Swoop will become Canada’s first ultra low cost airline to fly to the United States when it launches service this fall to five popular tourist destinations in Florida, Nevada and Arizona.
The subsidiary of WestJet Airlines Ltd. will start Oct. 11 with flights to Las Vegas from Abbotsford, B.C., and Edmonton, Alta., about four months after Swoop began to fly.
Service will be added over the following couple of weeks between Hamilton, Ont., and Las Vegas as well as to the Florida cities of Fort Lauderdale, Orlando and Tampa Bay. Flights between Edmonton and Phoenix will start Oct. 27.
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Most destinations will be serviced a few times per week but daily service will be flown between Edmonton and Las Vegas.
The transborder service will be launched to these U.S. gateways as Swoop receives delivery of its fifth and sixth airplane, said Swoop president Steven Greenway.
“They really blend well to the model that we provide in terms of low cost, high volume type of leisure profile that we definitely are targeting,” he said in an interview.
Everyday one-way fares start as low as $149 including taxes and fees through April, however it will offer 4,100 seats at low promotional fares of $99 and $119 for travel booked online until Feb. 13.
In Edmonton, WestJet will no longer offer direct flights to Las Vegas or Phoenix-Mesa Gateway Airport once the Swoop services begin.
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Currently, the airline flies into the smaller Mesa regional airport twice a week. Westjet will continue to fly into Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport 11 times a week; Swoop will take over the route to Mesa.
WestJet will still offer service to the two destinations after October, but with a layover.
“We have been in touch with any guests that have been affected with this change and have rebooked them on the appropriate flights which will now include a stopover,” WestJet spokesperson Lauren Stewart said in an email.
“For guests travelling from Edmonton they will be booked on connecting flights through our Calgary hub.”
WestJet said it’ll offer a full refund for travellers who prefer to fly nonstop with Swoop.
Swoop’s model is based on passengers paying ancillary fees for additions such as bags, premium seats, and Wi-Fi that inflate travel costs depending on individual passenger needs.
Swoop currently receives about $36 per passenger, twice the level at WestJet. But more of these non-fare revenues are expected to be generated as other services are added like car rental, hotel, third-party travel insurance and beefed up food and drink offerings.
“As we mature, as we grow the airline, that’s really where we start seeing some differences,” Greenway added, declining to forecast potential per passenger ancillary revenues.
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WestJet’s goal is to use Swoop’s low fares to stimulate demand from people who don’t typically fly and help to repatriate some of the five million Canadian travellers who cross the border to depart from U.S. airports.
“I think we can get a reasonable chunk both out of Abbotsford and Hamilton,” he said.
While the low Canadian dollar is making U.S. flights more expensive, the launch of Swoop’s service should also help increase Canadian transborder demand and Americans flying to Western Canada, Greenway said, adding prices are likely not low enough to persuade Americans to fly out of Canada for destinations in their own country.
The U.S. expansion will see Swoop operate to a mix of secondary airports _ Phoenix-Mesa Gateway Airport _ and highly popular ones like McCarran International Airport in Las Vegas where there are no alternatives.
READ MORE: Swoop to target millennials, young families and cross border travellers
Swoop faces domestic competition largely from Kelowna-based ultra low cost rival Flair Airlines, Air Canada and WestJet but also from lower cost competitors like Sunwing and Transat with large tour operations on transborder and Caribbean routes, Cameron Doerksen of National Bank Financial wrote in a report.
“We therefore see limited room for new (ultra low cost carriers) to capture significant sun destination traffic, unless it is sold at heavily discounted (and potentially unsustainable) fares.”
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