four involving L.A. are:
- LAX → Cleveland (CLE)
- LAX → Columbus (CMH)
- LAX → Pittsburgh (PIT)
- LAX → Washington Dulles (IAD)
The other two don’t touch Los Angeles, but for the record, they’re both Charlotte hub routes:
- Charlotte (CLT) → Ontario (ONT)
- Charlotte (CLT) → Sacramento (SMF)
The blackout runs from August 5 through October 5. (Don’t worry, World Cup Fans: you’re not affected.) Before you panic-rebook: you’ll still be able to fly LAX to those cities during that window. You’ll need a connection, of course. Anyone booked on an affected nonstop gets rebooked or refunded under American’s schedule-change policy.

So why now? KTLA, citing Reuters, reports American expects its jet fuel bill to climb more than $4 billion this year — a hit the airline has tied to the broader conflict in the Middle East. When fuel costs spike that hard, the thinner routes are first against the wall. (Delta — the airline with its own oil refinery — is presumably watching all of this with a small, quiet smile.)
American, naturally, would rather you not call these “cuts” at all. The airline told KTLA it’s “seasonally adjusted service on select routes” and stressed it is “not suspending any routes indefinitely,” while reminding everyone it still flies more routes than any other U.S. carrier. Translation: please hold your panic, this is normal, look how big our network is.
Maybe so. But American isn’t the first carrier to flinch at LAX this year — Norse Atlantic Airways scrapped its entire LAX summer schedule over the same fuel math. So I’d guess American won’t be the last to quietly change its LAX schedule before fall, either. If you’ve got a nonstop on one of these routes, check your itinerary now — not the night before.
Final Approach
Six routes out of more than 6,500 daily departures isn’t a meltdown — and American clearly doesn’t want it read as one. But it’s a tell. When a carrier the size of AA starts quietly pulling nonstops and saying “fuel” out loud, that’s the canary, not the coal mine. Norse already bailed on LAX for the summer. American’s trimming four of our nonstops. The pattern’s the story.
None of this means the sky is falling. It means the math changed. Fuel’s expensive, the thin routes go first, and that nonstop you’ve quietly relied on for years is only guaranteed until the spreadsheet says otherwise. Welcome to summer 2026, where “seasonally adjusted” is apparently doing an awful lot of heavy lifting.
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And yet United just added LAX-Columbus in March and isn’t doing a “seasonal adjustment”.