High Flying

America’s most expensive airports

Reported by Ellie Behling
Randall Enos

Before you traverse to Traverse City or shoot over to Charlotte, check out this list of America’s most expensive airports for domestic travel.

Research by Forbes listed the 25 most expensive airports. Many of them might surprise you, as they are housed in medium-size cities, mostly concentrated in the Midwest and Southeast.

Those of you who fly to the Cincinnati area are probably aware that better deals can be found north of the city in Dayton, or a couple of hours away in Indianapolis, Indiana, or Columbus, Ohio. The Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport took the gold as the most expensive airport, with an average fare price of 48 cents per mile, according to Forbes. To put it in perspective, that’s three times the average cost of flying from two of the country’s cheapest airports: Florida’s Fort Lauderdale/Hollywood International Airport (16 cents) and California’s Long Beach/Daugherty Field Airport (15 cents).

Yet, not so fast: Whether it was the bad press or a coincidental move to lower fares as airlines are seeing decreasing passengers, Cincinnati has lowered its fares since the Forbes article was published. The airport has long gotten away with higher fares because it is dominated by a Delta hub that shuts out competition, but Delta announced it will lower fares in the airport from 5% to 60%, according to news reports.

America’s Most Expensive Airports

Forbes used data from the Department of Transportation’s Origin and Destination Survey, which sampled 10% of all U.S. domestic commercial airline tickets from the third quarter of 2008. The other airports in addition to Cincinnati in the top 10 of Forbes list are:

Cherry Capital Airport in Traverse City, Michigan (41¢ per mile)

Tri-Cities Airport
near Johnson City, Tennessee (39¢ per mile)

Columbia Metropolitan Airport in Columbia, South Carolina (39¢ per mile)

Duluth International Airport
in Duluth, Minnesota (38¢ per mile)

Greenville-Spartanburg International Airport
in Columbia, S.C. (38¢ per mile)

Shreveport Regional Airport
in Shreveport, Louisiana (37¢ per mile)

Yeager Airport in Charleston, West Virginia (37¢ per mile)

Douglass International Airport
in Charlotte, North Carolina (37¢ per mile)

McGhee Tyson Airport in Knoxville, Tennessee (37¢ per mile).

In addition to Cincinnati, the only other large airport in the top 10 is Douglas International Airport in Charlotte. Forbes noted that it is another big hub in a medium-size city (in this case, U.S. Airways), which means the hub carrier ends up with “massive market shares and prodigious pricing power.”

The good news is, if you find yourself on a U.S. Airways flight to Charlotte, you can save your $2 for a soda: Earlier this year, the airline announced it was bringing back its policy of giving out complimentary soft drinks, the Associated Press reported. Every little bit counts, right?

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