I 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.

· · 1 min read

The same 15-pound dog in the same under-seat carrier costs $74 round-trip on one airline and $300 on another.

Most pet owners book flights by schedule and price, then discover the pet fee at checkout. The fee varies 4x depending on the carrier, and nothing about the service changes between the cheapest and most expensive.

  1. WestJet charges $37 one-way. That is $74 round-trip for the exact same under-seat pet carrier every airline requires. Allegiant is $50 one-way ($100 round-trip). Both are lower than Delta’s $95 one-way, which most travelers assume is standard.

  2. The middle tier clusters around $100-$125. Delta charges $95, Alaska $100, Southwest $125, JetBlue $125. Spirit also charges $125, which means Spirit’s pet fee matches Southwest’s despite Spirit being the “budget” option.

  3. American and United both charge $150 one-way. That is $300 round-trip. For two pets on a family trip, that is $600 in pet fees alone on a single domestic round-trip.

  4. Nine airlines charge under $100 one-way. WestJet, Allegiant, Eurowings, Gol, Breeze, Sun Country, Air Canada, Delta, and Frontier. The cheapest five are all under $75.

The airline with the lowest base fare is not the cheapest airline to fly with a pet.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which airline has the cheapest pet fee for in-cabin travel?
WestJet charges $37 one-way ($74 round-trip) for an in-cabin pet, the lowest published fee across 21 airlines with pet policies in our dataset. Allegiant Air is second at $50 one-way ($100 round-trip).
How much do American and United charge to fly with a pet in cabin?
Both American Airlines and United Airlines charge $150 one-way, which is $300 round-trip for a single in-cabin pet. That is 4x more than WestJet's $74 round-trip fee for the same service.
Do all airlines allow pets in the cabin?
No. Of 75 airlines tracked, only 21 publish in-cabin pet fees. Many international carriers, including most Asian and Middle Eastern airlines in our dataset, do not list in-cabin pet options at all.
C
Caden Sorenson

Senior Staff Engineer and Indie Developer

Caden Sorenson is a senior staff engineer with 15+ years of experience building iOS apps, web platforms, and developer tools. He holds a Computer Science degree from Utah State University and runs Vientapps, an indie studio based in Logan, Utah, where he ships small, focused tools and writes about every build in public.

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