Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Houston ultra-low-cost carrier operating from secondary airports with 2.4M customers in 2024 and first break-even year; #1 on-time US airline competing with Allegiant and Frontier for leisure travelers avoiding congested major hubs.
Avelo Airlines is a Houston, Texas-based ultra-low-cost carrier — privately held, founded in 2021 by Andrew Levy (former United Airlines CFO) — operating point-to-point service to leisure destinations from underserved secondary airports (Hollywood Burbank, New Haven, Wilmington, Raleigh-Durham) that avoid the congestion, high fees, and connection banking that characterizes major hub airports, serving 2.4 million customers in 2024 (6 million cumulative since launch) across 47 destinations in 18 US states plus select international routes. Avelo achieved its first break-even full year in 2024 and multiple profitable months, validating the secondary airport ultra-low-cost model in a competitive US aviation market that has seen multiple ULCC failures (Sun Country, Frontier restructurings, Breeze competitive pressure).
New US low-cost airline founded by JetBlue's David Neeleman; nonstop routes between underserved secondary US cities avoiding hub connections competing with major carriers on point-to-point routes.
Breeze Airways is a low-cost US airline founded by JetBlue creator David Neeleman (serial aviation entrepreneur behind Morris Air, WestJet, JetBlue, and Azul), providing nonstop service between smaller US cities that are typically underserved by major airlines — allowing point-to-point travelers to avoid connecting through hub airports. Founded in 2020 and headquartered in Cottonwood Heights, Utah, Breeze began flying in May 2021 and operates a fleet of Embraer E190/E195 jets and Airbus A220s for its "breezy" passenger experience on underserved city-pair routes.\n\nBreeze's route strategy focuses on city pairs where no nonstop service currently exists — connecting secondary markets like Provo, Charleston, New Orleans, Hartford, and Akron without forcing passengers through hub airports in Dallas, Chicago, or Atlanta. The airline's fare structure is simple: Nicer (economy), Nicer (with extras), and Nicest (premium economy equivalent with more space), all offered at competitive prices. Breeze has marketed itself as the "seriously nice" airline, emphasizing the gap between legacy carrier service quality and the value its low-cost routes provide.\n\nIn 2025, Breeze competes against the major US airlines and Southwest for point-to-point leisure travelers — particularly in secondary markets where American, Delta, United, and Southwest provide only connecting service. Breeze faces the challenging unit economics of starting a new airline (high aircraft lease costs, competitive labor market) while building brand awareness from scratch in markets where consumers may not know Breeze serves them. The 2025 strategy focuses on proving sustainable unit economics on established routes, selectively adding new routes based on demonstrated demand, and growing Breeze Points loyalty program adoption.
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