Artificial intelligence or AI is already reshaping parts of the commercial aviation industry, and in the coming years, airlines are expected to expand AI systems across operations, pricing, customer service, and flight management as they look to cut costs, increase margins, and improve reliability, efficiency, and performance.
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First, modern commercial aircraft generate enormous amounts of operational data through onboard sensors that monitor critical systems. Already, airlines are increasingly using AI systems to analyze that data and identify patterns associated with wear and tear or mechanical failure.
AI could help airlines shift maintenance away from reactive repairs—which usually cause ground delays because they are discovered too late—and toward predictive maintenance. We’ve all been there: Everyone boards the flight and things seem all set to go, only to have the captain come over the intercom and announce that there’s maintenance that needs to be done.
Though maintenance will still need to occur, being able to predict it better in advance could help reduce last-minute delays, which tend to be the most frustrating.
Also, many AI-driven changes on this list could benefit the passenger. However, the outlook remains uncertain when it comes to airlines using AI in its ticket pricing methods.
Airline ticket pricing has long relied on algorithms that result in different prices at different times. But, AI is expected to make pricing systems substantially more individualized, incorporating factors such as booking history, travel timing, route demand, loyalty status, and purchasing behavior to tailor fares to specific travelers.
That could mean two passengers searching for the same flight and the same time receive different ticket prices based on what the airline thinks each will pay, based on the aforementioned criteria, as well as the likelihood of purchasing upgrades, checked bags, or premium seating.
While it is easy to see how such a pricing model could benefit the airlines and their profit margins, the concept of personalized pricing raises concerns about transparency and fairness, particularly if airlines don’t reveal the exact data they are collecting and using to determine prices.
For example, if flight purchase history shows you travel at the end of every month to the same place for work (American Airlines, for example, now makes you select Business or Personal travel when booking), can they increase the price, knowing you have to go?
Lastly, Flight cancellations, weather delays, missed connections, and maintenance disruptions generate enormous customer-service demand, and we all know how that can go: Long lines at customer service desks and tortuous time listening to on-hold music on the phone.
AI might be able to help in some cases. Instead of waiting on hold for a call center representative, passengers may increasingly interact with AI assistants capable of automatically rebooking itineraries, issuing hotel or meal vouchers, translating requests across multiple languages, providing real-time updates during irregular hours, etc. The technology could prove particularly valuable during severe weather events, when airline support systems often become overwhelmed.
Faster rebooking and more proactive communication may help reduce some of the frustration traditionally associated with large-scale travel disruptions, although the reduction in human-to-human contact could create its own frustrations, as anyone who has ever called a 1-800 number and had trouble getting through to a human can understand.
Fuel remains one of the airline industry’s largest operating expenses, often accounting for roughly a quarter or more of total costs. That financial pressure, combined with growing scrutiny over aviation emissions, has made fuel efficiency a major area of AI investment.
Airlines are increasingly using AI to optimize flight routing, cruising altitudes, taxi operations, descent procedures, and aircraft loading to make small efficiency gains that could have significant effects across large fleets operating thousands of flights daily.
In theory, that could save the airlines money and perhaps reduce ticket prices, though it’s fair for consumers to be skeptical of the latter.





