$465 an Hour: The Big 3 Just Rewrote U.S. Airline Pilot Pay

by | May 20, 2026 | Aviation World, News | 0 comments

For most of aviation history, the salary difference between a Delta captain and a United captain on the same kind of aircraft was a real number. Sometimes 5%. Sometimes 8%. Always enough to matter when a pilot was deciding which big airline to chase.

In 2026, that number is now zero.

A twelve-year captain on a Boeing 777, 787 or Airbus A350 at United Airlines earns $465.13 per hour. At American Airlines: $465.13 per hour. At Delta: $465.13 per hour. Three carriers, identical widebody captain pay, identical pay step structures. The Big Three have just realigned the U.S. cockpit on a single curve.

Quick Facts

Top widebody captain pay (Big 3): $465.13 per hour

First officer (same aircraft, 12 years): $317.73 per hour

Approximate annual W-2 (widebody captain): $465,000–$520,000

Narrowbody pay (737 captain): Delta $388, American $402, United $399 — Delta’s old lead is gone

Background: Three new contracts ratified between 2024 and 2026

The Three Contracts That Did It

The pay convergence is the result of three separate but tightly coupled negotiations. United Airlines pilots ratified their new contract in 2023, locking in roughly $10 billion of total raises over the contract life. American followed shortly after, with a pilot deal that explicitly matched United’s pay scales. Delta’s existing agreement, signed in 2022, already topped both — until United and American caught up by mid-2026.

The result is exactly the kind of pay equalisation that ALPA (the Air Line Pilots Association) has been quietly working toward for two decades. Pilots can no longer choose between the Big Three on the basis of pay. They have to choose on the basis of base location, fleet, route network, schedule flexibility and quality-of-life factors.

American Airlines 777 widebody
American Airlines 777 captains now earn the same $465.13/hour as their United and Delta counterparts.

What That Hourly Number Actually Means

Pilots get paid by the hour, but they don’t fly 2,000 hours a year. A typical senior widebody captain works about 80 flight hours per month — call it 900 hours per year, plus reserve and training pay. At $465.13 per hour straight time, that puts gross pay around $420,000 to $470,000 base, before overtime, profit-sharing, and per-diem.

Add Delta’s roughly 10–15% profit-sharing distribution and you arrive at total W-2 compensation between $480,000 and $550,000 for the most senior widebody captains. American and United do not match Delta’s profit-sharing structure (American’s is roughly 5%, United’s is more modest), so the bottom-line take-home gap reopens — but on a much narrower margin than the pre-2024 era.

Airline cockpit captain
A modern airline cockpit. The pilots in here earn the same hourly rate no matter which of the Big Three logo is on the tail.
“For the first time in decades, top-tier pilot compensation at the major U.S. carriers no longer determines where a pilot chooses to work. We consider that a structural success for the profession.”
— Position summarised from public Air Line Pilots Association statements and pay-deal coverage by One Mile at a Time and The Traveler, 2025–2026

Why Delta’s Pilots Are Pushing Back Anyway

Delta’s contract is technically the best of the three — better profit-sharing, better quality-of-life provisions, slightly better widebody trip rigging. But Delta pilots’ relative pay advantage over United and American has now narrowed almost to zero on the headline number. Inside Delta’s pilot group, the mood is restless.

The existing Delta Pilot Working Agreement becomes amendable on December 31, 2026. ALPA and Delta reopened Section 6 negotiations earlier this year, with the union pushing hard for a quick deal that locks in another step ahead before American and United are next at the table. Delta’s union calls the current moment a “narrow window of leverage” — they want to bank the profit-sharing premium into base rates before Wall Street decides airlines are over-earning.

What This Costs the Airlines

Big numbers all round. The combined pilot-cost increase across United, American and Delta is on the order of $20 billion in present value across the contract terms — roughly $7 billion per carrier. For perspective, that is more than United’s 2019 net income for an entire year.

The airlines paid it because they had to. The post-pandemic pilot shortage forced their hands; the regional-to-mainline pipeline was structurally broken; and the alternative — flight cancellations and capacity caps — would have cost more in revenue than the raises cost in payroll.

For passengers, the pay realignment shows up indirectly. Domestic fares are up year-on-year. International ticket prices have stabilised at the post-2022 plateau. The Big Three have essentially passed about half the pay increase through to the customer. The rest comes from improved productivity and the broader airline pricing environment.

Whatever the bottom-line cost, the bigger story is structural: U.S. major-airline pilot compensation has been levelled, and it is now competing on the same playing field as European and Asian carriers for the first time since deregulation. The pilots noticed. The airlines noticed. The next chapter is what Delta, United and American do after matching each other.

Sources: Air Line Pilots Association; View from the Wing; One Mile at a Time; AeroTime; Simple Flying.

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