Lufthansa Cuts Minneapolis Flights, Transfers Route To Discover Airlines

Lufthansa Cuts Minneapolis Flights, Transfers Route To Discover Airlines

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Lufthansa will be discontinuing one of its newest transatlantic flights less than a year after launching it… sort of (thanks to Thrifty Traveler for flagging this).

Changes to Lufthansa’s Frankfurt to Minneapolis route

In June 2024, Lufthansa launched a 5x weekly, year-round flight between Frankfurt (FRA) and Minneapolis (MSP). The route is operated by a Boeing 787-9 with the following schedule:

LH482 Frankfurt to Minneapolis departing 11:10AM arriving 1:15PM
LH483 Minneapolis to Frankfurt departing 3:15PM arriving 6:40AM (+1 day)

This is a pretty cool route for the airline, given that Minneapolis is a Delta fortress hub, and doesn’t have that much long haul service from airlines other than Delta.

Unfortunately there’s a negative update when it comes to this service — Lufthansa will terminate this route as of April 29, 2025. However, the route isn’t going away altogether. As of May 2, 2025, the route will be taken over by Lufthansa Group subsidiary Discover Airlines, which will operate the route 4x weekly with an Airbus A330-300.

For some passengers, this will have limited implications, since they can still book tickets through Lufthansa, and book routings that feed into Lufthansa’s larger network through Frankfurt.

However, there are also downsides to these changes. On Discover Airlines, the passenger experience generally isn’t as good, service isn’t as good, and Discover Airlines doesn’t fully participate in Star Alliance in terms of earning and redeeming miles, and taking advantage of elite perks. In particular, in business class passengers will go from having reverse herringbone seats in Lufthansa’s 787-9 business class

Lufthansa 787 business class

…to having seats comparable to Lufthansa’s old business class in Discover Airlines’ A330 business class.

Discover Airlines A330 business class

Some people may think “well at least fares will be cheaper.” No, I wouldn’t count on that. The only thing that’s changing in that regard is that Lufthansa Group’s margins will increase.

Why Lufthansa is cutting Minneapolis flights

Lufthansa claims that it’s cutting the Minneapolis route due to lack of aircraft availability. Indeed, Lufthansa is dealing with serious aircraft delivery delays, in particular with Boeing aircraft.

However, it’s a bit more nuanced than that — I’m sure if the route were performing super well and had a bunch of high yield traffic, Lufthansa would find a way to make an aircraft available for it. Instead, clearly this is one of Lufthansa’s lower priority long haul routes for having a mainline aircraft. After all, it’s not that one specific aircraft is tied to one specific route. Instead, it’s part of a larger fleet planning puzzle.

Lufthansa claims that it plans to resume Minneapolis flights in the second half of 2026 with its own aircraft, though personally I wouldn’t count on that. It’s possible that it happens, but I wouldn’t consider it to be likely.

Minneapolis is dominated by Delta

Bottom line

In April 2025, Lufthansa will be cutting its Frankfurt to Minneapolis route, handing it over to subsidiary Discover Airlines. This is happening less than a year after the route launched. So while Lufthansa is claiming this change is due to aircraft availability, there’s a bit more to it than that.

While the load factors on this route have been decent, I imagine the yields haven’t, or else the airline wouldn’t risk offering a lower quality product.

What do you make of Lufthansa cutting its Minneapolis route, and transferring it to Discover Airlines?

Conversations (13)
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  1. RaflW Guest

    I think it's fairly obvious that LH wasn't earning nearly enough premium business on this route. It would take a lot for business pax used to the relationship with Delta to book away from their 'local' (ex NWA) carrier/alliance offering multiple EU gateways.
    So it makes a lot of sense to down-gauge to a 2-2-2 business class, one that I presume premium leisure pax will purchase ... at the right price.
    I have...

    I think it's fairly obvious that LH wasn't earning nearly enough premium business on this route. It would take a lot for business pax used to the relationship with Delta to book away from their 'local' (ex NWA) carrier/alliance offering multiple EU gateways.
    So it makes a lot of sense to down-gauge to a 2-2-2 business class, one that I presume premium leisure pax will purchase ... at the right price.
    I have no idea how much legwork LH (or partner UA) put in to try to reach corporate travel depts. at the big MN employers, but it seems like Lufthansa was welcomed more by economy travelers than pointy-end people. I'm just glad they're going to keep service under a different name (and cost structure).

  2. Santastico Diamond

    Condor has a Minneapolis to Frankfurt flight as well so if only for people looking for cruises that would be enough.

    1. RaflW Guest

      Condor's season at MSP is quite short. It may line up with some peak summer cruise business, but it's not that much capacity over the course of a year.

  3. Tim Dunn Diamond

    LH Group reported their profits today and they not surprisingly fell because of higher staff expenses and operational irregularities (strikes) at LH as core LH staff fight back at the continued outsourcing of their jobs to subsidiaries.

    LH generates half of the passenger revenue of the LH Group and yet had the lowest margin.

  4. Anthony A Guest

    This is deja vue all over again. I live in Philly and we have been stuck with Discover Airlines for 2 years and counting as LH stated back then that it was employee and aircraft shortage and each season they kept saying they would return back to mainline but haven't yet. So I won't be surprise if MSP doesn't return to LH in March 2026 as they stated unfortunately

  5. yoloswag420 Guest

    It's hard to penetrate fortresses. I believe MSP was Delta's 2nd largest hub in 2023. MSP isn't that prime of a destination either given that over a third of its traffic is connecting. LH aren't really fully pulling out anyhow since it's just Discover operating the flight vs LH mainline.

    That being said LH has been quite successful with their NA expansion otherwise. SEA's increasingly saturated market now has daily LH service to FRA and...

    It's hard to penetrate fortresses. I believe MSP was Delta's 2nd largest hub in 2023. MSP isn't that prime of a destination either given that over a third of its traffic is connecting. LH aren't really fully pulling out anyhow since it's just Discover operating the flight vs LH mainline.

    That being said LH has been quite successful with their NA expansion otherwise. SEA's increasingly saturated market now has daily LH service to FRA and 3x weekly to MUC, which is quite impressive considering it's a major OW/pseudo-SkyTeam hub. RDU is also looking strong.

    If LH could finally finish modernizing its cabins, I could actually get excited about their growth.

    1. ImmortalSynn Guest

      "it's a major OW/pseudo-SkyTeam hub."

      Weird statement. How does an airport manage to be a "pseudo-hub?"

    2. yoloswag420 Guest

      Not that weird. Delta says SEA is a hub, but in practice a hub only matters if you're successful. And we all know about Delta's bottom tier performance at SEA.

    3. Tim Dunn Diamond

      you mean you and others incessantly repeat unconfirmed drivel based on hearsay until you believe it is fact.

      Airlines don't report profit by hub. They do report by global region. Delta manages to report the highest total profits, profit per seat mile across the Pacific, and highest profit across the Atlantic.

      How, pray tell, does Delta support all of these hubs that people like are convinced are unprofitable and still end up with profitability as...

      you mean you and others incessantly repeat unconfirmed drivel based on hearsay until you believe it is fact.

      Airlines don't report profit by hub. They do report by global region. Delta manages to report the highest total profits, profit per seat mile across the Pacific, and highest profit across the Atlantic.

      How, pray tell, does Delta support all of these hubs that people like are convinced are unprofitable and still end up with profitability as high as they do?

      and better yet, what has DL managed to do to support all of these unprofitable hubs that AA and UA haven't figured out in the same almost 5 decades of deregulation?

      and where do AA and UA manage to lose so much more money than DL?

      you simply can't stand that DL has managed to build 2 new hubs in the past 10 years and is on the verge of another at AUS while AA and UA have done nothing in that regard

  6. James K. Guest

    Ugh Philly got bumped back down to Discover too, earlier in the year. Not cool, LH!

    1. Anthony A Guest

      Not sure if you were aware but Philly has had Discover for 2 years now as LH stated it was an employee and aircraft shortage and each seasons they keep stating LH would return.

  7. Pell J Guest

    I'm not happy about this development but having taken this flight, as someone who begrudgingly lives near MSP, and knowing others who have also taken it, I know the general comments have been that most passengers seems to be going on cruises. Heck, when I took the flight in September there were so many people going on Viking Cruises that they had a rep at the gate. The traffic seems to be largely leisure travelers....

    I'm not happy about this development but having taken this flight, as someone who begrudgingly lives near MSP, and knowing others who have also taken it, I know the general comments have been that most passengers seems to be going on cruises. Heck, when I took the flight in September there were so many people going on Viking Cruises that they had a rep at the gate. The traffic seems to be largely leisure travelers. So, in that regard, the switch to 4Y is unlikely to be noticed by the majority of passengers and as far as LH Group is concerned they maintain their foot in the door at MSP.

    At least we can redeem miles for 4Y through AC.

    1. raflW Guest

      Interesting. I suppose premium cruise passengers are probably more OK with 2-2-2 J class than many solo business passengers would be, if the air upgrade is priced right.

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yoloswag420 Guest

Not that weird. Delta says SEA is a hub, but in practice a hub only matters if you're successful. And we all know about Delta's bottom tier performance at SEA.

2
ImmortalSynn Guest

"it's a major OW/pseudo-SkyTeam hub." Weird statement. How does an airport manage to be a "pseudo-hub?"

2
yoloswag420 Guest

It's hard to penetrate fortresses. I believe MSP was Delta's 2nd largest hub in 2023. MSP isn't that prime of a destination either given that over a third of its traffic is connecting. LH aren't really fully pulling out anyhow since it's just Discover operating the flight vs LH mainline. That being said LH has been quite successful with their NA expansion otherwise. SEA's increasingly saturated market now has daily LH service to FRA and 3x weekly to MUC, which is quite impressive considering it's a major OW/pseudo-SkyTeam hub. RDU is also looking strong. If LH could finally finish modernizing its cabins, I could actually get excited about their growth.

2
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