Pittsburgh, June 3, 2026, 07:12 (EDT)
American Airlines is set to suspend its daily nonstop flight between Pittsburgh and Los Angeles for about two months, from Aug. 5 to Oct. 4. The cut removes one of the key West Coast routes out of Pittsburgh International Airport. Airport spokesman Bob Kerlik pointed to high jet fuel costs as the reason for the change.
Pittsburgh made the Los Angeles route a three-carrier market. American, United Airlines, and Breeze Airways each have nonstop flights. For June, there are 17 weekly flights listed and a scheduled flight time close to five hours and 20 minutes.
American is pausing its Pittsburgh-Los Angeles route as part of “several route adjustments AA made nationally at airports across the country due to high fuel costs,” Kerlik said. United is still set to fly the route daily, and Breeze is running its seasonal service three times a week, according to Beaver County Radio, which cited the airport official. Beaver County Radio
American plans to pause its Los Angeles-Pittsburgh flights from Aug. 5 to Oct. 4, filings with AeroRoutes showed. The Los Angeles-Pittsburgh route uses a once-daily Boeing 737-800. The same schedule update listed other late summer cuts and changes: Los Angeles-Cleveland, Los Angeles-Washington Dulles, Charlotte-Ontario, and Charlotte-Sacramento.
American Airlines is dropping six domestic routes that include four in Los Angeles, according to early industry reports. Cirium schedule data confirmed the changes, Travel Market Report said, but American hadn’t confirmed the list itself.
American’s jet fuel cost is piling up. Back in April, the airline said it saw more than $4 billion in extra expenses from rising fuel prices this year. That came as American posted a record $13.9 billion in first-quarter revenue and booked a GAAP net loss of $382 million. CEO Robert Isom said American had “delivered record revenue” for the quarter. American Airlines Newsroom
Executives had warned that schedules might get cut if fuel stayed expensive. CEO Robert Isom said American was “working to take appropriate actions” to cover higher fuel costs. Chief Commercial Officer Nat Pieper said carriers often deal with pricier fuel by “increasing revenue or by reducing marginal capacity,” which means cutting the less profitable seats or flights. PYMNTS.com
American Airlines CEO Isom has kept the airline’s cut 2026 outlook, Reuters said last week, even though rising fuel could push up expenses by $4 billion to $5 billion this year. American has lagged Delta and United on profits for years, making the impact from even small route moves more acute as costs jump.
Pittsburgh’s airport loses what it called a key route with the pause. American started up daily, year-round PIT-LAX flights again in April 2025, using 172-seat Boeing 737-800s. Back then, airport officials said Los Angeles flights were important for local business, Southern California, and film industry links.
United is flying Pittsburgh-Los Angeles again after a 12-year break, jumping back in this spring. Its March start makes United the third carrier with nonstop service on the route, alongside American and Breeze.
But there’s no guarantee these “temporary” moves will be easy for travelers. Airlines change schedules all the time, and AeroRoutes warns that what’s planned now can shift later; another jump in fuel prices or weak end-of-summer demand might make these cuts last longer. Cheaper fuel or good bookings could bring flights back on time. AeroRoutes
Pittsburgh will hang on to nonstop service to Los Angeles, but fewer seats will be available after American cuts back. Some travelers may not notice the change. The rest could see fewer flights, have to connect more often, or pay higher fares if other airlines take their time adding capacity.