Today: 15 June 2026
Hawaiian Airlines Is Now oneworld — and Alaska’s Takeover Is Showing Up at the Gate
25 April 2026
2 mins read

Hawaiian Airlines Is Now oneworld — and Alaska’s Takeover Is Showing Up at the Gate

HONOLULU, April 25, 2026, 11:05 HST

This week, Hawaiian Airlines entered the oneworld alliance and deepened its integration with Alaska Airlines’ operating systems—steps that bring Alaska Air Group’s planned acquisition of Hawaiian into sharper focus for customers. Travelers are already seeing changes, from loyalty perks to flight codes and booking details.

Timing is critical here—not simply because of the merger. Now, Hawaiian passengers using Atmos Rewards, the joint Alaska-Hawaiian loyalty program, get access to earn and spend points, plus elite perks, with all 14 other oneworld carriers. The door swings both ways: oneworld members can take advantage of their benefits on Hawaiian flights.

The real shakeup is behind the scenes. Hawaiian has migrated to Sabre, the same reservation and check-in system Alaska uses—a switch that ties together everything from online bookings and mobile apps to loyalty profiles and airport kiosks.

Diana Birkett Rakow, CEO of Hawaiian, said the partnership opens up routes “from Honolulu to Hong Kong” for both Hawai‘i residents and Atmos members. For Ole Orvér, who heads oneworld, Hawaiian joining up means a bigger reach across the Pacific and in the U.S. Alaska Airlines

oneworld picks up its third U.S. member with this deal—Hawaiian joins Alaska Airlines and American Airlines in the alliance, bringing Honolulu in as a global hub. That unlocks new routes to Hilo, Rarotonga, Pago Pago and Papeete for the group’s Pacific network.

The updates hitting customers are straightforward: every Hawaiian flight now operates under Alaska’s “AS” code. Still, Alaska insists Hawaiian’s logo, airport signs, and onboard experience aren’t going anywhere. Japan Airlines, which partners with oneworld, confirmed Hawaiian’s flight numbers switched over on April 21. JAL企業サイト

Travelers flying Alaska can now handle everything through a unified Alaska Hawaiian app, all trips consolidated under a single record locator. Shared airport lobbies are up and running at several mainland locations—Los Angeles, Seattle, New York-JFK, San Francisco, and San Jose. Hawaiian, for its part, has shifted to web and mobile check-in only, with self-serve bag-tag kiosks stationed in the lobbies.

Alex Da Silva, a spokesperson for the airline, described the passenger system switchover as the “biggest and most complex integration project” involved in the merger, telling Aloha State Daily there were no material problems after the changeover. Volunteers, he said, were on hand at Honolulu airport to help guests. Aloha State Daily

American Airlines and Alaska are exploring ways to expand their partnership, Reuters reported this week, with early discussions focused on building out international joint ventures—transpacific routes potentially on the table, possibly with Japan Airlines in the mix. There’s no merger being considered, according to the report.

Still, closer ties between Alaska and American aren’t a given. Reuters noted that any ramped-up partnership would require sign-off from the U.S. Transportation Department, plus a potential look from antitrust officials—especially after a federal judge tossed out American’s Northeast Alliance with JetBlue in 2023.

Alaska wrapped up its takeover of Hawaiian in September 2024, announcing plans to maintain both brands separately for now, even as it pushes to unify operations under one certificate and passenger system. Shares of the merged carrier continue to trade as Alaska Air Group’s ALK on the New York Stock Exchange.

U.S. regulators put strings on the deal, requiring protections for rewards value, essential Hawaii routes, rural flights, access at Honolulu’s airport, family seating, and compensation if controllable disruptions hit. These requirements are still in play as the integration shifts out of the boardroom and into real airport operations.

Stock Market Today

  • Vedanta Demerger: Aluminium Shares Soar to Rs 522; Combined Valuation Hits Rs 933 Per Share
    June 15, 2026, 2:38 AM EDT. Shares of Vedanta's four demerged entities debuted strongly, with Vedanta Aluminium Metal Ltd leading at Rs 522, above market forecasts. Vedanta Oil & Gas Ltd, Vedanta Power Ltd, and Vedanta Iron & Steel Ltd listed at Rs 38, Rs 41.8, and Rs 20 respectively. The combined value of these units plus Vedanta Ltd, trading at Rs 311.2, reached approximately Rs 933 per original Vedanta share, a 20.6% increase from the pre-demerger close of Rs 773.6. This marks a successful completion of Vedanta's restructuring aimed at creating focused businesses with dedicated management, unlocking substantial shareholder value.

Latest articles

Dow Futures Tick Up, Oil Drops After U.S.-Iran Deal, SpaceX IPO in Focus

Dow Futures Tick Up, Oil Drops After U.S.-Iran Deal, SpaceX IPO in Focus

15 June 2026
Dow, S&P 500, and Nasdaq futures rose Sunday evening after reports of a U.S.-Iran peace deal that would reopen the Strait of Hormuz, sending oil prices down over 4% as traders anticipated resumed energy shipments; SpaceX shares surged 19.2% in their Nasdaq debut, closing at $160.95 and pushing market cap above $2 trillion, while investors await confirmation of the deal and details on shipping normalization.
Asia Opens June 16 as Oil Gains, BOJ and Fed Moves Loom

Asia Opens June 16 as Oil Gains, BOJ and Fed Moves Loom

15 June 2026
Brent crude plunged 4.02% to $83.82 and WTI fell 4.63% to $80.95 after the U.S. and Iran reached a deal to halt the war and reopen the Strait of Hormuz, easing inflation pressure and lifting profit expectations for Asian equities, but execution risks remain with the deal’s terms incomplete and potential for oil to rebound if tensions flare. (Reuters)
Fed, Oil Prices, and SpaceX Draw Attention Prior to Tuesday’s Open

Fed, Oil Prices, and SpaceX Draw Attention Prior to Tuesday’s Open

15 June 2026
U.S. stocks face key risks as investors await the June 16–17 Fed meeting, with inflation at 4.2% and Brent crude at $86.80; the U.S.-Iran deal could lower oil prices and ease inflation, but uncertainty over terms and Fed policy keeps markets volatile, while SpaceX’s 19.2% Nasdaq debut signals strong demand for AI-linked growth stocks. (Reuters)
Palo Alto Networks Stock Jumps as AI Cyber Fears Become Its Next Big Test
Previous Story

Palo Alto Networks Stock Jumps as AI Cyber Fears Become Its Next Big Test

Uranium Energy Stock Drops 6%: Why UEC’s U.S. Uranium Push Is Back In Focus
Next Story

Uranium Energy Stock Drops 6%: Why UEC’s U.S. Uranium Push Is Back In Focus

Go toTop