45°F
weather icon Clear

East Coast airfares skyrocket in wake of Amtrak crash

Airfares between New York and Washington, D.C. are jumping since the fatal Amtrak crash in Philadelphia on Tuesday.

Amtrak service from Philadelphia to New York has shut down, which means train travelers in the popular Washington-New York sector are stranded. And that has sent demand for airlines soaring, and travelers are having to pay up.

Ticket prices were fluctuating wildly from hour to hour on a nonstop roundtrip flight search on Expedia from New York to D.C. for flights leaving on Friday and returning on Sunday.

At different times Thursday, US Airways and American Airlines were each displaying tickets for between $699 and $1105. But at around 3 p.m., all those flights seemed to have just one ticket left. Delta Air Lines too listed flights with prices between $716 and $968, with similar caveats on availability.

Typically, a roundtrip flight between those cities costs around $200 on a normal day and can go up to $600 for a last-minute booking, according to experts.

Delta spokeswoman Elizabeth Wolf said it had added two additional 76-seat flights each way after seeing an increase in bookings.

United Airlines spokeswoman Karen May said there was an increase in demand, but that the airline had so far not added additional flights.

“There’s no question (the airlines) are making hay while the tracks aren’t working,” according to travel expert George Hobica of Airfarewatchdog.com.

At least eight people died and eight more were in critical condition after the speeding train derailed and crashed in Philadelphia on Tuesday. The train was going from Washington to New York.

Amtrak has been offering limited service in the Northeast corridor since the crash, with “fewer frequencies than normal” between Washington and Philadelphia and also between New York and Boston.

Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
MORE STORIES
THE LATEST
Disneyland closes 8 attractions after busy Christmas season

Disneyland will close eight attractions for seasonal refurbishments after the busy winter holidays as the Anaheim theme parks prepare for the 70th anniversary celebration in the spring.

Arthur Frommer, travel guide pioneer, dies at 95

Travel writer Arthur Frommer, who revolutionized leisure travel for ordinary Americans with his guidebook “Europe on 5 Dollars a Day,” has died. He was 95.

Disneyland adds a few new surprises this Christmas holiday season

Disneyland has Christmas down to a science, but that won’t stop the Anaheim theme park from adding a few new festive surprises to this year’s lineup of tried-and-true traditions that return every holiday season.