Who Really Holds Your Travel Money Before You Travel and What Are They Doing With It
Skift Take
Travel companies have built a banking-like float system around consumer prepayments, without banking-like protections, and the scale is now too large to ignore.
Connecting the Dots
Rafat Ali on what’s really shaping travel — and why it matters.You book a flight six months before you travel, you pay in full at checkout, the money leaves your bank account immediately, and then nothing happens for a while. The flight hasn’t happened yet, the pilot hasn’t shown up, the jet fuel hasn’t been burned. Your $500 is sitting in Delta’s bank account, commingled with every other dollar Delta has, recorded on the balance sheet as something the airline industry calls “air traffic liability,” which is an honest name for it, and your $500 is now indistinguishable from the cash that pays for aircraft leases, crew salaries, profit-sharing bonuses, and share buybacks.
Delta’s air traffic liability as of March 31, 2026: $10.7 billion. Total liquidity to cover it: $8.1 billion, and that includes a $3.1 billion undrawn credit revolver that is not cash.
I’ve spent the past several weeks pulling 10-Q and 10-K filings from SEC for 15 U.S. public travel companies, airlines, OTAs, cruise lines, hotel companies, t