Alaska vs Hawaiian Airlines 2026
Head-to-head on bags, reliability, premium cabin, routes, and the combined Atmos Rewards program. What the merger means for travelers in 2026.
On this page
- Quick verdict
- Side-by-side specs
- What We Looked For
- Which airline charges less for bags, Ala...
- Is Alaska or Hawaiian more reliable for ...
- Does Alaska or Hawaiian have better seat...
- Does Alaska or Hawaiian fly to more dest...
- Do Alaska and Hawaiian miles work togeth...
- Who Should Pick Alaska
- Who Should Pick Hawaiian
- The Bottom Line
- FAQ
- Go deeper
- Related
Quick verdict
Alaska wins for mainland US travel with stronger reliability (79.2 percent on-time for full-year 2025 per Cirium, second in North America behind Delta) and a growing international network via the Hawaiian merger. Both airlines now charge the same checked bag rates ($45/$55). Hawaiian wins for anything involving Hawaii itself, with deeper inter-island frequency, Pacific international routes, and the Leihoku Suites first class on the 787-9.
| Spec | Alaska Airlines | Hawaiian Airlines |
|---|---|---|
| Carry-on (in) | 22 x 14 x 9" | 22 x 14 x 9" |
| Carry-on (cm) | 56 x 36 x 23 cm | 56 x 36 x 23 cm |
| Carry-on weight | No published limit | No published limit |
| Carry-on fee | Free | Free |
| Personal item | Not published | Not published |
| 1st checked bag | $45 | $45 |
| 2nd checked bag | $55 | $55 |
| Basic economy | Not restricted | Not restricted |
| Gate-check risk | Low | Medium |
Alaska and Hawaiian are the strangest pair to compare in 2026 because they’re technically the same company. Alaska Air Group closed the acquisition in September 2024, merged the loyalty programs into Atmos Rewards through 2025 (HawaiianMiles members on October 1), and got a single FAA operating certificate on October 29, 2025. The reservation systems combined on April 22, 2026, so every flight now carries the AS code. But both brands still fly under their own names, and they serve meaningfully different travel patterns. Alaska is becoming the global US West Coast carrier, adding 787-9 long-haul to Tokyo, Rome, and London through 2026, plus a 737 MAX route to Reykjavik. Hawaiian is becoming the specialist Pacific brand, focused on Hawaii-mainland, inter-island, and Pacific international routes.
Short version: for mainland US travel and the new international long-haul, Alaska. For anything involving Hawaii (inter-island, Hawaii-mainland beyond Seattle, Pacific international to Japan/Korea/Australia/NZ/Tahiti), Hawaiian. The Atmos Rewards program means miles work across both brands and you earn toward the same elite status regardless of which airline you fly. The real question in 2026 isn’t “which loyalty program” or “which carrier owns which route” but “which brand happens to fly the specific route you need.”
What We Looked For
This comparison is unusual because it’s really about two brands of the same company. The criteria:
- Bags and fees, where the two brands still have separate published policies
- Reliability, where Alaska leads on punctuality and Hawaiian on cancellations
- Premium cabin hard product, where Hawaiian’s Leihōkū Suites are the star of both brands
- Route coverage, split by geography
- Loyalty, which is now one program (Atmos Rewards) but still has brand-specific earning nuances
- The merger timeline, because what’s true in Q2 2026 may not be true in Q4
Which airline charges less for bags, Alaska or Hawaiian?
Both airlines now charge the same checked bag rates, but Alaska has no carry-on weight limit, making it the simpler option for most travelers.
Both brands have published their own baggage policies, and they’re genuinely different in 2026.
Carry-on:
- Alaska: 22 x 14 x 9 inches (56 x 36 x 23 cm), no weight limit
- Hawaiian: 22 x 14 x 9 inches (56 x 36 x 23 cm), no published weight limit
Carry-on is a tie. Both airlines use the same 22 x 14 x 9 inch (56 x 36 x 23 cm) box, and after the Alaska-Hawaiian merger Hawaiian dropped its old 25 lb carry-on weight cap. The official policy for both is now simply that you must be able to lift your bag into the overhead bin unaided. Older guidance citing a 25 lb Hawaiian limit weighed at the gate on inter-island flights no longer reflects the published policy.
Checked bag fees (North America routes):
- Alaska: $45 first bag, $55 second (raised April 10, 2026)
- Hawaiian: $45 first bag, $55 second (raised April 10, 2026)
Both airlines now charge identical rates after the industry-wide April 2026 hikes. The bag fee is no longer a differentiator between these two brands.
Hawaiian inter-island bag fees:
- First bag: $30
- Second bag: $40
These are reduced rates for island-to-island service within Hawaii. Alaska has no equivalent since it doesn’t operate inter-island flights.
Free bag carve-outs:
- Alaska: Atmos Rewards elites (Atmos Gold and above), Alaska Airlines credit cardholders, active-duty military. The Alaska Airlines credit card’s free-bag perk extends to up to 6 companions on the same reservation, which is one of the most generous credit card bag benefits in the US.
- Hawaiian: Atmos Rewards elites (Atmos Gold and above), some Main Cabin fares include a free checked bag (Main Cabin Basic does not), plus Hawaiian’s co-branded Barclays credit card.
Basic Economy:
- Alaska Saver: carry-on and personal item included, seat at check-in, last boarding group, no changes
- Hawaiian Main Cabin Basic: carry-on and personal item included, no free checked bag on North America routes, seat at check-in, last boarding group, no changes or refunds
Both airlines’ basic economy includes carry-on. Neither has the punitive “personal item only” rule that United domestic Basic Economy uses.
- Winner: carry-on rules
- Tie / identical 22 x 14 x 9 in, no published weight limit on either after the merger
- Winner: North America checked bag fees
- Tie / both $45 first / $55 second after the April 2026 increase
- Winner: credit card bag benefits
- Alaska, by a wide margin / 6 companions
- Winner: inter-island fees
- Hawaiian / the only one that operates them
Is Alaska or Hawaiian more reliable for on-time flights?
Alaska leads on punctuality (79.2 percent on-time for full-year 2025 per Cirium, second in North America), but Hawaiian quietly completes a higher share of its schedule.
Alaska is a consistent top-tier operator on punctuality; Hawaiian’s on-time record is more variable, but it cancels less.
Alaska’s 2025 reliability:
- On-time performance: 79.2 percent for full-year 2025 (Cirium), ranked second in North America behind Delta
- Cancellation rate: 1.30 percent for full-year 2025 (US DOT)
- Strong operational culture, simple fleet (mostly 737), efficient West Coast hub operations
Hawaiian’s reliability:
- On-time performance: Cirium did not publish a full-year 2025 figure for Hawaiian, so there is no clean head-to-head punctuality number; its record is generally regarded as more variable than Alaska’s
- Cancellation rate: 0.82 percent for full-year 2025 (US DOT), among the lowest of any US carrier reporting and below Alaska’s 1.30 percent
- Inter-island operations are exposed to weather (trade wind shifts, Kona low storms on Neighbor Islands) and tight turns that can compound delays
- Mainland-Hawaii legs are reliable, helped by longer flight times and less congested airspace
For domestic mainland travel, Alaska’s on-time edge is the reason to pick it. But the cancellation data flips the usual story: Hawaiian completes more of its scheduled flights than Alaska does, which matters if losing a day of a Hawaii trip is your worst-case.
- Winner: on-time performance
- Alaska / 79.2% full-year 2025, second in North America
- Winner: cancellations
- Hawaiian / 0.82% vs Alaska's 1.30% (US DOT 2025)
- Winner: weather recovery in Hawaii
- Hawaiian / the local expert
Does Alaska or Hawaiian have better seats and premium cabins?
Economy is roughly tied, but Hawaiian’s Leihoku Suites on the 787-9 are one of the best business class products any US carrier offers.
Standard economy is similar on both brands, but the premium cabin story is where things get interesting.
Standard economy pitch:
- Alaska: 31 to 32 inches (79 to 81 cm) on most aircraft, 30 inches (76 cm) on some higher-density configurations
- Hawaiian: 31 inches (79 cm) on A321neo, 32 inches (81 cm) on A330, 31 to 32 inches (79 to 81 cm) on 787-9
Roughly tied. Neither is notably cramped or notably roomy compared to US industry averages.
Paid extra-legroom:
- Alaska Premium Class: 35 inches (89 cm) of pitch, priority boarding, complimentary alcoholic beverages and snacks. Available on most flights.
- Hawaiian Extra Comfort: 36 inches (91 cm) of pitch, priority boarding, amenity kit on long-haul, complimentary alcoholic beverages. Available on A330 and A321neo.
Both airlines run solid premium economy products. Hawaiian’s Extra Comfort is slightly roomier on paper, Alaska’s Premium Class is more widely available across the fleet.
First Class / Business Class:
Alaska First Class (domestic):
- 2-2 configuration on 737s
- Recliner seats, 41 inches (104 cm) of pitch, 21 inches (53 cm) wide
- Not lie-flat (all domestic 737 routes)
- Meals and drinks included
- Priority boarding and bag handling
Hawaiian First Class on A330:
- 2-2-2 configuration
- 180-degree lie-flat seats, older generation product
- Bulkhead row has more space but same recliner-style seat
- Dated but functional hard product compared to newer US carrier business class
Hawaiian Leihōkū Suites on 787-9 (the flagship):
- 1-2-1 configuration
- Lie-flat beds with sliding privacy doors
- Direct aisle access from every seat
- Launched 2024 with the 787-9 fleet introduction
- Considered one of the best business class products of any US carrier, competitive with Delta One Suites and JetBlue Mint
- Operated mainly on Honolulu-Seattle, Honolulu-LAX (select), and from January 2026 on Seattle-Tokyo Narita
The 2026 complication with the 787-9: The Dreamliners are being progressively repainted and transferred to Alaska Airlines livery as Alaska takes over the long-haul international routes. Seattle-Tokyo started on the 787-9 in January 2026. Seattle-Rome launched April 28, 2026 and Seattle-London Heathrow launched May 21, 2026, both operated by the ex-Hawaiian 787-9s under the Alaska brand. (Alaska also launched Seattle-Reykjavik on May 28, 2026, but that route flies a 737 MAX 8, not the 787.) The A330s are being repositioned to handle the bulk of Hawaii-mainland traffic. If you specifically want Leihōkū Suites on a Hawaii flight, book soon and verify the aircraft type; the 787-9 on Hawaii routes is shrinking in 2026.
- Winner: domestic first class
- Alaska / more consistent availability
- Winner: lie-flat business class hardware
- Hawaiian (Leihōkū Suites on 787-9) when available / Alaska when flying the same 787s rebadged on new international routes
- Winner: premium economy
- Roughly tied
Does Alaska or Hawaiian fly to more destinations?
Alaska covers the US West Coast and new European routes, while Hawaiian dominates inter-island, Hawaii-mainland, and Pacific international service.
This is where the two brands are most clearly differentiated.
Alaska’s network:
- Hubs: Seattle (SEA, primary), Portland (PDX), San Francisco (SFO), Los Angeles (LAX), San Diego (SAN), Anchorage (ANC)
- 110+ destinations, with strength on the US West Coast and Alaska
- Domestic transcon: Seattle-JFK, Seattle-BOS, LAX-JFK, SFO-JFK
- Mexico: 15+ destinations
- Canada: Vancouver, Victoria, and others
- New 2026 international long-haul: Seattle-Tokyo Narita (January 2026), Seattle-Rome (April 28, 2026), Seattle-London Heathrow (May 21, 2026), Seattle-Reykjavik (May 28, 2026, on the 737 MAX 8)
- oneworld alliance member since 2021: earning and partner access on British Airways, Iberia, Qantas, Japan Airlines, Cathay Pacific, Finnair, Malaysia Airlines, Qatar Airways
- Horizon Air and SkyWest regional partners fly smaller Pacific Northwest routes as Alaska Horizon
Hawaiian’s network:
- Hubs: Honolulu (HNL, primary), Kahului Maui (OGG), Kona (KOA), Hilo (ITO), Līhue (LIH)
- Inter-island: dense multi-daily service between all major Hawaiian Islands, typically 717 (being phased out) or A321neo
- Hawaii-mainland: HNL/OGG/KOA/LIH to LAX, SFO, Seattle, Portland, Sacramento, San Diego, Oakland, San Jose, Phoenix, Las Vegas, Salt Lake City, Denver, Austin, New York JFK (seasonal), and Boston (seasonal)
- Pacific international: Tokyo Haneda, Tokyo Narita, Osaka, Sapporo, Seoul Incheon, Sydney, Brisbane, Auckland, Tahiti (Papeete), Pago Pago (American Samoa), Rarotonga (Cook Islands)
- Particular strength: the only US carrier with direct service to Tahiti, Pago Pago, and Rarotonga
Key overlap and handoff:
- Seattle-Honolulu: flown by both brands under the Atmos Rewards system
- Hawaii-Tokyo: currently Hawaiian, with Seattle-Tokyo now operated by Alaska on the 787-9
- International long-haul from Seattle: Alaska is the brand going forward
- Pacific routes (NZ, Australia, Tahiti, Korea): Hawaiian remains the operating brand
Combined network reach: Through Atmos Rewards and the oneworld alliance, the combined network covers over 1,000 destinations. Alaska-earned miles redeem on Hawaiian flights and vice versa. Elite status benefits (priority boarding, free bags, complimentary upgrades) apply to both brands.
- Winner: US West Coast domestic
- Alaska
- Winner: Hawaii inter-island
- Hawaiian / uncontested, no Alaska service exists
- Winner: Hawaii-mainland
- Tie / both brands operate overlapping routes and Atmos Rewards covers both
- Winner: Asia-Pacific (Japan, Korea, Australia, NZ, Tahiti)
- Hawaiian
- Winner: Europe and new long-haul
- Alaska / Rome, London, Reykjavik in 2026
- Winner: oneworld partner access
- Tie through Atmos Rewards / though earning rates may differ
Do Alaska and Hawaiian miles work together under Atmos Rewards?
Yes. The programs merged in October 2025, with miles transferring 1:1 and elite status applying across both brands.
This is the biggest merger change and the most consequential for most travelers.
What happened:
- August 20, 2025: Alaska Mileage Plan members became Atmos Rewards members
- October 1, 2025: HawaiianMiles members transitioned into Atmos Rewards
- Miles transferred 1:1 with no loss of value (one old mile equals one Atmos point)
- Pre-transition miles don’t expire, and members kept their existing balances
- Elite status moved to four new tiers: Atmos Silver, Atmos Gold, Atmos Platinum, and Atmos Titanium, replacing the old MVP and Pualani names. Members received the equivalent status when their accounts moved over
- Members earn across both Alaska and Hawaiian flights plus 30+ partners (all oneworld members plus additional codeshare partners)
Earning under Atmos Rewards:
- Base earning: miles per dollar spent, with tier bonuses for Atmos Gold and above
- In 2026, the program is adding optional earning by distance, by price, or by segments flown (member’s choice)
- Credit card earning: the Alaska Airlines Visa and the Hawaiian Airlines World Elite Mastercard both continue to earn Atmos Rewards miles
Redemption:
- Partner awards: strong value on Japan Airlines, Cathay Pacific, British Airways, and Qantas business class
- Hawaii redemption: 15,000 miles one-way for Mainland-Hawaii in economy on some dates (good value)
- Lie-flat international: Leihōkū Suites on the 787-9 can redeem for 50,000 to 70,000 miles one-way on select routes (exceptional value for a premium cabin)
Perks that carry across both brands:
- Free checked bags for Atmos Gold and above
- Priority boarding
- Complimentary upgrades to First Class on Alaska routes and Extra Comfort on Hawaiian routes (subject to availability and tier)
- Lounge access through Alaska Lounges and partner airport lounges
What’s still evolving: As of April 2026, some Atmos Rewards features are still being rolled out. Distance-based earning is announced for later in 2026. Elite status qualification thresholds have been unified but some legacy HawaiianMiles members are still in transition for specific benefits. For critical loyalty decisions (renewing status, buying elite tier upgrades), verify the current rules directly with Alaska/Hawaiian rather than relying on 2024 or early 2025 writeups.
- Winner: program breadth
- Atmos Rewards / combined, is better than either predecessor program alone
- Winner: Pacific partner value
- Hawaiian's historical partners (Japan Airlines / Korean Air) remain strong
- Winner: oneworld value
- Alaska's oneworld membership since 2021 carries over to the combined program
Who Should Pick Alaska
- You live on the West Coast or in the Pacific Northwest (Seattle, Portland, San Francisco, LA, San Diego, Anchorage)
- You travel to mainland US destinations, Mexico, Canada, or the new 2026 international long-haul (London, Rome, Reykjavik, Tokyo)
- You want one of the most punctual US carriers (second in North America for on-time arrivals in 2025)
- You use the Alaska Airlines Visa and want the 6-companion free-bag benefit for family travel
- You value oneworld alliance partner flexibility (Qantas, British Airways, Japan Airlines, Cathay Pacific)
- You don’t need the Leihōkū Suites specifically (though Alaska will operate them on new long-haul routes)
- Your carry-on is heavy and you want no weight limit
Who Should Pick Hawaiian
- You’re flying to or from Hawaii specifically, especially inter-island
- You live in a state that Hawaiian serves directly (LAX, SFO, Seattle, Portland, Las Vegas, Phoenix, Salt Lake City, Denver, Austin, JFK, BOS)
- You’re going to Japan, Korea, Australia, New Zealand, Tahiti, Pago Pago, or Rarotonga
- You specifically want the Leihōkū Suites on the 787-9 while they’re still on Hawaii routes (verify aircraft)
- You prefer a product tailored to Hawaii travel (cabin service, meals, inflight experience)
- You have HawaiianMiles that have transitioned to Atmos Rewards and want to keep earning on the Hawaiian brand
The Bottom Line
The honest answer in 2026 isn’t “pick Alaska or pick Hawaiian.” It’s “figure out which brand operates the route you need, and know that the loyalty program and elite benefits carry across both.”
For mainland travel and the new international long-haul (Tokyo, London, Rome, Reykjavik), Alaska is the operating brand and the better punctuality bet. Its strong on-time performance (79.2 percent full-year 2025, second in North America behind Delta), no carry-on weight limit, and oneworld alliance access make Alaska the better everyday US carrier option, even though Hawaiian edges it on raw cancellation rate.
For anything involving Hawaii, Hawaiian is where you’ll find the service. Inter-island flying is exclusively Hawaiian. Hawaii-mainland has overlap with Alaska on West Coast routes but Hawaiian retains more frequencies from secondary cities. The Pacific international network (Japan, Korea, Australia, NZ, Tahiti) is uniquely Hawaiian. And the Leihōkū Suites on the 787-9 remain one of the best business class products any US carrier has ever had, for however long they stay in the Hawaii network before being fully transferred to Alaska international routes.
The biggest thing most travelers miss: the merger is real, the loyalty program is real, and miles carry across both brands. You don’t need to “pick” one program. You’re building value in both every time you fly either brand, and earning status that applies universally. The old question of “which frequent flyer program should I choose for Hawaii?” is obsolete. The new question is just “which brand flies my specific route, and does the aircraft have the product I want?”
For more comparisons, see Alaska vs Southwest and Hawaiian vs Southwest.
Frequently asked questions
Are Alaska and Hawaiian Airlines the same airline now?
Is Alaska or Hawaiian better in 2026?
Do Alaska and Hawaiian loyalty miles work together now?
Does Hawaiian have a real business class?
Which airline has better on-time performance, Alaska or Hawaiian?
Which credit card is better, Alaska Airlines Visa Signature or Hawaiian Airlines World Elite Mastercard?
Go deeper on either airline
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Last verified Jun 2026 against official Alaska Airlines and Hawaiian Airlines policy pages. Airlines change rules without notice, so confirm with your carrier before flying. See our research methodology.