Major Milestone: Alaska & Hawaiian Achieve Single Operating Certificate

Major Milestone: Alaska & Hawaiian Achieve Single Operating Certificate

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It’s a big day for Alaska Air Group, as Alaska Airlines and Hawaiian Airlines have just received a single operating certificate, clearing a major hurdle in the eyes of the government…

Alaska & Hawaiian are now one airline, according to the FAA

Alaska and Hawaiian have now officially received a single operating certificate from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). So while Alaska and Hawaiian are continuing to operate as separate brands, as far as the FAA is concerned, the two carriers are now one.

This milestone was achieved just over a year after Alaska’s formal takeover of Hawaiian, and it marks the successful integration of training, policies, procedures, and manuals, across both airlines.

Here’s how Alaska Air Group CEO Ben Minicucci describes this:

“Congratulations to everyone at Alaska Airlines and Hawaiian Airlines for getting us to a single operating certificate. This was a year-long, multi-phase effort involving multiple departments and thousands of hours of work. We also appreciate the FAA and the U.S. Department of Transportation for their guidance and support as we carefully reviewed and harmonized our processes with a shared focus on safety. This is an important step in our journey as a combined organization, and I’m excited about our future together.”

Alaska Airlines just got a bit bigger, per the government

What are the implications of a single operating certificate?

Alaska and Hawaiian moving onto a single operating certificate is primarily an internal and government matter for the time being, though over time, it’ll have more implications.

The most immediate change is that as of the start of the IATA winter 2025-2026 season, Hawaiian flight numbers have changed, so that Alaska and Hawaiian don’t have duplicate flight numbers. This makes it possible for the two airlines to increasingly integrate their systems.

That’s all that is changing for now. From a passenger standpoint, a bigger development is that in the spring of 2026, Alaska and Hawaiian will move onto a single passenger service system. At that point, we’ll see the “HA” code retired, and all flights take on the “AS” code.

Even in the long term, Alaska and Hawaiian will maintain separate branding. The idea is that all flights touching Hawaii will have Hawaiian branding, while all other flights will have Alaska branding. Fortunately Hawaiian will be joining the oneworld alliance as of early 2026, so at that point, there should be full metal neutrality from the perspective of frequent flyers.

Also as of the coming spring, we’ll see the major labor groups at the airlines receive new joint collective bargaining agreements. This includes flight crews, as well as airport and maintenance teams. That means all employees at Alaska Air Group will be under the same contract, regardless of which “brand” they primarily work with.

So there’s obviously a lot going on here, but there’s no denying that Alaska Air Group is making great process with the integration following the merger.

Hawaiian Airlines will officially join the oneworld alliance

Bottom line

Alaska Airlines and Hawaiian Airlines are now officially on a single operating certificate, which is a major milestone in the merger of the two companies. While Alaska and Hawaiian branding will stick around in the long run, the two airlines are now considered one, as far as the government is concerned.

The next steps are for Alaska Air Group to convince employees and customers that the brand is one, as that’s still quite an undertaking. 😉

What do you make of Alaska & Hawaiian now being on a single operating certificate?

Conversations (8)
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  1. Steve_from_Seattle Member

    Glad to see this milestone actually happen.

    Yes AS's IT problems are concerning but I think the real joke is cloud computing in general. It just strikes me as bad architecture to be so dependent upon 3rd party systems. Today, the issue seems to be a Microsoft platform. Previously, they had a hardware issue. There have also been issues with an Amazon platform.

    So, today (and last week), it's Alaska. @Tim Dunn and others, let's...

    Glad to see this milestone actually happen.

    Yes AS's IT problems are concerning but I think the real joke is cloud computing in general. It just strikes me as bad architecture to be so dependent upon 3rd party systems. Today, the issue seems to be a Microsoft platform. Previously, they had a hardware issue. There have also been issues with an Amazon platform.

    So, today (and last week), it's Alaska. @Tim Dunn and others, let's not forget about Delta and Crowdstrike. AS's response has been to hire consultants to help them fix their IT issues, as opposed to DL's approach of suing Crowdstrike, a vendor they chose themselves. I view that as a step on the right direction.

  2. Robert D Guest

    I noticed this morning when searching flights to HNL on Alaska’s app that some of the flights are identified as “Operated by Alaska as Hawaiian Airlines”.

  3. Chris k Guest

    Alaska is a joke. I had miles stolen from my account. They replaced them and I need to call when I need to use them. Found a flight last week and surprised at an 8 hour hold time for the first it outage. Now this today…

  4. Tim Dunn Diamond

    and their website is running in backup mode right now.

  5. Mark Guest

    I wasn't aware that they were planning on rebranding the existing Alaska Airlines flights to Hawaii as Hawaiian Airlines flights.

  6. AA flyer Guest

    Does this mean we dont have to wait until HA joins OneWorld to earn AA miles? If all flights are AS I wouldn't think so. Curious how this impacts earning miles

  7. 99 Luft Stanzas Guest

    I'll miss the HA

    Just hope Alaska don't screw up what makes Hawaiian special and get the Kōloa Mai Tai back on board

  8. 1990 Guest

    Whatever they do, they'd better keep that guava juice flowing on those old Hawaiian routes!

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1990 Guest

Whatever they do, they'd better keep that guava juice flowing on those old Hawaiian routes!

2
Mark Guest

I wasn't aware that they were planning on rebranding the existing Alaska Airlines flights to Hawaii as Hawaiian Airlines flights.

1
99 Luft Stanzas Guest

I'll miss the HA Just hope Alaska don't screw up what makes Hawaiian special and get the Kōloa Mai Tai back on board

1
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