Southwest Airlines sent shockwaves through the aviation industry today by announcing a total withdrawal from Chicago O’Hare International Airport and Washington Dulles International Airport. This strategic retrenchment, effective June 4, 2026, marks the end of the carrier’s high-profile experiment at two of the nation's most congested secondary hubs and signals a definitive shift toward its "Southwest 2.0" profitability plan.
The Retreat from O'Hare and Dulles
The Dallas-based carrier confirmed on March 13 that its last day of operation at both O'Hare (ORD) and Dulles (IAD) will be June 3, 2026. The move comes as the airline grapples with new FAA-imposed flight caps at O’Hare, which recently limited the airport to 2,800 daily operations to curb chronic delays.
“Operating at Chicago O'Hare continues to be challenging,” a Southwest Airlines spokesperson stated in an official release on Friday afternoon. “We are confident we can serve Chicagoland through our strongly-held position at Chicago Midway.”
For the Washington, D.C. market, the airline is pivoting its resources toward Baltimore/Washington International (BWI) and Reagan National (DCA). The company’s travel advisory noted that “the same changes also apply to Washington Dulles International Airport,” urging travelers booked after the June cutoff to seek refunds or rebook through alternative gateways.

Southwest 2.0 and the Profitability Push
This withdrawal is not merely a service cut but a pillar of a broader transformation. Since January 27, 2026, Southwest has officially transitioned to assigned seating and introduced bag fees for basic fares, moves that once seemed unthinkable for the low-cost giant.
By exiting high-cost airports like ORD and IAD, Southwest aims to reallocate its Boeing 737 fleet to higher-margin leisure routes and its newly launched "frontier" markets. This includes its historic expansion into Alaska and the U.S. Virgin Islands, which began earlier this quarter. Analysts suggest that the carrier is trading the "prestige" of O'Hare for the higher yields of destination-specific traffic in the Caribbean and the Pacific Northwest.
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Shifting Capacity to New Horizons
While the airline scales back in Illinois and Virginia, it is aggressively courting travelers elsewhere. New services to Anchorage and the Caribbean are part of a massive 31-route expansion launching this spring. Below are the details for the most significant new operations officially added to the 2026 schedule to replace the lost hub capacity.

New Air Operations and Route Reallocations (2026)
| Flight No. | Route | Departure Time | Arrival Time | Duration | Operating Days |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| WN 402 | Chicago Midway (MDW) – Milwaukee (MKE) | 10:00 AM | 10:45 AM | 0h 45m | Daily |
| WN 2218 | Denver (DEN) – Anchorage (ANC) | 5:45 PM | 9:25 PM | 5h 40m | Daily |
| WN 856 | Orlando (MCO) – St. Maarten (SXM) | 9:15 AM | 1:20 PM | 3h 05m | Tue, Sat |
| WN 1104 | San Diego (SAN) – Boston (BOS) | 8:30 AM | 4:55 PM | 5h 25m | Daily |
| WN 339 | Las Vegas (LAS) – San Jose, CR (SJO) | 11:30 PM | 6:45 AM | 6h 15m | Mon, Thu, Fri |
Official Guidance for Impacted Travelers Southwest has issued a firm protocol for those affected by the ORD and IAD closures.
“Any travel that includes O'Hare on or after June 4, 2026, will be impacted by this change. Customers can rebook or travel standby within 14 days of their original travel date without paying a fare difference.”
The airline confirmed that all affected staff at O'Hare and Dulles will be offered the "opportunity to bid for open positions across the Southwest's network," specifically at Midway and Reagan National.
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