Your next flight doesn't have to be so expensive. Here's why

您的下一趟航班不必如此昂贵。原因如下:

The Indicator from Planet Money

2026-03-25

9 分钟
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Why are flight tickets so expensive right now? Increased oil prices seems like it’d be the obvious answer. That’s mostly right. Airlines used to do some financial magic to help keep airfare down as oil prices increased, a strategy called “fuel hedging.” But they stopped. And now fliers are on the hook for a lot of the difference.  On today’s show, the lost art of fuel hedging. How it worked, plus why airlines stopped doing it. Come see Planet Money live on stage in April! 12 cities. Details and tix here: https://tix.to/pm-book-tour.  Related episodes: A lot of gas trapped, oil reserves tapped, and Live Nation gets a (tiny) capWill Trump’s shipping insurance plan work?Listener Questions: Airline tickets, grocery pricing and the Fed For sponsor-free episodes of The Indicator from Planet Money, subscribe to Planet Money+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org. Fact-checking by Sierra Juarez. Music by Drop Electric. Find us: TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, Newsletter. To manage podcast ad preferences, review the links below: See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences. Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoices NPR Privacy Policy
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  • NPR.

  • This is The Indicator from Planet Money.

  • I'm Darian Woods.

  • And I'm Waylon Wong.

  • I think by now it's been a familiar exercise since the war in Iran started.

  • You open a browser tab, you look at airfares for a summer vacation,

  • and then you close your laptop and you throw it into the ocean.

  • Yes, it is a ricochet effect economically about this Strait of Hormuz closing and how that's affecting airline prices.

  • Yeah, jet fuel accounts for around 20% of a typical airline's costs.

  • And the price of jet fuel has actually shot up more than crude oil, gasoline or diesel.

  • So many people who are shopping for airfares right now are feeling this pain.

  • Hiking airfares is this obvious lever that airlines can pull when their costs go up.

  • But there's another one that these companies do have at their disposal.

  • It's a strategy known as fuel hedging.

  • Airlines like Cathay Pacific, Lufthansa, and Qantas do it.

  • But most airlines in the U.S. Haven't done it for a decade.

  • So today on the show, what is fuel hedging?

  • Why did airlines in the U.S. Stop doing it?

  • And what will they do now?

  • Jerry Laderman is an airline veteran.