Southwest Airlines Agrees to Record $140 Million Penalty for 2022 Winter Travel Chaos

Image: Southwest Airlines plane at the gate. (photo via Eric Bowman)
Image: Southwest Airlines plane at the gate. (photo via Eric Bowman)
Donald Wood
by Donald Wood
Last updated: 8:55 AM ET, Mon December 18, 2023

Southwest Airlines announced it had agreed to pay a record-setting $140 million civil penalty levied by the United States Department of Transportation (DOT) over the December 2022 holiday meltdown associated with Winter Storm Elliott.

The DOT’s consent order comes after a lengthy investigation into travel disruptions that led to around 16,900 flight cancellations and stranded two million passengers during last year's busy winter holiday travel.

As part of the agreement, Southwest will pay a $35 million cash fine across a three-year period, as well as implement a new policy worth $90 million in travel vouchers of $75 or more to passengers delayed at least three hours due to an issue or cancellation caused by the airline.

The policy will be implemented by April 30, 2024.

“We have spent the past year acutely focused on efforts to enhance the customer experience with significant investments and initiatives that accelerate operational resiliency, enhance cross-team collaboration and bolster overall preparedness for winter operations,” Southwest CEO Bob Jordan said. 

“Our commitment to customers has been central to our success across our 52-year history and has helped us become one of the world's most admired and trusted airlines,” Jordan continued. 

After the chaos of Southwest’s failures during the 2022 winter storm, the carrier paid over $600 million to impacted passengers and estimated that the incident cost the company more than $1 billion.

Over the last year, the airline implemented significant technology and consumer service upgrades, dubbed the Disruption Action Plan, as well as substantial investments in de-icing equipment, new staffing and software upgrades to predict network health.

The DOT credited Southwest with $33 million toward the penalty for voluntarily awarding frequent flyer points to hundreds of thousands of impacted passengers.


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