Spirit Airlines has reached an agreement in principle with creditors to emerge from its second Chapter 11 bankruptcy in late spring or early summer. The restructuring will reduce its debt and lease obligations from $7.4 billion to $2.1 billion, positioning the carrier as a smaller, leaner operation focused on core markets. CEO Dave Davis described the plan as creating a strong competitor able to deliver value at competitive prices.
Spirit Airlines announced on February 25, 2026, that it has secured an agreement with its debtor-in-possession lenders and secured noteholders on key terms of a restructuring support agreement. This deal paves the way for the low-cost carrier to exit Chapter 11 protection in late spring or early summer, following its second filing within a year. The airline first entered bankruptcy in November 2024 amid mounting debt, rising costs, and the failed $3.8 billion merger with JetBlue. It emerged in March 2025 but returned to court five months later due to ongoing losses.
Under the plan, Spirit will slash its total debt and lease liabilities by approximately 72%, from $7.4 billion to $2.1 billion. Annualized fleet costs are projected to drop by more than 65% from pre-bankruptcy levels. The fleet has already shrunk from 214 aircraft to around 125, with a target of roughly 100. To achieve this, the airline has rejected leases on newer Airbus A320neo family jets, retaining more older A320ceo variants, which may increase fuel costs but provide immediate financial relief.
Operationally, Spirit is refocusing on core markets including Fort Lauderdale and Orlando in Florida, the New York area, and Detroit. It plans to trim flights on low-demand days like Tuesdays and Wednesdays, boost aircraft utilization during peaks, and expand premium offerings such as premium economy and Big Front Seat capacity across the fleet. The summer 2025 flying program was cut by 25%, and 11 bases were closed, eliminating 21 routes—67% of which faced direct competition. This summer, flights will be 40% fewer than last year. Workforce reductions included furloughs and redundancies, though some pilots and flight attendants are returning for peak seasons.
CEO Dave Davis stated, “This agreement in principle is the result of months of hard work and allows Spirit to move toward completing its transformation. Spirit will emerge as a strong, leaner competitor that is positioned to profitably deliver the value American consumers expect at a price they want to pay.”
Industry experts express mixed views on the viability of a downsized Spirit. Aviation analyst Dr. James Pearson noted, “It’ll be a far smaller, more focused operator, but certainly with higher unit costs.” John Grant of JG Aviation Consultants described it as “a marginal player” with a 2.4% domestic capacity share by August 2026, compared to Frontier’s 4%. The airline has sold aircraft and offloaded airport gates to raise funds and insists it will remain independent, though a sale has not been ruled out.
Enhancements to the Free Spirit loyalty program and co-branded credit cards aim to boost ancillary revenues and customer retention. While the restructuring strengthens the balance sheet, questions remain about competing in a crowded market with reduced scale and frequency.