Mon, May 28, 2012, 7:51 PM EDT - U.S. Markets closed for Memorial Day

Why Europe Has The Cheapest Airfare


The price of an airline ticket has increased substantially worldwide over the past year as unrest in the Middle East once again worries investors about the oil supply. As fuel surcharges rise, the overall cost of travel jumps for the average consumer. In comparing the ticket costs for American airlines versus European airlines, the latter is still significantly cheaper. What makes European air travel less expensive?

Partial Airline Deregulation

In the late 1990s, the airline industry in most of Europe went through a partial deregulation. This allowed a barrage of new airlines to enter markets where only a single national airline existed before. This increase in competition not only drove down prices for the new low-cost carriers, but also forced the legacy carriers to drop their prices to compete. This deregulation also created a substantial number of new routes around Europe, which allowed travelers to fly more often and more conveniently.

In the United States, low-cost carriers, such as JetBlue, have entered the market and put some downward pressure on prices, but this has not provided competitive motivation to the extent it has in European Union.

More Alternate Airports

The geography of many European countries lends itself to lower prices. The physical closeness of cities allows for more alternate airports to spring up nearby to established airports, in order to alleviate delays and air traffic snarls. London, for example, is serviced by its main airport, Heathrow, but has Gatwick, Stansted, Luton and City nearby. More airports allow travelers more choices for departure and arrival points. Some of the smaller airports have lower landing fees and, therefore, tickets are less expensive. Travelers within the U.S. have fewer alternative options, which keeps pricing high.

Excess Capacity

According to the International Air Transport Association, the United States has done an efficient job of cutting down capacity (both number of flights and number of planes) to reflect a reduction in demand for flights. This enables the U.S. to "right-size" its operations and cut down on the fixed costs of keeping flight routes.

The European Union, on the other hand, has been slower to react to a decline in demand and has more excess capacity. Because most of the costs of running a flight are fixed - meaning the cost is the same if there is one flyer or 200 - airlines are more willing to offer bargain airfares to fill the seats. This keeps the overall price of the average ticket lower in Europe.

Volume

The final reason that flights are cheaper in Europe is that there are simply more of them. Because of the density of the population, air travel is fast and convenient for most Europeans. The population of Europe is approximately 857 million versus America's 300 million in a space about two and a half times smaller. Europeans, on average, fly more often than Americans and airfares must compete with other convenient methods of traveling short distances, such as driving or taking the train.

The Bottom Line

There are several reasons why airfares are cheaper on average in Europe than the United States. Culture, geography, competition and regulation all play a part. Eventually, continued rises in oil prices will force prices to increase and the threatened recession is likely to dampen demand for tickets. Airfare costs in Europe will likely approach those of the United States in the next year, but should continue to lag behind.



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23 comments

  • Ida  •  Montreal, Canada  •  2 months ago
    Deregulation of airlines, more players, lower prices...and we can't do that here because? On top of that, don't forget, fuel is a heck of a lot more expensive in Europe, but they still manage to have decent prices. Our airlines are very heavily regulated, very often bailed out, have virtually no competition and charge an arm and a leg...and you have to do yourself a lot of the tasks that they used to do for you, like checking in. All this while charging for food on board. The joke's on us! And dont' let anyone give you that nonsense about less people etc, I still remember vividly a time when a return ticket domestic flight in USA could cost $60. And that was not that long ago either.
  • savemypoints.com  •  Mississauga, Canada  •  4 months ago
    Don't fly Air France. They refuse to pay compensation for canceled flights to the EU and will not refund extra baggage fees for baggage delivered 5 days late.
    • Cynthia 4 months ago
      Check EASA - There is a law and they have to! there are only a few reasons why they don't have to and to 99.9 % they are not applicable!
    • e 4 months ago
      cynthia you are the all kowing person on this side...i am so glad to read you hihi you know every airline , every law..well everything..great to meet you
    • Henry 4 months ago
      Next time get travel insurance.
  • sinkr  •  Toronto, Canada  •  4 months ago
    In north america it's a partially restricted market. In Europe and Asia it's open to all, airlines like Ryanair (an irish airline,) or easyjet (UK) can fly from Paris to Prague without involving either home country whereas Air Canada, American Airlines etc all have to to fly either to or from their respective countries. If Southwest or similar budget airline was allowed to operate freely within Canada you'd see prices drop. I wanted to go to Calgary/Banff/Jasper area last summer but from Toronto it was cheaper to fly to Rome than to Calgary and that is a damn shame.
    • r 4 months ago
      Its all due to Canada's primitive way of thinking.
    • Henry 4 months ago
      How can you explore your own country ?????
      Canada is behind with everything.
  • Rolling Stone  •  4 months ago
    Another thing is that Europeans have viable alternatives to flights: bullet trains, buses. Even driving typically involves shorter distances and higher speed limits than in North America, so not that exhausting. Here we locked between flying or driving long hours - no wonder air cariers do not behave nicely.
    • Cynthia 4 months ago
      Yeah and in exchange you get, housed with yards, and a beautiful countryside. But I suppose it's better to live in a shoebox dubbed as apartment and pay a redicules abount on VAT on your groceries and what not. You know you have a choice, there is something called Immigration to other countries. Make the changes that make you happy!!
    • e 4 months ago
      cynthia not everyone is housed with yard, anyway has nothing to do with airfares...rolling stone just made a comment and he is right and you take it to a very different level whats up with you ?
    • Henry 4 months ago
      Cyntia, you mean " Emmigration to other countries", not "Immigration...".
  • M*  •  4 months ago
    I took KLM and i have to say for the price paid it was definately better quality/service/etc. than the equivalent canadian or american airlines.
    • Cynthia 4 months ago
      KLM suck they cancel flights all the time. Never bother booking a flight out of Amsterdam on a Monday night around 8 p.m. it will get cancelled!
    • e 4 months ago
      cynthia you must not travel a lot because many of your comments dont make sense
    • e 4 months ago
      M i agree KLM is a good airline to fly...the worst one most of the time is air canada
  • mark  •  Kitchener, Canada  •  4 months ago
    Americans have nothing to complain about in comparison to the ridiculous prices we pay north of the border. We are taxed to death and I will gladly cross the border and fly out of Buffalo to save a few hundred bucks.
    • Corey M 4 months ago
      Canadian prices are ridiculous... thats for sure
    • Cynthia 4 months ago
      you wanna get taxed to death? I'd recommend moving to Europe, preferably Germany, so you can learn what taxes are and maybe learn to appreciate what you got. Aw, who am I kidding, you're a complainer and probably love it!
    • e 4 months ago
      cynthia yes germany has higher taxes then the usa and canada but the have way better social system,better healthcare. and a good pension plan when the retire...perhaps now since you got informed you will no longer call mark a complainer
  • ..  •  London, Canada  •  4 months ago
    Lets go to Europe!
  • louisfunes18  •  4 months ago
    Why Europe has cheaper airfare?? Why that's easy, they're not as GREEDY as Air Canada!!!!!!!
  • rmcgillbc  •  Coquitlam, Canada  •  4 months ago
    I rarely fly out of Vancouver airports unless it's on points. Bellingham, Washington has cheap flights to most of the major southern U.S. cities and that's how we go. I've also flown out of Seattle on occasion if going to Hawaii or Florida. Lots of Seatac hotels offer deals that include parking so it means driving 2 1/2 hours to save a lot of money.
  • VY  •  Kelowna, Canada  •  4 months ago
    Ticket cost + taxes = REAL cost / greedy AirCanada + tax greedy government = Canadians fly less and take less vacations. Many blame fuel prices but it is not much in grand picture. How it could be cheaper to go for one week all-inclusive resort in Cuba, taxes in, than fly Toronto-Vancouver return? Government supports high prices for everything: flights, internet, mobile services etc and taxes all at our expense.
  • NOT-NICE-CONTROVERSIAL  •  4 months ago
    close to everything and all land they have more modes of transportaton around and competition is alive in europe. one can c all of europe on a bicycle.
  • r  •  4 months ago
    Canada as usual is behind the rest of the world with its travel services. There are plenty of airports around our cities that could be made into practical passenger airports. I guess the government want to protect the major airline.
  • A Yahoo! User  •  Toronto, Canada  •  4 months ago
    in Europe the oil company`s don`t control everything
  • Jack W  •  Surrey, Canada  •  4 months ago
    When are we going to learn from Europe???????
  • rmcgillbc  •  Coquitlam, Canada  •  4 months ago
    Canada is the second largest country in the world and we only have 35 million people. You expect to have cheap fares on flights that cover thousands of kilometers on planes that are half full? Do you think airlines are in business as a favour to you? The only way to have cheap fares is if the government subsidized the airlines and we've already been through that.
    We only have 13 or 14 major airports in all of Canada and the shortest routes are between Ottawa, Montreal and Toronto. That same area in Europe has 50 million people and 10 cities. Economies of scale dictate pricing.
  • jinsengtea  •  Ottawa, Canada  •  4 months ago
    I guess if we complain enough, then Harper will commit a few million dollars for consultants to study why airfares are a bit high in Canada!
  • greg  •  Kingston, Canada  •  4 months ago
    Duh. Big population, small distances.
  • Cynthia  •  4 months ago
    Well if you want to learn the real truth about "Cheap Flights" in europe, I'd recommend going to YouTube and search for "FASCINATING AIDA - Cheap Flights" - I do not know a single European person, who disagrees with this sketch!!!
  • downwithharper  •  4 months ago
    if they're so good why do they need constant bailouts?
  • shahbaj  •  Markham, Canada  •  4 months ago
    fly air canada
 
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