JetBlue Airways Corporation (JBLU) delivered a quarter defined by a sharp divergence between operational momentum and exogenous cost shocks. In Q1 2026, the carrier reported a 4.7% year-over-year increase in total operating revenue to $2.24 billion — even while deliberately cutting available seat miles by 1.7% — driven by meaningful improvement in revenue per available seat mile (RASM) and strong premium cabin outperformance. Yet these revenue gains were overshadowed by a 15.2% surge in average fuel costs to $2.96 per gallon, 26% above JetBlue’s initial guidance, attributable to Middle East geopolitical tensions. The resulting cost pressure widened the GAAP net loss to $319 million, sent both GAAP and non-GAAP EPS below analyst consensus, and forced management to suspend the full-year 2026 financial guidance while leaving its JetForward restructuring targets intact.
Q1 2026 Revenue and RASM: Yield Improvement Despite Capacity Cuts
JetBlue’s Q1 2026 revenue growth came despite a 1.7% intentional reduction in available seat miles, the clearest signal that the airline’s yield-focused capacity management strategy is producing results. RASM rose 6.5% year-over-year, landing near the high end of the company’s revised guidance range. Revenue grew because each seat flown generated more revenue — not because JetBlue added capacity.
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Table 1. Q1 2026 Revenue and Unit Metrics
Metric
Q1 2026
Q1 2025
YoY Change
Total Operating Revenue (GAAP)
2.24 billion
$2.14 billion
+4.7%
Available Seat Miles (ASM)
15.3B
15.6B
-1.7%
Revenue per ASM (RASM) (Cents)
$14.6
$13.71
+6.5%
Passengers Carried
9.3 million
9.26 million
+0.7%
Load Factor
82.2%
80.7%
+1.5 points
Premium cabin RASM outperformed core RASM by 9 percentage points year-over-year — a signal that JetBlue’s Mint premium product is contributing disproportionately to unit revenue growth. The domestic first-class product, planned for H2 2026, is expected to extend this trend into additional routes. Load factor improved to 82.2% from 80.7%, indicating that the reduction in capacity was matched by disciplined seat fill rather than yield dilution.
Fort Lauderdale stands as the clearest proof point: JetBlue grew capacity at that hub by 23% while still achieving 5% RASM growth, having added 21 new destinations over the past year. All of JetBlue’s Q2 2026 incremental capacity growth is directed to Fort Lauderdale, concentrating supply where demand signals are strongest.
Loyalty revenue also contributed: Cash remuneration from the loyalty program rose 19% year-over-year, and credit card acquisitions grew 45%, reflecting the early impact of the Blue Sky interline partnership with United Airlines, which launched in Q1 2026, with reciprocal loyalty benefits turning on in Q2 2026.
The Fuel Problem: $2.96 Per Gallon Erases Operational Gains
The fuel cost surge was the single driver behind the wider-than-expected Q1 loss. Average fuel cost per gallon reached $2.96 in Q1 2026, up 15.2% from $2.57 in Q1 2025 and 26% above the midpoint of JetBlue’s initial guidance — a consequence of Middle East geopolitical tensions transmitting rapidly into jet fuel spot markets.
Approximately 4 percentage points of the GAAP CASM ex-fuel increase of 6.6% were attributable to identified one-time disruptions — a Caribbean airspace closure and winter storms. Adjusted CASM ex-fuel grew approximately 2.5%, in line with JetBlue’s JetForward restructuring targets. The EPS miss against consensus was driven entirely by fuel costs, not by demand softness or a failure of revenue strategy.
The structural challenge is the recapture lag. With over 90% of Q1 capacity booked before the fuel price surge materialized, JetBlue had limited ability to reprice fares and offset cost increases within the quarter. For Q2 2026, management projects a fuel cost recapture rate of only 30%–40%, rising toward 100% by early 2027 as bookings flow through at higher fare levels and the premium product mix improves.
JetForward Progress: Restructuring On Track Despite External Headwinds
JetBlue’s JetForward restructuring plan delivered $305 million in incremental EBIT in FY2025, exceeding internal targets. Management maintained both the FY2026 target of $310 million and the FY2027 target of $850–$950 million in incremental EBIT, explicitly distinguishing the JetForward program trajectory from the suspended headline financial guidance.
Key 2026 JetForward initiatives in progress include:
Blue Sky with United Airlines: Interline sales launched in Q1 2026; reciprocal loyalty benefits activating Q2 2026. Addresses JetBlue’s historical disadvantage in network breadth and premium demand capture.
Domestic first class: Planned launch in H2 2026, extending premium cabin revenue beyond current Mint routes.
Blue House premium lounge expansion: Second location opening in Boston in summer 2026.
Fort Lauderdale hub transformation: 21 new destinations added in the past year; RASM grew 5% on 23% capacity expansion, validating the network densification strategy.
The fuel-adjusted operating margin improved approximately 3 percentage points year-over-year in Q1 2026, and underlying CASM ex-fuel of +2.5% (adjusted) tracks within the JetForward cost discipline framework. The restructuring’s revenue lever — RASM improvement through capacity discipline and premium mix shift — is functioning as designed; the external shock is the fuel input, not a JetForward execution failure.
Guidance Suspension and the Path to Profitability
On April 28, 2026, JetBlue formally suspended its full-year 2026 financial guidance, citing the sharp increase in jet fuel prices and heightened macroeconomic uncertainty. CEO Joanna Geraghty confirmed JetBlue is not considering bankruptcy, and the company’s liquidity position provides meaningful operational runway.
Table 3. Q2 2026 Guidance
Metric
Q2 2026 Guidance
Basis
RASM growth (YoY)
+7% to +11%
GAAP
Capacity growth (ASMs, YoY)
+1.5% to +4.5%
GAAP
CASM ex-fuel growth (YoY)
+3% to +5%
GAAP
Fuel price per gallon
$4.13–$4.28
GAAP
Fuel recapture rate
30%–40%
GAAP
The Q2 2026 fuel price forecast of $4.13–$4.28 per gallon implies a year-over-year increase of approximately 75% at the midpoint. Even with RASM guidance of 7%–11%, the arithmetic gap between fuel costs and revenue recapture rate explains the guidance suspension. Second-half 2026 capacity cuts of approximately 2–3 percentage points are planned, concentrated in off-peak periods, to protect unit revenue in lower-demand windows.
JetBlue ended Q1 2026 with $2.4 billion in total liquidity — approximately 26% of trailing twelve-month revenue, above the company’s internal target range of 17%–20%. This includes an undrawn $600 million revolving credit facility.
Key Signals for Investors
RASM guidance of 7%–11% for Q2 2026 represents an acceleration from Q1’s 6.5% growth; if the high end is achieved, it would confirm pricing power is holding even against significantly higher fuel costs.
The fuel recapture rate of 30%–40% in Q2 2026, rising to 100% by early 2027, is the primary bridge to profitability restoration; each quarter of delay extends the window before JetBlue can achieve breakeven under current fuel prices.
JetForward EBIT targets of $310 million for FY2026 and $850–$950 million for FY2027 were not revised; the divergence between suspending headline guidance while preserving restructuring targets signals management confidence in controllable operations but uncertainty on fuel inputs.
Fort Lauderdale’s ability to absorb all Q2 2026 incremental capacity without eroding unit revenue is the operational test of the next quarter; failure to sustain positive RASM at the hub would undermine JetBlue’s network concentration strategy.
All primary financial data from JetBlue’s official investor relations materials. Market capitalization from Yahoo Finance as of May 1, 2026.

















