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Air Canada cuts service on more routes in response to rising fuel prices
The airline said the summer seasonal routes will end early and resume in 2027 as it reduces capacity and adds temporary fuel surcharges.
On Wednesday, Air Canada confirmed it is suspending four Canada-to-United States routes—Toronto–Sacramento, Vancouver–Raleigh, Toronto–Charleston, and Montreal–Austin—citing high jet fuel costs amid the United States–Iran conflict.
The latest cuts follow Air Canada's April announcement of seven route suspensions across domestic, Canada-U.S., and international services as both WestJet and Air Canada reduced capacity to manage soaring fuel expenses.
These summer seasonal services will end earlier than planned, with final flights between July 29 and Sept. 7, 2026, before resuming in Summer 2027; Air Canada also raised checked baggage fees for Economy Basic, Standard, or Flex fares purchased on or after April 13, 2026.
Affected customers will be contacted with alternate travel options, including the choice of a full refund where applicable, as Air Canada works to mitigate disruption from the service suspensions.
Air Canada's response mirrors industry-wide efforts by WestJet to absorb rising fuel costs through capacity reductions and temporary surcharges, with additional suspensions affecting JFK–Toronto, JFK–Montreal, and Salt Lake City–Toronto through 2027.