Major US airline is canceling flights to Cuba, Miami and other popular hotspots

Delta Air Lines has announced a significant reduction in its flight network, including the suspension of all routes in between Atlanta and Havana, Cubastarting October 26, 2025amid what the carrier describes as “dampening customer demand.”
In a file with the United States Department of Transportation (DOT) earlier this month, Delta requested one exemption for the entire season to interrupt its Cuba operations March 28, 2026. The DOT formally approved the request on September 3. As part of the decision, all seven weekly Delta flights will be canceled Atlanta to Havana will be discontinued while the Miami-Havana route will be reduced by 50 percent, from 14 to seven weekly flights.
The Atlanta-based airline said the decision was driven by weak market performance and a continued decline in demand for travel between the US and Cuba.
“While current market demand between the U.S. and Cuba does not support these flights at this time, Delta remains hopeful that demand between the U.S. and Cuba will recover,” the company said. said in an official statement.
Delta’s move follows a broader trend in the sector. Other US airlines including United Airlines, Southwest Airlines and American Airlineshave also reduced or suspended routes to Cuba in recent months due to similar market conditions. Southwest has halted flights from Tampa, while United recently canceled its Houston-Havana roundtrip flight.
Outside of Cuba, Delta’s fall schedule adjustments include the elimination of seven additional routes through its US network. Among the most notable:
- Minneapolis-St. Paul to Albuquerque, Buffalo, Fairbanks and Great Falls
- Salt Lake City to Toronto
- Atlanta to Fresno
- Austin to Midland, Texas (permanently discontinued as of November 8, 2025)
Delta is also stopping internationally New York (JFK)-Brussels trajectory January 5, 2026ending a transatlantic service that has been part of the airline’s network for 34 years.
Industry analysts note that Delta’s recent decisions reflect a growing trend among major U.S. airlines to scale back underperforming or low-demand routes amid changing travel dynamics and higher operating costs. However, the airline has insisted that these changes are temporary and designed to ensure sustainable growth in its core markets.
With the winter season approaching, Delta’s recalibration highlights the challenges of balancing global demand recovery with fluctuating regional travel trends. While some destinations are flourishing, others – including Cuba – have yet to fully recover from post-pandemic air travel patterns.




