Frontier vs Allegiant 2026
Frontier: lower base fares, major-metro routes. Allegiant: 0.47% cancel rate (lowest in the US), lower carry-on fees, and a 50 lb checked bag versus Frontier's 40. 2026 verdict.
On this page
- Quick verdict
- Side-by-side specs
- What We Looked For
- Which airline charges less for bags, Fro...
- Does Frontier or Allegiant fly to more d...
- Is Frontier or Allegiant more reliable?
- Does Frontier or Allegiant have more leg...
- Is FRONTIER Miles or Allways Rewards the...
- Is a Frontier or Allegiant bundle cheape...
- Who Should Pick Frontier
- Who Should Pick Allegiant
- The Bottom Line
- FAQ
- Go deeper
- Related
Quick verdict
Frontier has lower base fares and competes on major metro routes, while Allegiant charges less for carry-ons ($35 versus $59) and connects small cities directly to vacation destinations. Allegiant also has a far lower cancellation rate at 0.47 percent versus Frontier's 1.77 percent (US DOT full-year 2025), and follows the 50-pound industry-standard checked bag weight limit; Frontier alone among the two still caps checked bags at 40 pounds.
| Spec | Frontier Airlines | Allegiant Air |
|---|---|---|
| Carry-on (in) | 24 x 16 x 10" | 22 x 16 x 10" |
| Carry-on (cm) | 61 x 41 x 25 cm | 56 x 41 x 25 cm |
| Carry-on weight | 16 kg (35 lb) | No published limit |
| Carry-on fee | From $59 | From $35 |
| Personal item | 14 x 18 x 8" | 18 x 14 x 8" |
| 1st checked bag | Not published | Not published |
| 2nd checked bag | Not published | Not published |
| Basic economy | Economy | Base Fare |
| Gate-check risk | High | High |
Most airline comparisons pit a budget carrier against a legacy airline and the verdict boils down to comfort versus price. This is not that comparison. Frontier and Allegiant are both ultra-low-cost carriers that strip everything from the base fare and charge for every add-on. They use the same aircraft family (all-Airbus A320), charge for carry-on bags, and rank near the bottom of most airline quality surveys. The question is not which airline is more comfortable. Neither is. The question is which one serves your route at a lower total cost and gets you there without a cancellation.
The answer depends almost entirely on where you live. Allegiant’s business model is built around connecting small and mid-size American cities directly to vacation destinations. If you live in Bellingham, Ogden, or Punta Gorda and want a nonstop to Las Vegas or Orlando, Allegiant is often the only airline offering that route. Frontier operates more like a national low-cost carrier, competing directly with Delta, United, and American on high-traffic routes out of Denver, Orlando, Las Vegas, and other major hubs. On routes where both airlines fly, Frontier’s base fare is usually lower but Allegiant’s add-on pricing (especially for carry-on bags) can make the total trip cost competitive.
What We Looked For
- Total trip cost, because the base fare is meaningless on a ULCC without accounting for bag fees, seat selection, and bundles
- Bag fees and weight limits, including the carry-on pricing gap and Frontier’s non-standard 40-pound checked bag cap (Allegiant follows the 50-pound industry standard since 2023)
- Route strategy, the most important difference between these two airlines and the one most travelers overlook
- Cancellation rates, because Allegiant’s 2025 improvement is one of the biggest reliability stories in US aviation
- On-time performance, where both airlines trail the industry but the gap between them is small
- Loyalty programs, neither of which is a reason to choose one airline over the other
Which airline charges less for bags, Frontier or Allegiant?
Allegiant charges $35 for a carry-on at booking versus Frontier’s $59, saving $48 round trip on carry-on fees alone.
Neither airline includes a carry-on in the base fare. You get a personal item and nothing else. Everything beyond that is an add-on, and the pricing differs more than you might expect between two airlines in the same category.
Carry-on fees. Frontier charges $59 for a carry-on when added at booking. That price climbs at check-in, at the counter, and at the gate, where it can exceed $100. Allegiant charges $35 at booking for the same add-on. That is a $24 gap on a round trip ($48 total), which is larger than the fare difference on many competing routes.
Carry-on dimensions. Frontier allows 24x16x10 inches with a strict 35-pound weight limit that agents enforce with scales at the gate. Allegiant allows 22x16x10 inches with no published weight limit. Frontier’s larger box is 2 inches longer, but the weight limit catches travelers who pack densely. If your bag weighs 36 pounds, you will pay an overage at the gate on Frontier and board without issue on Allegiant.
Personal item. Frontier’s free personal item maxes out at 14x18x8 inches. Allegiant’s is 18x14x8 inches, the same overall size. A standard Jansport backpack fits on both airlines, but anything larger risks a gate-check fee. Both airlines actively enforce personal item sizing.
Checked bags. This is where Allegiant’s pricing gets complicated. Allegiant uses dynamic route-based pricing for checked bags, with rates ranging from $15 to $70 each way depending on the route, season, and when you pay. The standard rate is around $50, and it jumps to $75 at the airport. Frontier uses dynamic pricing, typically $47 to $63 at booking and higher at check-in or the airport. On many routes, Allegiant and Frontier are closer in price than they used to be.
The 40-pound trap is a Frontier-only issue in 2026. Allegiant raised its standard checked bag cap from 40 to 50 pounds in March 2023, putting it back in line with Delta, United, American, and Southwest. Frontier still holds the line at 40, which means a bag packed to the typical 50-pound legacy-carrier limit clears free on Allegiant but triggers an overweight surcharge on Frontier. This is a meaningful and underrated differentiator between the two ULCCs, and it especially matters for travelers switching from a legacy carrier who haven’t been told the rule changed.
For details on your specific bag, use our carry-on size checker or see our guide to avoiding checked bag fees.
- Winner: carry-on price
- Allegiant / $35 vs $59 at booking
- Winner: carry-on size
- Frontier / 24x16x10 vs 22x16x10; Frontier is 2 inches longer
- Winner: checked bag price
- Allegiant / dynamic pricing starts lower on most routes
- Winner: checked bag weight limit
- Allegiant / 50 lb industry standard vs Frontier's 40 lb cap
- Winner: personal item size
- Tie / identical 18x14x8 in
Does Frontier or Allegiant fly to more destinations?
Both serve roughly 90 to 130 airports, but Frontier targets major metros while Allegiant connects small cities to vacation destinations.
This is the section that matters most, and it is where Frontier and Allegiant stop looking like interchangeable budget airlines.
Frontier’s model is high-frequency service between major metro airports. Denver (DEN) is the closest thing to a hub, but Frontier runs significant operations out of Orlando (MCO), Las Vegas (LAS), Atlanta (ATL), Philadelphia (PHL), and Miami (MIA). Frontier competes directly on routes that Delta, United, and American also fly, using lower fares to pull price-sensitive travelers off the legacy carriers. Approximately 90 destinations, most of them primary airports in large and mid-size cities.
Allegiant’s model is the opposite. Allegiant connects small and mid-size cities to a handful of vacation destinations, using secondary and regional airports that other airlines ignore. The airline operates from cities like Bellingham (BLI), Ogden (OGX), Punta Gorda (PGD), Sanford (SFB), and Mesa (AZA) rather than Seattle, Salt Lake City, Fort Myers, Orlando, or Phoenix. Flight frequency is low (often 2 to 4 times per week on a given route rather than daily), and the network is designed for leisure travelers who will plan around the schedule.
This means the airlines rarely compete head to head. If you live in a major metro area, Frontier is the ULCC option on your routes. If you live in a smaller city or near a regional airport, Allegiant may be the only nonstop to your vacation destination. The route strategy determines which airline you even have the option of flying.
Fleet. Both airlines operate all-Airbus fleets. Frontier flies A320neo, A321neo, and older A320ceo aircraft. Allegiant operates an all-Airbus A320-family fleet, having retired its older MD-80 jets in 2018. Neither airline operates widebody aircraft or has international long-haul service.
- Winner: major city routes
- Frontier / competes directly on high-traffic routes
- Winner: small city nonstops
- Allegiant / serves regional airports others ignore
- Winner: flight frequency
- Frontier / daily or multi-daily on popular routes
- Winner: unique routes
- Allegiant / nonstops from secondary airports that no other carrier flies
Is Frontier or Allegiant more reliable?
Allegiant is more reliable in 2025, with a 0.47 percent cancellation rate versus Frontier’s 1.77 percent (US DOT). Both trail the industry on on-time arrivals.
Both airlines trail the industry on on-time arrivals, but the cancellation story has diverged sharply.
On-time rates. Allegiant and Frontier both trailed the industry on on-time arrivals in 2025, with Frontier ranking as the most-delayed major US carrier. Both finished well behind leaders like Delta (80.90 percent) and Southwest (77.04 percent).
Cancellations. This is where Allegiant’s 2025 numbers stand out. Allegiant’s cancellation rate was 0.47 percent, the lowest of any US carrier in 2025. That is a dramatic improvement from 1.72 percent in 2024, when Allegiant was among the more cancellation-prone airlines. Frontier’s 2025 cancellation rate was 1.77 percent (US DOT full-year 2025), nearly four times higher than Allegiant’s.
For context, Allegiant ranked second overall in the Wall Street Journal’s 2025 airline rankings, ahead of every legacy carrier except Alaska. Frontier tied for last with American Airlines. That gap is significant for a traveler choosing between two ULCCs.
Why the improvement matters. Allegiant’s low-frequency schedule (a few flights per week on most routes) means a cancellation is more damaging than on a high-frequency airline. If your Monday Frontier flight from Denver cancels, there is likely another Frontier flight the same day. If your Wednesday Allegiant flight from Punta Gorda cancels, the next one might not leave until Saturday. Allegiant’s drop to 0.47 percent cancellations addresses what used to be the biggest risk of flying the airline.
- Winner: on-time arrivals
- Allegiant / both below average; Frontier was the most-delayed major US carrier in 2025
- Winner: cancellations
- Allegiant / 0.47% vs 1.77% (US DOT 2025)
- Winner: rebooking options after disruption
- Frontier / higher frequency, more daily flights
Does Frontier or Allegiant have more legroom?
Allegiant offers approximately 30 inches of seat pitch versus Frontier’s 28 to 29 inches, giving Allegiant a slight edge in standard economy.
Neither airline is competing on comfort, but the numbers are not identical.
Standard economy pitch. Allegiant offers approximately 30 inches of seat pitch. Frontier offers 28 to 29 inches, among the tightest in US aviation. That one-to-two-inch gap is noticeable on flights over two hours.
Extra legroom. Frontier’s Stretch seats offer 33 to 38 inches of pitch, a meaningful upgrade from the 28-inch base. Allegiant offers Legroom+ seats with additional pitch, though the exact increase varies by aircraft configuration. Both are paid upgrades.
Seat width. Both airlines use standard A320-family seating at approximately 17.8 inches across. No meaningful difference.
Wi-Fi and entertainment. Frontier offers streaming Wi-Fi for purchase and free on-demand entertainment through the Frontier app. Allegiant does not currently offer in-flight Wi-Fi on most aircraft. Neither airline has seatback screens. If you need to work during the flight, Frontier has the advantage.
Power outlets. Frontier has power outlets and USB ports on newer A320neo aircraft. Allegiant’s availability varies by aircraft age.
- Winner: standard legroom
- Allegiant / 30" vs 28-29"
- Winner: extra legroom
- Frontier / Stretch at 33-38"
- Winner: Wi-Fi
- Frontier / available on most flights
- Winner: seat width
- Tie / both ~17.8" on A320 family
Is FRONTIER Miles or Allways Rewards the better loyalty program?
FRONTIER Miles is more developed, with status match offers and the GoWild Pass. Neither program is a compelling reason to choose one airline over the other.
Neither ULCC has a loyalty program worth building a strategy around, which is itself useful information.
FRONTIER Miles is the more developed program. Points are earned based on fare price and redeemed for flights. Frontier occasionally runs status match promotions (the most recent offered Elite Gold status for $69), which include benefits like a free carry-on, free seat selection, and priority boarding. The program also has a bundled subscription model (GoWild! All-You-Can-Fly Pass) that starts around $599 per year for domestic flights, appealing to extremely flexible travelers who can fly on short notice.
Allways Rewards is Allegiant’s loyalty program, earning 1 point per dollar spent. The program is newer and less developed, with limited elite benefits. Points can be redeemed for flights, but the earning rate and redemption value trail most competitors. Allegiant does offer an Allegiant+ membership (around $99 per year) that bundles bag discounts, priority boarding, and other perks for frequent flyers.
If loyalty earning is a major factor in your airline choice, neither of these airlines is the right pick.
- Winner: loyalty program depth
- Frontier / more tiers, status match offers, GoWild! pass
- Winner: paid membership value
- Depends on travel frequency / GoWild! for very flexible travelers, Allegiant+ for 3-4 trips per year
Is a Frontier or Allegiant bundle cheaper overall?
Allegiant’s bundles are generally less expensive, driven by its $35 carry-on fee versus Frontier’s $59 and lower route-based add-on pricing.
Since both airlines strip everything from the base fare, the bundle price is the more honest comparison.
Frontier bundles. The PERKS bundle ($69) includes a carry-on, checked bag, and seat selection. The WORKS bundle ($99) adds priority boarding, refundability, and free changes. On a round trip, The WORKS costs $198 on top of the base fare.
Allegiant bundles. The Deluxe bundle varies by route but typically runs $30 to $60 and includes a carry-on, checked bag, and seat selection. The Total bundle adds priority boarding and trip insurance for $50 to $80. Allegiant’s bundles are generally less expensive because they are priced per route rather than as a fixed national rate.
On a comparable round trip where both airlines fly the same route, Allegiant’s bundled total is often lower despite a higher base fare. The cheaper carry-on ($35 vs $59) drives most of that difference.
- Winner: bundle value
- Allegiant / lower add-on pricing on most routes
- Winner: bundle predictability
- Frontier / fixed national pricing, easier to compare
Who Should Pick Frontier
- You live near a major metro airport where Frontier competes with legacy carriers
- You want the lowest possible base fare and are willing to fly with only a personal item
- You value daily flight frequency and want rebooking options if plans change
- You travel enough to consider the GoWild! All-You-Can-Fly Pass
- You want Wi-Fi available during the flight
- You carry a roller bag longer than 22 inches that fits Frontier’s 24x16x10 but not Allegiant’s 22x16x10
Who Should Pick Allegiant
- You live in a smaller city or near a regional airport that Allegiant serves with nonstop vacation routes
- You want a cheaper carry-on fee ($35 vs $59 at booking)
- You are planning a leisure trip to Las Vegas, Orlando, Myrtle Beach, or another Allegiant focus city
- You can plan around 2-to-4-times-per-week flight schedules
- You want the airline with fewer cancellations (0.47 percent in 2025, the lowest in the US)
- You prefer slightly more legroom in standard economy (30” vs 28-29”)
- You want lower checked bag pricing on most routes plus a 50-pound weight limit (Frontier still caps at 40)
The Bottom Line
Frontier and Allegiant look similar on paper. Same aircraft family, same fee-for-everything model, same bottom-tier reputation. The actual difference is geographic. Allegiant built a business around routes that no one else flies, connecting small American cities to vacation destinations at low frequency. Frontier built a national network that competes with legacy carriers on major routes at high frequency. Your home airport determines which airline is even an option.
When both airlines do serve the same market, Allegiant’s lower add-on pricing (especially the $35 carry-on versus Frontier’s $59) and its dramatically improved cancellation rate make it the better value on a per-trip basis. Frontier’s advantages are frequency, Wi-Fi, and a more developed loyalty program, none of which matter if you are a once-or-twice-a-year leisure traveler. Spirit used to be the third ULCC in this conversation, but it ceased all operations on May 2, 2026 and entered Chapter 7 liquidation, so Frontier and Allegiant are now the two ULCCs left standing on most routes. Our Spirit vs Frontier comparison is kept as a historical reference on how the three once stacked up.
The biggest surprise in 2026 is Allegiant’s reliability turnaround. An airline that cancelled 1.72 percent of flights in 2024 dropped to 0.47 percent in 2025 and finished second in the Wall Street Journal’s overall rankings. If your concern about Allegiant was cancellations, the 2025 data suggests that concern is outdated.
Frequently asked questions
Is Frontier or Allegiant cheaper in 2026?
Which is more reliable, Frontier or Allegiant?
Does Frontier or Allegiant charge less for bags?
Does Frontier or Allegiant fly more places?
Do Frontier and Allegiant include a carry-on bag?
Go deeper on either airline
Browse more comparisons
Related guides
- GuideBest Personal Item Bags for Budget Airlines in 2026The best personal item bags for Ryanair, Frontier, Allegiant, and Wizz Air in 2026. Tested against real gate sizers and ranked for strict ULCC compliance.
- GuideSouthwest vs Delta from Las Vegas 2026: Bags, Routes, BasicSouthwest dominates LAS with more daily flights than any other carrier. Delta brings premium cabins and SkyTeam reach. Which one wins out of Las Vegas in 2026.
- GuideBA First vs Virgin Upper Class 2026: LHR-LAX Premium ComparedBA First and Virgin Upper Class are the two top premium cabins on London-LA in 2026. Which one wins on seat, lounge, chauffeur, and miles redemption.
- GuideFlying With a Baby: Practical Tips From Parents (2026)Real tips for flying with a baby in 2026: skip the red-eye, beat ear pressure, pack smart, decide lap infant vs a seat. Parent-tested, with gear that helps.
- GuideAre You Entitled to Flight Compensation? 2026 Decision GuideDelayed, cancelled, or bumped? Whether you're owed money depends on where your flight departed. A quick guide to EU261, UK261, and US DOT rules.
Related stories
- From the blogI Checked Basic Economy at 74 Airlines: The Personal-Item-Only Fare24 of 74 airlines give you a personal item and nothing else in their cheapest fare. Nine of them are full-service carriers, not budget airlines.
- From the blogI Checked 21 Airline Pet Fees. The Spread Is $74 to $300.Round-trip in-cabin pet fees range from $74 on WestJet to $300 on United and American. Same pet, same cabin, 4x price difference depending on the airline.
- From the blogI Checked Carry-On Rules at 75 Airlines: The Real TrapAcross 75 airlines, 21 don't publish personal item dimensions and the 54 that do range threefold in size. The bag you tuck under the seat is where the rules go.
Last verified May 2026 against official Frontier Airlines and Allegiant Air policy pages. Airlines change rules without notice, so confirm with your carrier before flying. See our research methodology.