How Airlines Add Thousands Of Seats For The Super Bowl While Still Maintaining Their Schedules
Every year, the Super Bowl triggers one of the largest short-term travel surges in the United States. Tens of thousands of fans converge on a single region over just a few days, pushing airfare higher and placing enormous pressure on airport and airline operations. In response, airlines do more than adjust pricing or add a handful of extra seats. They reshape their networks by launching unusual nonstop routes and significantly increasing capacity into the host region.
