Breeze Airways Goes International TOMORROW January 10: First Flight Since 2021 Launch

Published on : 09 Jan 2026

Breeze Airways Airbus A220-300 aircraft preparing for inaugural international flight from Norfolk Virginia to Cancun Mexico January 10 2026 marking David Neeleman airline first route outside United States

Breaking: Breeze Airways launches its FIRST-EVER international flight TOMORROW (January 10, 2026) at 6:00 AM—Norfolk to Cancun for $99. David Neeleman’s 5-year-old airline exits domestic-only status after 3+ years FAA certification battle. Seven total routes launching through March: Cancun, Montego Bay, Jamaica; Punta Cana, Dominican Republic. This is the first NEW U.S. airline to win international approval since Virgin America 2016.


Published: January 9, 2026
First Flight: January 10, 2026 (TOMORROW 6:00 AM Norfolk-Cancun!)
Routes Launching: 7 international routes through March 2026
Destinations: Cancun, Montego Bay, Punta Cana
Fares Start: $99 one-way (promotional)
Historic Milestone: First new U.S. flag carrier certified in 10+ years


What’s Launching Tomorrow (January 10)

Starting January 10, 2026 at 6:00 AM Eastern Time, Breeze Airways Flight 123 departs Norfolk International Airport (ORF) bound for Cancun International Airport (CUN)—the airline’s FIRST flight outside the United States since launching May 27, 2021.

This is Day 1 of Breeze’s international era after 3+ years battling FAA for U.S. Flag Carrier certification.

Key Milestones Tomorrow:

✈️ First international route – Norfolk-Cancun (Saturday service only)
✈️ $99 promotional fares – One-way intro pricing
✈️ Airbus A220-300 aircraft – 137 seats (12 premium, 45 extra legroom, 80 economy)
✈️ Exclusive service – ONLY airline flying Norfolk-Cancun nonstop
✈️ Norfolk’s first international – No international flights since Air Canada Toronto ended after 9/11 (2001)
✈️ David Neeleman milestone – JetBlue founder’s 5th airline goes global

The Complete Seven-Route Rollout (Jan-March 2026)

Breeze isn’t launching just one route—it’s rolling out SEVEN international routes over three months to Cancun, Montego Bay, and Punta Cana.

Cancun, Mexico Routes (4 Total)

Route 1: Norfolk (ORF) → Cancun (CUN)

  • Launch: January 10, 2026 (TOMORROW!)
  • Schedule: Saturdays only, seasonal
  • Fares: From $139 one-way
  • Exclusivity: ONLY airline on this route
  • Historic: Norfolk’s first international service since 2001

Route 2: Charleston (CHS) → Cancun (CUN)

  • Launch: January 17, 2026
  • Schedule: Saturdays only, seasonal
  • Fares: From $119 one-way
  • Exclusivity: ONLY airline Charleston-Cancun nonstop
  • Significance: Charleston’s first Breeze international route

Route 3: New Orleans (MSY) → Cancun (CUN)

  • Launch: February 7, 2026
  • Schedule: Saturdays only, seasonal
  • Fares: From $99 one-way (lowest price!)
  • Competition: Competes with other carriers but Breeze offers lowest fares

Route 4: Providence (PVD) → Cancun (CUN)

  • Launch: February 14, 2026 (Valentine’s Day!)
  • Schedule: Saturdays only, seasonal
  • Fares: From $129 one-way
  • Exclusivity: ONLY airline Providence-Cancun
  • Ends: April 25, 2026 (seasonal)

Montego Bay, Jamaica Routes (2 Total)

Route 5: Tampa (TPA) → Montego Bay (MBJ)

  • Launch: February 11, 2026
  • Schedule: Wednesdays and Saturdays, seasonal
  • Fares: From $109 one-way
  • Exclusivity: ONLY airline Tampa-Montego Bay nonstop
  • Frequency: Twice weekly

Route 6: Raleigh-Durham (RDU) → Montego Bay (MBJ)

  • Launch: March 5, 2026
  • Schedule: Thursdays and Sundays, seasonal
  • Fares: From $99 one-way
  • Exclusivity: ONLY airline RDU-Montego Bay (Avelo suspended service)
  • Frequency: Twice weekly

Punta Cana, Dominican Republic Route (1 Total)

Route 7: Raleigh-Durham (RDU) → Punta Cana (PUJ)

  • Launch: March 4, 2026
  • Schedule: Wednesdays and Saturdays, seasonal
  • Fares: From $99 one-way
  • Competition: American Airlines also flies this route seasonally Nov-March
  • Frequency: Twice weekly

Summary: 4 Cancun routes, 2 Montego Bay routes, 1 Punta Cana route = 7 total international routes by March 5, 2026.

The Aircraft: Airbus A220-300

Breeze is using its Airbus A220-300 fleet for ALL international routes—NOT the older Embraer E190s/E195s used on shorter domestic flights.

A220-300 Specifications:

Total Capacity: 137 seats (3-class configuration)

Class 1: Premium Seats (12 total)

  • Domestic first-class style recliners
  • Extra-wide seats with plush cushioning
  • Priority boarding
  • Free seat selection for “Nicest” fare buyers
  • Located rows 1-3

Class 2: Extra Legroom (45 seats)

  • 3-5 additional inches legroom vs standard
  • Exit rows and preferred forward cabin
  • Available for “Nicer” fare upgrade ($30-50 typically)
  • Located rows 4-10

Class 3: Standard Economy (80 seats)

  • 31-32 inch seat pitch (industry standard)
  • Middle and rear cabin
  • Included in “Nice” base fare
  • Located rows 11-23

Why A220 for International:

  • 3,000-mile range – Covers all Caribbean/Mexico destinations comfortably
  • Fuel efficiency – 25% lower operating costs vs older 737s/A320s
  • Quieter cabin – Pratt & Whitney GTF engines
  • Better economics – Smaller 137-seat capacity fills easier than 180-seat competitors on thin routes
  • Premium product – 12 first-class recliners differentiate Breeze from budget carriers Spirit/Frontier

What you WON’T get: Lie-flat business class, in-flight entertainment screens, free checked bags, complimentary meals. Breeze is premium ECONOMY—not full-service international.

Breeze’s Four Fare Classes Explained

Unlike Southwest’s old single-class system, Breeze offers FOUR fare tiers with escalating benefits:

1. “Nice” Fare (Base)

What’s included:

  • Personal item only (fits under seat)
  • Standard economy seat (rows 11-23)
  • No changes, no cancellations
  • Board last

Cost: Starting $99-139 one-way international

Best for: Budget travelers with NO checked bags, flexible with seat assignment

2. “Nicer” Fare (Mid-Tier)

What’s included:

  • Personal item + carry-on bag
  • Extra legroom seat selection (rows 4-10)
  • Flight changes allowed (fee applies)
  • Priority boarding
  • Same-day flight changes

Cost: Typically $40-60 more than “Nice”

Best for: Travelers wanting better seats + carry-on without checked bag fees

3. “Nicest” Fare (Premium)

What’s included:

  • Personal item + carry-on + 1 checked bag (50 lbs)
  • Premium seat selection (rows 1-3, domestic first-class recliners)
  • Priority boarding (first to board)
  • Flight changes FREE (no fee)
  • Same-day flight changes FREE
  • Cancellation allowed (credit for future travel)

Cost: Typically $80-120 more than “Nice”

Best for: Business travelers, families needing checked bags, those wanting best seats

4. “Breezy Blue” Fare (Flexible)

What’s included:

  • Everything in “Nicest” PLUS:
  • 2 checked bags (50 lbs each)
  • Full refund if cancel (not just credit)
  • Complimentary drinks + snacks
  • Flexibility to change/cancel anytime

Cost: Typically $150-200 more than “Nice”

Best for: Uncertainty about travel plans, those wanting maximum flexibility

Pro tip: International routes REQUIRE passport. “Nice” fare saves money but remember you’re in standard economy rear cabin with NO checked bag. Families should budget for “Nicest” to get included checked bag.

Why Norfolk, Charleston, Providence Got EXCLUSIVE Service

Breeze chose Norfolk, Charleston, and Providence for Cancun routes specifically because they’ve NEVER had nonstop Mexico service—creating exclusive monopolies.

The Breeze Strategy:

Target secondary cities: Norfolk (pop 238,000 metro), Charleston (pop 809,000 metro), Providence (pop 1.6M metro) are mid-size markets ignored by United/Delta/American who focus on mega-hubs.

Eliminate competition: By launching where NO ONE else flies, Breeze avoids price wars. Norfolk-Cancun has ZERO competitors. Charleston-Cancun has ZERO competitors. Providence-Cancun has ZERO competitors.

Drive load factors: Smaller A220 (137 seats) fills easier than competitor 737s/A320s (180+ seats). Breeze only needs 100 passengers per flight to profit; United needs 150+ on larger aircraft.

Seasonal flexibility: Saturday-only service minimizes risk. If demand weak, cancel easily. If demand strong, add Wednesdays/Thursdays later.

Norfolk’s 23-Year International Drought

Norfolk International Airport (ORF) hasn’t had scheduled international service since September 11, 2001 when Air Canada discontinued Toronto flights after 9/11 attacks—a 23-year gap.

Why Norfolk matters:

  • Military hub – Norfolk Naval Station (world’s largest naval base), Langley Air Force Base, Coast Guard bases = thousands of military families wanting affordable Cancun beach vacations
  • Underserved market – Previously forced to drive 3.5 hours to Washington Dulles or 4 hours to Charlotte for international flights
  • Beach destination appeal – Virginia Beach tourists (14M annual visitors) want easy Mexico escapes

David Neeleman: “This new route will be the only operating international service from ORF. Instead of having to connect through a major hub, our Guests in Norfolk will now be able to fly internationally nonstop more conveniently than ever.”

Charleston’s Limited International Options

Charleston International Airport (CHS) currently has only TWO international routes:

  1. Air Canada Toronto – Seasonal summer service
  2. BermudAir Bermuda – Launched April 2025

Breeze’s Cancun route becomes Charleston’s THIRD international destination and first to Latin America. Charleston CEO Elliott Summey called it “a significant milestone reflecting growing demand for international service.”

Why Charleston loves this:

  • Tourism economy – Charleston attracts 7.5M visitors annually; locals want outbound vacation options too
  • No Mexico access – Residents previously drove to Charlotte or Atlanta for Cancun flights
  • Breeze loyalty – Charleston was Breeze’s FIRST-EVER destination when airline launched May 2021; city has supported carrier since inception

Charleston Regional Aviation Authority chair Helen Hill: “Charleston has been part of Breeze’s story since the carrier’s inception and will continue to grow that partnership.”

David Neeleman’s 5th Airline Milestone

This international launch represents a MAJOR personal milestone for Breeze founder David Neeleman—one of aviation’s most successful (and controversial) entrepreneurs.

Neeleman’s Airline Empire:

1. Morris Air (1984-1993): Founded budget carrier; sold to Southwest Airlines for $129M

2. WestJet (1996): Co-founded Canada’s #2 airline (now 180+ aircraft, 25M passengers/year)

3. JetBlue Airways (1999-2007): Founded JetBlue in 1999; grew to major U.S. carrier; ousted as CEO 2007 after Valentine’s Day ice storm crisis

4. Azul Brazilian Airlines (2008): Founded Brazil’s #3 airline; still operating 170+ aircraft

5. Breeze Airways (2021-present): Launched May 27, 2021 during COVID pandemic; now 80+ destinations, 5th airline to go international

The Neeleman Philosophy:

“We’re providing something that has either never existed or a new option for travelers to fly nonstop. And that’s our whole DNA.” – Lukas Johnson, Breeze Chief Commercial Officer

Neeleman built his fortune identifying UNDERSERVED routes. While United/American chase New York-London profits, Neeleman connects Norfolk-Cancun. While Delta dominates Atlanta hub, Neeleman links Charleston-Cancun.

His track record: Four successful airlines across three countries. JetBlue revolutionized U.S. aviation with leather seats + free TV. Azul dominates Brazil. Now Breeze targets U.S. secondary cities.

The international milestone: “Becoming a U.S. flag carrier is a huge milestone for Breeze, and one that our Team Members have been working tirelessly on for the last three years,” Neeleman said. “We’re excited to bring the same convenience and elevated experience they love about our domestic flights to three exciting new international destinations.”

The 3-Year FAA Certification Battle

Breeze’s journey to international service took 3+ years of FAA proving runs, paperwork, inspections, and regulatory hoops.

What “U.S. Flag Carrier” certification requires:

Proving runs – Test flights to international destinations with FAA inspectors onboard evaluating crew performance, safety procedures, emergency protocols

International Operations Manual – Detailed procedures for customs, immigration, international air traffic control, foreign airport operations

Crew training – Pilots/flight attendants certified for international procedures including ocean crossings, extended range operations, foreign emergency protocols

Aircraft certification – A220-300 approved for international operations including ETOPS (Extended Operations) for overwater flights

Station setup – Staff hired at foreign airports (Cancun, Montego Bay, Punta Cana) to handle ground operations, baggage, customer service

Customs/immigration agreements – Bilateral agreements with Mexico, Jamaica, Dominican Republic governments

Financial vetting – Proof of financial stability to operate international routes

Timeline:

  • May 2021: Breeze launches domestic service
  • 2022-2024: Begins FAA flag carrier application process
  • August 2025: Private “proving runs” from Charleston to Cancun and Punta Cana with FAA inspectors
  • September 25, 2025: FAA grants U.S. Flag Carrier certification—FIRST new U.S. airline certified in 10+ years (since Virgin America 2016, later acquired by Alaska Airlines)
  • January 10, 2026: First commercial international flight

Why it took 3 years: FAA doesn’t rush international approvals. Safety standards MUST be proven. Breeze had to demonstrate its 5-year-old operation was mature, stable, financially sound enough to handle international complexities.

The payoff: Breeze now has UNLIMITED international route authority (within aircraft range). After proving Cancun/Montego Bay/Punta Cana work, Neeleman can add Costa Rica, Colombia, Peru, anywhere within A220’s 3,000-mile range.

Raleigh-Durham’s 200-Job Crew Base

To support international expansion, Breeze is opening its 12th crew base at Raleigh-Durham International Airport (RDU) in Q1 2026—creating 200+ pilot and flight attendant jobs.

Why RDU matters:

  • Central East Coast location – Ideal positioning for Caribbean routes
  • Growing Breeze hub – Currently 8 routes (2023) expanding to 32 routes including Montego Bay + Punta Cana
  • Research Triangle talent – RDU serves Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill metro (2.1M population) with educated workforce, universities, tech companies

Crew base economics:

  • 200 pilots + flight attendants hired locally
  • Reduced deadheading – Crews live in RDU vs flying in from other bases, cutting costs
  • Better quality of life – Pilots/FAs start/end trips from home base vs hotel layovers
  • Operational reliability – Local crews available for schedule disruptions, weather delays, cancellations

RDU Airport CEO Michael Landguth: “We are thrilled to see Breeze deepen its investment by creating jobs in our community and adding international flights to its route map.”

The expansion: RDU went from 8 Breeze routes (2023) to 32 routes (2026) including 2 international = 300% growth in 3 years.

Competition Analysis: Who Breeze Is Challenging

Cancun Market

Total U.S.-Cancun capacity: 10+ million seats annually (one of busiest international routes from U.S.)

Breeze’s tiny slice: 4 routes, Saturday-only = approximately 28,000 annual seats (0.3% market share)

Major competitors:

  • Southwest: Operates Cancun from 20+ U.S. cities, daily/multi-daily flights, 2M+ annual seats
  • United: Hub-based Cancun service from Houston, Chicago, Newark, Denver
  • American: Dallas, Charlotte, Miami, Phoenix hubs to Cancun
  • Delta: Atlanta, Detroit, Minneapolis, Los Angeles to Cancun
  • JetBlue: New York, Boston, Fort Lauderdale to Cancun
  • Frontier/Spirit: Ultra-low-cost competition from multiple cities

Breeze advantage: Goes where others DON’T (Norfolk, Charleston, Providence) vs where others already dominate.

Montego Bay Market

Breeze routes: Tampa-MBJ (exclusive), RDU-MBJ (exclusive after Avelo exit)

Competitors:

  • JetBlue: Major Montego Bay operator from New York, Boston, Fort Lauderdale
  • Southwest: Dallas, Houston, Baltimore to Montego Bay
  • American: Charlotte, Miami, Philadelphia to Montego Bay
  • United: Newark, Washington Dulles to Montego Bay

Breeze advantage: Tampa-MBJ is ONLY nonstop option. RDU-MBJ was served by Avelo (now suspended), giving Breeze monopoly.

Punta Cana Market

Breeze route: RDU-PUJ (competes with American Airlines seasonal service)

Competitors:

  • American: Dominant Punta Cana carrier from Charlotte, Miami, Philadelphia, Chicago
  • JetBlue: New York, Boston, Fort Lauderdale to Punta Cana
  • United: Newark, Washington to Punta Cana
  • Delta: Atlanta, New York to Punta Cana
  • Southwest: Baltimore to Punta Cana

Breeze disadvantage: RDU-PUJ faces American Airlines competition Nov-March (344 weekly seats). Breeze must compete on price.

Bottom line: Breeze isn’t trying to beat United/Delta/American on major routes. It’s finding routes they IGNORE and owning those monopolies with small efficient aircraft.

How Much This Actually Costs

Breeze advertises “$99 fares” but the REAL cost includes fees, taxes, and fare class selection.

True Cost Breakdown (Norfolk-Cancun Example):

Scenario 1: Budget Traveler (“Nice” Fare)

  • Base fare (Nice): $139 one-way
  • US taxes/fees: $5.60 security fee + $23 intl departure tax = $28.60
  • Mexico taxes: $65 (tourism tax + airport fees + immigration)
  • Seat selection: $0 (assigned automatically, likely middle/rear)
  • Checked bag: $0 (personal item only fits under seat)

TOTAL ONE-WAY: $232.60 ROUND-TRIP: $465.20

Scenario 2: Family of 4 (“Nicest” Fare + Bags)

  • Base fare (Nicest): $219 one-way × 4 = $876
  • US taxes/fees: $28.60 × 4 = $114.40
  • Mexico taxes: $65 × 4 = $260
  • Seat selection: Included (premium rows 1-3)
  • Checked bags: Included (1 bag per person in Nicest fare)

TOTAL ONE-WAY: $1,250.40 (family of 4) ROUND-TRIP: $2,500.80

Scenario 3: Business Traveler (“Breezy Blue” Refundable)

  • Base fare (Breezy Blue): $299 one-way
  • US taxes/fees: $28.60
  • Mexico taxes: $65
  • Seat selection: Premium seat rows 1-3 included
  • Checked bags: 2 bags included
  • Flexibility: Full refund if cancel

TOTAL ONE-WAY: $392.60 ROUND-TRIP: $785.20

Reality check: That “$99 fare” becomes $232.60 with taxes for basic economy. Families pay $2,500+ round-trip for 4 people with bags/premium seats.

How Breeze Compares to Competitors

Norfolk to Cancun via Washington Dulles (United alternative):

  • United ORF-IAD-CUN: 2 flights, 6-8 hours total, 1 connection
  • Cost: $400-600 round-trip economy (similar to Breeze)
  • Breeze advantage: Nonstop 2 hours 40 minutes, no connection hassle

Charleston to Cancun via Charlotte (American alternative):

  • American CHS-CLT-CUN: 2 flights, 6-7 hours, 1 connection
  • Cost: $350-550 round-trip economy
  • Breeze advantage: Nonstop saves 4+ hours, no missed connection risk

Providence to Cancun (Previously NO nonstop option):

  • Previous: Drive to Boston Logan (1 hour) + JetBlue BOS-CUN nonstop
  • OR: Southwest PVD-BWI-CUN (2 flights, connection)
  • Breeze advantage: First-ever nonstop from Rhode Island

The value proposition: Breeze saves 4-6 hours travel time + eliminates connection anxiety. For families with kids, that’s worth premium over ultra-low-cost Spirit/Frontier.

What Travelers Must Know NOW

Passport Requirements

CRITICAL: International travel requires valid passport with 6+ months validity remaining.

  • U.S. passport processing: 6-8 weeks standard, 2-3 weeks expedited ($60 extra)
  • Check expiration NOW—many Cancun bookings will be denied boarding if passport expires within 6 months of return date
  • Children need individual passports (no “adding” kids to parent passport)

Booking Window

  • Norfolk-Cancun: Bookable NOW for January 10+ Saturdays
  • Charleston-Cancun: Bookable NOW for January 17+ Saturdays
  • All routes: Available at flybreeze.com or Breeze Airways app

Pro tip: Book early for best fares. Introductory $99-139 pricing won’t last—expect $199-299 once promotional period ends.

Seasonal Operation

ALL routes are SEASONAL meaning they DON’T operate year-round.

Typical season: January-April (peak winter escape season when Northeasterners flee cold for Caribbean warmth)

Providence-Cancun specifically: Ends April 25, 2026 (shortest season)

What this means: Don’t assume Saturday Cancun flights operate in July/August—they likely DON’T. Book winter/spring only.

Customs/Immigration

Leaving U.S.: No exit immigration (U.S. doesn’t stamp passports when leaving)

Entering Mexico/Jamaica/Dominican Republic:

  • Fill out immigration form on plane (provided by crew)
  • Customs declaration required
  • Tourism tax paid at airport (included in ticket for Mexico; separate for Jamaica/DR)
  • Have hotel address ready for immigration form

Returning to U.S.:

  • Clear U.S. Customs + Immigration at Norfolk/Charleston/Providence/etc.
  • Mobile Passport Control app speeds up process
  • Declare all purchases (duty-free limits apply)

Why This Matters for U.S. Aviation

Breeze’s international certification breaks a 10-year drought of new U.S. flag carriers—the last was Virgin America in 2016 (later acquired by Alaska Airlines 2018).

What it proves:

New airlines CAN succeed post-COVID – Breeze launched May 2021 during pandemic uncertainty and survived
Secondary city strategy works – Connecting underserved Norfolk/Charleston instead of competing for New York slots
A220 economics unlock thin routes – Smaller efficient aircraft make Norfolk-Cancun profitable where 737s wouldn’t fill
Neeleman still has magic – 5 successful airlines across 3 countries proves replicable model

What it threatens:

⚠️ JetBlue’s Caribbean monopoly – Breeze now competes on Montego Bay routes where JetBlue dominated from Northeast
⚠️ Southwest’s Cancun dominance – Breeze undercuts Southwest pricing while offering premium seats Southwest lacks
⚠️ American/Delta/United’s regional neglect – Proves demand exists in cities Big 3 ignore

Industry reaction:

Airlines hate when successful startups prove their assumptions wrong. For decades, major carriers insisted Norfolk-Cancun “doesn’t have enough demand” to justify nonstop flights. Breeze’s bet: Saturday-only A220 service will prove them wrong and STEAL passengers who previously connected through hubs.

If Breeze succeeds, expect copycats targeting other secondary-city-to-resort routes: Richmond-Punta Cana? Greenville-Montego Bay? Omaha-Cancun? The playbook is written.

David Neeleman’s Long-Term Vision

In Aviation Week’s Window Seat Podcast (2025), Neeleman hinted at MUCH bigger international ambitions beyond Cancun/Montego Bay/Punta Cana:

Quotes from Neeleman:

“The A220-300 has about a 3,000-mile range, so 7 hours of range. We can get into South America and all through Central America if we go from Florida. We can’t go too far over the ocean, like to Hawaii, until we get ETOPS certification. But there’s a lot of things we can do going south, and hopefully going west and even some destinations going east at some point in time.”

Translation:

Possible future routes (within A220 range):

✈️ Central America: Costa Rica (San José), Panama City, Guatemala City, Belize City
✈️ South America (from Florida): Cartagena Colombia, Medellín Colombia, Lima Peru, Quito Ecuador
✈️ Longer Caribbean: Aruba, Curaçao, Grand Cayman, Turks and Caicos
✈️ Mexico expansion: Puerto Vallarta, Los Cabos, Mazatlán, Cozumel

NOT possible without ETOPS: Hawaii (requires Extended Range Operations approval for long overwater flights—Breeze doesn’t have this yet)

The expansion timeline: If Cancun/Montego Bay/Punta Cana succeed (load factors 75%+, profitable by summer 2026), expect Neeleman to announce Costa Rica/Colombia routes by late 2026.

The ultimate vision: Build international network where Breeze is the ONLY nonstop option from 30-50 U.S. secondary cities to 10-15 Latin American/Caribbean destinations. Own the monopoly routes. Avoid competing with United/Delta/American on their turf.

Can it work? Neeleman’s track record says yes. He built JetBlue into #6 U.S. airline. He built Azul into Brazil’s #3 carrier. Breeze is his 5th attempt—and he’s 5-for-5 so far.

The Bottom Line

Tomorrow (January 10, 2026) at 6:00 AM, Breeze Airways makes history departing Norfolk for Cancun—the airline’s first flight outside the United States since launching May 27, 2021.

This isn’t just a new route. It’s validation of David Neeleman’s contrarian strategy: ignore major hubs, target underserved secondary cities, offer premium economy (not ultra-low-cost), create monopolies where competition doesn’t exist.

For Norfolk/Charleston/Providence travelers: This is transformative. No more 3-4 hour drives to major airports for Mexico flights. No more connections through Charlotte/Atlanta/Washington. Nonstop to Cancun in under 3 hours.

For Breeze: This is a huge financial bet. International flights cost more (airport fees, foreign staff, customs infrastructure) and face more regulation than domestic routes. If these seven routes succeed, it unlocks dozens more. If they fail, it’s a costly retreat to domestic-only.

For U.S. aviation: This proves new airlines CAN still challenge legacy carriers. Breeze is 5 years old competing with airlines founded in the 1920s-1940s. The A220 aircraft + secondary city strategy + international ambitions could reshape U.S.-Latin America travel.

Tomorrow, January 10, 6:00 AM, Norfolk International Airport—Breeze Airways Flight 123 to Cancun boards. This is Day 1 of a new chapter in American aviation.

The Norfolk-Cancun nonstop exists. Book it NOW before fares triple.


Complete Route Launch Calendar

  • January 10, 2026: Norfolk → Cancun (Saturdays)
  • January 17, 2026: Charleston → Cancun (Saturdays)
  • February 7, 2026: New Orleans → Cancun (Saturdays)
  • February 11, 2026: Tampa → Montego Bay (Wednesdays + Saturdays)
  • February 14, 2026: Providence → Cancun (Saturdays, ends April 25)
  • March 4, 2026: Raleigh-Durham → Punta Cana (Wednesdays + Saturdays)
  • March 5, 2026: Raleigh-Durham → Montego Bay (Thursdays + Sundays)

For More Resources:

Posted By : Vinay

As a lead contributor for Travel Tourister, Vinay is dedicated to serving our Tier 1 audience (US, UK, Canada, Australia). His mission is to deliver precise, fact-checked news and actionable, data-driven articles that empower readers to make informed decisions, minimize travel risks, and maximize their adventure without compromising safety or budget.

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