• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us
  • Ask Scott
Travel Codex

Travel Codex

Your Resource for Better Travel

  • Subscribe
  • Credit Cards
  • Reviews
  • Guides & Tips
  • Award Travel

An Update on Delta Downsizing in Memphis

by Rohan Anand
Last updated September 18, 2018

Delta has officially loaded its schedule for its Memphis operations, which will no longer be considered a hub for the airline after September 3, 2013, as reported last week.

Memphis currently offers 93 daily departures to 49 cities across the U.S., and a weekly seasonal flight to Cancun, via Delta mainline and its regional airlines.

As part of the de-hubbing and downsizing, Delta will cancel 10 year-round routes out of Memphis and reduce operations on another 10. These are the following routes that will be affected:

Cancelled routes:

  • Baton Rouge, LA
  • Fayetteville, AR
  • Jackson, MS
  • Knoxville, TN
  • Little Rock, AR
  • Oklahoma City, OK
  • Omaha, NE
  • Shreveport, LA
  • St. Louis, MO
  • Tulsa, OK

Reduced routes:

  • Austin, TX (2 > 1 daily, CRJ)
  • Columbus, OH (2 > 1 daily, ERJ)
  • Dallas/Ft. Worth, TX (3 > 2 daily, CRJ)
  • Houston, TX (3 > 2 daily, CRJ)
  • Indianapolis, IN (3 > 2 daily, CRJ and ERJ)
  • Kansas City, MO (2 > 1 daily, CRJ)
  • Milwaukee, WI (2 > 1 daily, CRJ)
  • Nashville, TN (2 > 1 daily, CRJ)
  • San Antonio, TX (2 > 1 daily, CRJ)
  • Washington Reagan, D.C. (3 > 2 daily, CR9)

My guess is that Delta will also not be resuming its summer-seasonal flights to Cancun, Phoenix nor Seattle, although the status on those flights will become more known once Delta loads is Summer 2014 schedule into the GDS.

Delta will retain the same amount of frequencies to 19 markets from MEM, including six to its other domestic hubs.
Hub route frequencies:
 
  • Atlanta, GA (10x M88)
  • Cincinnati, OH (3x CRJ)
  • Detroit, MI (2x CR7, 1x CR9, 1x 319, 1x M88)
  • Minneapolis, MN (1x CR9, 1x 319, 1x 320)
  • New York, NY (LGA) (2x CR7, 1x 320)
  • Salt Lake City, UT (1x CR9, 2x 320)

Non-hub route frequencies:

  • Boston, MA (1x CR9)
  • Charlotte, NC (2x CRJ, 1x CR9)
  • Chicago, IL (ORD) (2x CRJ, 1x CR9)
  • Denver, CO (1x CR9)
  • Las Vegas, NV (1x 320)
  • Los Angeles, CA (2x 320)
  • Louisville, KY (1x ERJ)
  • New Orleans, LA (3x CRJ)
  • Orlando, FL (1x 320)
  • Philadelphia, PA (1x CR7, 1x CR9)
  • Pittsburgh, PA (1x CRJ, 1x ERJ)
  • Raleigh-Durham, N.C. (1x CRJ, 1x ERJ)
  • Tampa, FL (1x 320)

 

National Geographic-Lindblad Expeditions Announces First-Ever European River Cruises Routes
Trending
National Geographic-Lindblad Expeditions Announces First-Ever European River Cruises Routes

Analysis and observations

Looking at all of this data together, the picture really isn’t as bad as it is made out to be. Delta will still maintain nonstop service from Memphis to 29 cities, all major US markets with the possible exceptions of Seattle, St. Louis, San Francisco, Portland, Phoenix, Miami/South Florida, and Jacksonville. The airline will still offer 22 daily mainline flights (even though a little less than half of them are to Atlanta) and at minimum, 3 daily nonstop flights to six other Delta hubs, providing MEM travelers easy connection options to Delta’s systemwide network. 

Moreover, Delta is maintaining more than a single daily flights to 11 non-hub markets, which is pretty significant. As someone who grew up in Dallas and lived through the Delta de-hubbing process at DFW, which took place in 2005, I would argue that Delta is treating Memphis MUCH more generously than they did to my hometown back in the day.

Now, granted, that was a different time and era (the DFW decision was made in light of an impending bankruptcy whereas MEM is simply unprofitable, redundant, and affected by a nearby hub and fleet-phaseout program). DFW also didn’t necessarily “need” to maintain links to cities like LAX, TPA, BOS, DEN etc. because we already had a hub carrier via American. I can see the logic behind Delta maintaining a single daily flight from Memphis to Las Vegas, for instance, because no other carrier presently flies this route, and Delta can enjoy a monopoly on this segment even though it now considers it a “point-to-point” leg between spokes in its network. 

One final thought is what is going to happen to Delta’s Cincinnati hub – will it suffer a similar fate as Memphis?

My response to that is that I don’t think that Memphis is necessarily “suffering” from much “fate” since it is only losing service to 10 markets and seeing frequency reductions to another 10. That is consistent with the schedule reduction of ~90 daily flights to ~60, or a third of its current volume. 

Truthfully, the reductions at MEM have been “phased-in” in waves over the course of two years now, and the situation has been somewhat similar at CVG, so it should come as no surprise if Delta makes similar alterations at Cincinatti in the upcoming months. The only real “casualty” here is that the hubs are just losing the label of being a “hub,” which is really somewhat meaningless in the grand scheme of things. If they weren’t really “hubs” to begin with, offering 1-3 daily flights to large scale cities, and eliminating nonstop service to the smaller regional-tier cities, they’re really not much more than just a focus operation. 

For example, say I live in Columbus, OH and I want to fly to San Antonio. If I have some interior knowledge of the industry, right off the bat, I’m not going to assume the best routing option (if it requires a connection) will be via MEM, given the fact that there is a single daily flight from Columbus and two daily flights to San Antonio. Rather, I’m going to gravitate towards other Delta “hubs” that I know truly exist in Detroit, Atlanta or elsewhere.

Returning to the Cincy discussion, I would venture to say that Cincinnati will also likely retain a similar network in size, but with a sincerely reduced schedule. Small and medium-tier markets will definitely lose nonstop service. I’ve heard through the vine that Delta maintains its long-haul flight from CVG to Amsterdam thanks to corporate contracts with companies like Proctor & Gamble, so those should be safe as long as the contracts are maintained. American Airlines still retained its nonstop flight to London Heathrow from Raleigh-Durham, even after it de-hubbed RDU back in the 90’s, thanks to a contract with the Research-Triangle in the Carolinas. 

I’ll be keeping watch over CVG in the upcoming months, and curious to know if Delta finds success in the revamped MEM station. Also watch-worthy will be the impact of LCC entrants into MEM (such as Southwest) and how the market will change as a result. 

  • 4shares
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • Email

Read This Next

  • BREAKING NEWS: Delta Eliminates Memphis Hub, Cuts Jobs
  • a large building with many cars parked in a parking lot
    Walking in Memphis (Airport): A History
  • a close up of a tag
    Delta Pisses Off Seattle Customers

About Rohan Anand

Rohan has been writing about airlines and aviation since 2008. He has been writing for Travel Codex since 2013, and co-founded and launched the Airways Podcast with Vinay Bhaskara in 2016. He is a self-proclaimed #AvGeek, but is also fascinated by the evolving world of airline and aviation technology, data, tools, developments, models and disruption. Aside from his full-time day job as a Technical Project Manager, Rohan lifts weights, practices and teaches Yoga, cooks, listens to all varieties of music, is the captain of a rec volleyball team, and loves exploring the nightlife in his current home, Chicago. Rohan also likes to S.C.U.B.A. dive, ski, bike, and sing #KARAOKE. His perfect day is on a beach, with commercial wide-body planes fying overhead, and good jams with good company. Rohan's favorite airline, airport, and aircraft are KLM, Amsterdam Schiphol and the McDonnell-Douglas MD-11.

Primary Sidebar

Over 100K+ Followers

Subscribe to updates from Travel Codex

none

Learn to how to find the cheapest awards.

Search Now

none

Transfer points to get more value.

See Options

none

Compare credit cards to earn more miles.

Explore Offers

Contact

If you have a question or would like to make a press inquiry, please contact:

Scott Mackenzie
Editor in Chief
scott@travelcodex.com

For updates:
Subscribe to RSS
Subscribe to Apple News

Privacy Policy


© Travel Codex, LLC All Rights Reserved.


Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this site’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Travel Codex with appropriate and specific directions to the original content.