Travel is 'roaring back' — but the industry might not be ready for a boom
Despite the omicron variant, travelers are making plans to hit the road this year, whether the industry is ready for them or not.
Despite the omicron variant, travelers are making plans to hit the road this year, whether the industry is ready for them or not.
After months of quarantine and canceled vacations, wary Americans are ready to plan trips again. However, they remain doubtful they’ll actually be able to travel and are often waiting till the last minute to book, according to a survey from AAA. When they do head out, it will likely be by car.
JetBlue has formed a code-sharing agreement with a small semi-private jet company it's invested in called JetSuite.
CNBC's Phil LeBeau reports on Ryanair CEO Michael O'Leary's latest comments about the Boeing's 737 Max situation on the company's earnings call.
The funds will be available over the next several years and are not part of any compensation Boeing may have to pay to those who sue the company for damages related to accidents.
Gap years have been increasing in popularity among young Americans, and amid the pandemic-caused move to remote learning, deferring college entrance for a year makes sense. But it will be a different experience.
A powerful nor'easter is expected to hit the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast on Friday and Saturday, USA Today reports.
Air Lease CEO John Plueger speaks with CNBC's Phil LeBeau from the Paris Air Show
Spirit Airlines delayed a shareholder vote on a planned tie-up with Frontier for a third time.
Gina Sanchez of Chantico Global and New Street Advisors’ Delano Saporu discuss some of the most shorted stocks.
NerdWallet studied hotel rates worldwide from 2019 to 2021 and found it can pay to wait to book until two weeks before arrivals as compared to months before.
Vivian James Rigney tells CNBC Travel about what he learned — and how much it cost him — to climb the tallest mountains on every continent.