Itâs happening: Southwest Airlines will start charging passengers to check bags for the first time.
Itâs a stunning reversal that shows the low-cost pioneer is willing to part with a customer perk executives have said set it apart from rivals in more than half a century of flying in hopes of increasing revenue.
Southwestâs changes come after months of pressure from activist Elliott Investment Management. The firm took a stake in the airline last year and won five board seats as it pushed for quick changes at the company, which held on for decades â until now â to perks such as free checked bags, changeable tickets and open seating.
For tickets purchased on or after May 28, Southwest customers in all but the top tier-fare class will have to pay to check bags, though there will be exceptions. Elite frequent flyers who hold âA-List Preferredâ status will still get two bags and A-List level members will get one free checked bag. Southwest credit card holders will also get one free checked bag.
âTwo bags fly freeâ is a registered trademark on Southwestâs website. But its decision to about-face on what executives long cast as a sacrosanct passenger perk brings the largest U.S. domestic carrier in line with its rivals, which together generated $5.5 billion from bag fees last year, according to federal data.
Southwest executives have long said they didnât plan to charge for bags, telling Wall Street analysts that it was a major reason why customers chose the airline.
âAfter fare and schedule, bags fly free is cited as the No. 1 issue in terms of why customers choose Southwest,â CEO Bob Jordan said on an earnings call last July.
But Southwest has changed its tune.
âWhatâs changed is that weâve come to realize that we need more revenue to cover our costs,â COO Andrew Watterson said in an interview with CNBC about the baggage fee changes. âWe think that these changes that weâre announcing today will lead to less of that share shift than would have been the case otherwise.â
In September, Southwestâs then-chief transformation officer, Ryan Green, told analysts that its analysis showed Southwest would lose more money from passengers defecting to rivals if it started charging for bags than it would make from the fees.
âThe fact that free bags is a key driver of choice creates the risk that customers may choose the competition if we change the policy,â he said.
Southwest said last month that it had parted ways with Green.
The airline also said Tuesday that it will launch a new, basic economy fare, something rivals have offered for years.
Southwest, in addition, will change the way customers earn Rapid Rewards: Customers will earn more of the frequent flyer miles depending on how much they pay. Redemption rates will vary depending on flight demand, a dynamic pricing model competitors use.
And flight credits for tickets for tickets purchased on or after May 28 will expire one year, or earlier, depending on the type of fare purchased.
Itâs the latest in a string of massive strategy changes at Southwest as its performance has fallen behind rivals.
Last July, Southwest shocked passengers when it announced it would ditch its open seating model for assigned seats and add âpremiumâ extra legroom options, ending decades of an single-class cabin.
The airline is also looking to slash its costs. Higher expenses coming out of the pandemic have taken a bite out of airline margins.
Last month, Southwest announced its first mass layoff, cutting about 1,750 jobs roughly 15% of its corporate staff, many of them at its headquarters, a decision CEO Jordan called âunprecedentedâ in the carrierâs more than 53 years of flying.
âWe are at a pivotal moment as we transform Southwest Airlines into a leaner, faster, and more agile organization,â he said last month.
Earlier this year, Southwest announced the retirement of its longtime finance chief, Tammy Romo, who was replaced by Breeze executive Tom Doxey, and its chief administrative officer, Linda Rutherford. Both executives worked at Southwest for more than 30 years.
Southwest has also cut unprofitable routes, summer internships and employee teambuilding events its held for decades.
