Originally Posted by
norcalfiend
Slightly off-topic but on a related note, Znotins mentioned that there will be new "transcon" routes operated with the A321XLR that were not operated with the A321T.
The obvious reason why AA did not operate LAX-DCA with the A321T is that the A321T only has 102 seats. Operating 204 daily seats each way between 2 hubs like LAX-DCA limits how much traffic AA can carry vs the current 196 seat average gauge it uses today (for a total of 392 daily seats each way) on a major route where they have many frequent flyers. They likely ran that math and determined that the ~2x Y capacity more than made up the additional revenue they could capture on the A321T and prevented leakage of their loyalists.
I would not be surprised to see LAX-DCA shift to the XLR as the XLR has 155 seats which is more palatable though still a capacity decline, but some routes that were explicitly mentioned as targets include JFK-SAN, JFK-SEA (it's been tried by B6 and DL to no success, but perhaps AA does something w/ AS which is much stronger at SEA?), a 2nd JFK-SNA, and PHX-Hawaii (though that seems odd given the premium configuration in a market where gauge may matter - perhaps it's in addition to existing service). LAX-DCA and BOS-SFO (gotta use those 19 gates and the XLR will go to BOS) make a ton of sense to me as premium markets.
Source:
https://airlinegeeks.com/2025/12/16/...r-new-a321xlr/
Originally Posted by
USFlyerUS
A321T on this route wouldn't make sense. DCA is a slot controlled airport, and DCA-LAX is operated with an exception. Limiting the seats in this case doesn't make economic sense. In fact, I would argue the DOT might rescind the approval if AA were to limit capacity on each flight like that.
Very good points, I didn't realize the A321T was configured with such low capacity. AA really suffers from not having an aircraft in the fleet like the 757 anymore, as has been discussed ad nauseum. I cannot imagine any widebody could operate at DCA with the short runways and general lack of space on the apron.