American Airlines relaunches Miami service in October
Flights between Bermuda and Miami are set to restart early next month, while BermudAir launches new flights servicing New York and New Jersey.
According to the October flight schedule, published by Skyport, American Airlines is set to restart its daily service between Bermuda and Miami on October 6 after grounding the service for a little over a month.
The airline is also scheduled to continue daily service to Charlotte, North Carolina and New York JFK, along with five weekly flights to Philadelphia.
As previously announced, BermudAir is set to launch flights to Newark, New Jersey on October 26, with the airline adding service to New York LaGuardia on October 29.
Both flights will operate twice a week.
The airline is also expected to bolster its service to and from Halifax in Canada on October 6, adding a third weekly flight.
However, the Bermudian-based airline was scheduled to end its service to Hartford, Connecticut yesterday and its direct service to Charleston, South Carolina, will halt on October 26.
BermudAir is scheduled to continue to offer five weekly flights between Bermuda and Boston, Westchester and Toronto, along with three weekly flights to Baltimore and two weekly flights to Orlando, Raleigh-Durham, Richmond and Montreal.
JetBlue is scheduled to slightly reduce its service between Bermuda and Boston, cutting its Wednesday, Friday and Saturday flights effective October 26.
Air Canada will continue to offer five weekly flights between Bermuda and Toronto and one weekly flight to Montreal.
However, the Toronto flight will not operate on October 27 and 29, while the Montreal flight will not run on October 25.
British Airways is scheduled to maintain its daily service between Bermuda and Heathrow, but will not operate a flight on October 26 — while United Airlines will offer six weekly flights to Newark.
Delta Air Lines is scheduled to continue offering four weekly flights between Bermuda and New York JFK, along with three weekly flights to Atlanta, Georgia.