Spirit cuts four routes to holiday cities, refunds available

After reaching a creditor deal to emerge from its second Chapter 11 bankruptcy within a year, Spirit Airlines has crafted a way forward that will leave it with fewer planes and focusing only on routes that have the highest potential for traffic.

This year, the low-cost airline permanently exited domestic markets like Milwaukee, St. Loui and Rochester while also cutting 11 international routes to The Caribbean and Latin America from Florida.

Spirit is positioning it as “optimization” that will help it bring down its debt burden from $7.4 billion to $2.1 billion. The routes that will run for the last time in April include flights from Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport (FLL) to Grand Cayman in the Cayman Islands, Managua in Nicaragua and San Salvador in El Salvador.

Spirit Airlines to stop flights to Orlando, Grand Cayman

The flashy new route to Owen Roberts International Airport (GCM) in Grand Cayman was just launched in December 2025 as part of the airline’s efforts to expand to more holiday destinations. After a short sun-seeking season during which it ran three times a week, it will be cut on April 13.

The flight to Augusto C. Sandino International Airport (MGA) in Managua will be cut on April 14 while the one to San Salvador Airport (SAL) will follow it a day later with a final April 15 flight.

Related: American Airlines joins the Spirit Airlines bankruptcy case

The airline will also reduce the frequencies on its flights to Guatemala, Ecuador and Colombia without fully exiting these markets.

“Spirit will align its network and capacity to routes and periods of strongest consumer demand,” the airline said in a statement on its bankruptcy emergence on Feb. 26. “This includes higher aircraft utilization during peak days while reducing off-peak flying, as well as the flexibility to adjust to seasonal demand across markets.”

The flashy Spirit flight between Grand Cayman and Fort Lauderdale did not survive the latest round of route cuts.

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What are your refund options when a Spirit route gets cut

On the domestic side, Spirit is also canceling a route between Arnold Palmer Regional Airport (LBE) in southwestern Pennsylvania and Orlando International (MCO) on April 15.

To take its place, the airline will bring back a seasonal route to the city to Myrtle Beach International (MYR) in South Carolina as the small regional airport tries to attract another airline to run flights to holiday destinations so residents are not tied to the larger airport in Pittsburgh.

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Route tracking outlet AeroRoutes shows that further domestic cuts are likely scheduled for the spring; Spirit has not officially commented on the flight reductions.

Travelers who booked travel on any of these flights beyond the route cut dates are subject to Spirit’s refund policy that entitles them to either a full refund to the original method of payment or a seat on alternative flight that they can choose whether to accept.

“If you do not accept your rebooked flight or decide not to travel, a refund for all flights not flown on your reservation will be automatically processed to the original form of payment within seven business days,” Spirit states on its website.

Related: U.S. Embassy tells stranded Americans they are on their own

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