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Delta unveils 12 new and expanded transatlantic routes as part of largest-ever summer schedule

Sept. 20, 2024
6 min read
Delta Airbus A330-900neo LAX
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Delta Air Lines wants to take you to Europe next summer.

On Friday the Atlanta-based carrier unveiled its transatlantic schedule for summer 2025, and it includes seven new routes, an exciting new destination and expanded service to some of the most popular markets across Europe.

There's lots to get excited about, especially if you're planning a big European vacation next year. Read on for all the details.

7 new routes, 1 new destination

CIRIUM

Headlining the announcement is the addition of seven new routes, including one brand-new destination. All of the routes begin next summer.

RouteDatesAircraftFrequency
Atlanta to BrusselsJune 10, 2025 - Oct. 23, 2025Boeing 767-300ERthree times weekly
Atlanta to Naples, ItalyMay 23, 2025 - Oct. 24, 2025Airbus A330-200four times weekly
Boston to BarcelonaMay 22, 2025 - Oct. 23, 2025Boeing 767-300ERthree times weekly
Boston to MilanMay 23, 2025 - Oct. 24, 2025Boeing 767-300ERfour times weekly
Detroit to DublinMay 7, 2025 - Oct. 5, 2025Airbus A330-200four times weekly
Minneapolis-St. Paul to RomeMay 23, 2025 - Oct. 24, 2025Airbus A330-300four times weekly
New York to Catania, ItalyMay 22, 2025 - Oct. 24, 2025Boeing 767-300ERdaily

Delta already serves six of the seven aforementioned markets from other domestic hubs, but the new service to Catania on the east coast of Sicily is an intriguing new addition (and likely to be popular among "White Lotus" fans). That's especially true since there hasn't historically been a nonstop flight from the U.S. to this island.

Overall, Delta thinks that travelers will want to visit Italy next summer. Four of the seven new routes are to Italy, and the airline even marketed its all-in-one Italian vacation packages as a headline in the Friday announcement.

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Furthermore, this past summer, Delta launched new service to Naples with flights from New York, and just a year later, the airline is back with its second route to Naples — this time, from Atlanta.

Delta will be the largest U.S. carrier in the Italian market next summer, offering 10% more service than this year. (Interestingly, the route from Minneapolis-St. Paul to Rome is technically a resumption, as the carrier last served the market in the summer of 2016, Cirium schedules show.)

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Other interesting additions include the two new services from Boston — a hub that Delta has tried to fortify in recent years against JetBlue and other incumbents. Even though Delta's New York hub is the carrier's primary Northeast transatlantic gateway, it still offers service to top nonstop destinations from Boston that appeal to both locals and others who want to connect in Boston to avoid the often busy and delay-prone New York airspace that sees frequent ground-delay problems.

In addition, Milan is Boston's largest unserved European market, so the new Delta service could appeal to travelers in the local market. Meanwhile, the Boston-to-Barcelona route is already served by Iberia.

Delta's new flight from Detroit to Dublin will complement the airline's existing service to the Irish capital from four other U.S. hubs: Atlanta, Boston, New York-JFK, and Minneapolis-St. Paul.

5 expanded routes

CIRIUM

In addition to the new routes, Delta is also boosting existing service on five transatlantic routes next summer, including:

  • Atlanta to Athens: 11 weekly flights
  • Atlanta to Barcelona: 10 weekly flights
  • Atlanta to Rome: 17 weekly flights
  • Atlanta to Zurich: daily service
  • Detroit to Munich: daily service

It's likely no surprise that four of the five expanded routes originate at Delta's megahub in Atlanta. The airline continues to succeed at the world's busiest airport, and these additional frequencies should help it attract even more local and connecting passengers through Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport (ATL).

"With over 700 weekly flights to 33 European destinations and beyond, we're expanding access to key cities like Barcelona and Dublin with new routes, while introducing our first-ever nonstop service to Catania, Sicily," said Joe Esposito, Delta's senior vice president of network planning, in a statement.

1 route cut

One route from the summer 2024 schedule will be cut next year. This three-times-weekly service from New York to Munich will be slashed to make room for the new Detroit to Munich route.

Delta confirmed the cut with the following statement: "Delta is adjusting its summer 2025 schedule to meet demand by canceling the three-times-weekly JFK to Munich service and reallocating those frequencies to offer daily flights between Detroit and Munich."

Notably, this is Delta's latest adjustment in Germany after just recently slashing flights from Atlanta to Stuttgart.

Bottom line

Delta's big European expansion for summer 2025 comes just two weeks after American Airlines announced its own transatlantic schedule for next summer.

Like American, Delta is expanding in southern Europe, with more flights to Italy and Greece than ever before. These destinations have proven resilient summer after summer, and the airlines seemingly think that demand for nonstop service will only increase.

It's especially exciting for Delta customers to see the airline add an all-new route-map pin in Catania, a destination that previously required a stop in a major European hub on the way from the U.S.

Though Delta has historically focused on boosting European routes to key partner hubs in London, Amsterdam and Paris, next summer is shaping up be another blockbuster one. There will be more flights than ever to popular destinations teeming with tourists.

And now that American and Delta have announced their big summer schedules, it'll be interesting to see what United and its creative network planning team have up their sleeve — that announcement is expected in the next few weeks.

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Featured image by ZACH GRIFF/THE POINTS GUY
Editorial disclaimer: Opinions expressed here are the author’s alone, not those of any bank, credit card issuer, airline or hotel chain, and have not been reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by any of these entities.