Air Canada and United are not just competitors. They are partners. Both fly under the Star Alliance flag, codeshare on over 260 daily transborder flights, and share an antitrust-immunized joint venture for the US-Canada market. On many routes between the two countries, they sell seats on each other’s planes.
So why compare them at all? Because when you book a Toronto to Chicago flight, or a Vancouver to San Francisco hop, or a Montreal to Newark red-eye, the codeshare means you often have a choice. Same route, same departure window, different metal. The aircraft you board, the loyalty program you credit, the cabin you sit in, and the reliability you get are all different. For the roughly 60 million people who cross the US-Canada border by air each year, the choice between these two Star Alliance partners matters more than most airline comparisons.
United wins on punctuality, network reach, and earning rate. Air Canada wins on redemption value, cabin comfort, and service awards. The right answer depends on which side of the border you live on.
What We Looked For
- On-time reliability, because a 17-point gap between these two carriers is unusually large for a Star Alliance comparison
- Transborder route coverage, since both airlines serve the US-Canada corridor through codeshare and their own metal
- Loyalty program value, comparing Aeroplan and MileagePlus on both earning and redemption
- Carry-on and checked bag policies, where the two airlines have converged in surprising ways
- Seat comfort and cabin experience, including pitch, recline, and premium cabin differences
- Hub geography, which determines connecting options depending on where you start
Which airline charges less for bags, Air Canada or United?
Both airlines strip the carry-on from their cheapest North American fare. Checked bag pricing is nearly identical. This is functionally a tie.
The biggest surprise in this comparison is how similar the bag policies have become. Air Canada’s Economy Basic fare on North American routes restricts you to a personal item only, no overhead bin access. United’s Basic Economy does the same on domestic US flights. Both airlines adopted this restriction within a year of each other, and both offer the carry-on back on higher fare classes or with status and co-brand credit cards.
Carry-on. Air Canada Economy Basic (within Canada, US, Mexico, Caribbean, Central America): personal item only. United Basic Economy (domestic US): personal item only. Both include the carry-on on international long-haul Basic Economy fares.
Personal item. Air Canada: 17x13x6 inches. United: 17x10x9 inches. Air Canada’s personal item is wider but shallower. In practice, both fit a standard laptop bag or small backpack.
Checked bags. Air Canada: 45 dollars first bag, 60 dollars second bag on North American routes (price increased April 13, 2026). United: 45 dollars first bag, 55 dollars second bag prepaid online. United saves you five dollars on the second bag.
Winner for carry-on policy: tie. Both strip the carry-on on cheap fares. Both include it on standard economy and above.
Winner for checked bag pricing: tie. First bag is identical at 45 dollars. United is slightly cheaper on the second bag.
Winner for personal item size: Air Canada, by a small margin in width.
Seats and comfort
Air Canada offers more recline and has won recent Skytrax cabin awards. Seat pitch is similar across both airlines. Premium cabin products favor Air Canada on widebodies and United on domestic routes.
In standard economy, both airlines offer 30 to 31 inches of seat pitch depending on the aircraft. The numbers are close enough that the difference on any given flight comes down to the specific plane, not the airline.
Where Air Canada pulls ahead is recline. On Boeing 777 aircraft, Air Canada economy seats offer roughly five to six inches of rearward recline. United’s slimline seats on the same aircraft type provide closer to three inches. If you sleep on flights, this matters.
Air Canada picked up Skytrax awards in 2024 for Best Business Class Airline Lounge Catering, Best Cabin Crew in North America, and Cleanest Airline in North America. United did not appear in those categories.
Premium cabins. Air Canada Signature Class on widebodies (777, 787) features lie-flat pods with direct aisle access on newer configurations. United Polaris offers a comparable lie-flat product on its 777 and 787 fleets with Polaris Lounges at major hubs. Both are strong business class products. On narrow-body domestic and short-haul flights, United First Class is a recliner-style seat with 37 to 38 inches of pitch. Air Canada’s domestic business class varies more by aircraft, with some routes offering only a blocked middle seat rather than a true premium product.
Winner for economy comfort: Air Canada, primarily on recline.
Winner for premium long-haul cabin: tie. Polaris and Signature Class are competitive products.
Winner for domestic premium cabin: United. More consistent first-class product on narrow-body routes.
On-time performance and cancellations
United is significantly more punctual in 2026. This is the widest gap in the entire comparison.
In March 2026, Cirium ranked United third among North American carriers with a 78.49 percent on-time arrival rate. Air Canada ranked ninth with 61.30 percent. That is a gap of over 17 percentage points.
Context matters. Air Canada briefly topped the North American on-time rankings in mid-2025 with 77.15 percent, so the current numbers may reflect seasonal or operational issues rather than a permanent gap. Canadian winter weather hits Air Canada’s hub operations harder than United’s more geographically distributed hub network. Toronto Pearson, Air Canada’s largest hub, is one of the most weather-disrupted major airports in North America from November through March.
Still, 61.30 percent means roughly four out of every ten Air Canada flights arrived late in March 2026. For a cross-border business traveler with a meeting to make, that is a meaningful risk.
Winner for on-time performance: United, and it is not close right now.
Route network
United covers more of the world. Air Canada covers more of Canada. For transborder routes specifically, their codeshare makes both networks partially interchangeable.
United serves over 300 destinations across 74 countries. Hubs in Newark, Chicago O’Hare, Denver, Houston Intercontinental, San Francisco, Washington Dulles, and Los Angeles give it unmatched domestic US coverage and strong international connectivity to Europe, Asia, and Latin America.
Air Canada serves over 180 destinations across 63 countries. Hubs in Toronto Pearson, Montreal Trudeau, Vancouver, and Calgary anchor its domestic Canadian network. For Summer 2026, Air Canada is expanding aggressively into Europe with new routes from Montreal to Berlin, Catania, and Palma de Mallorca, plus Toronto to Shanghai and a year-round Vancouver to Bangkok service.
The codeshare changes the math for transborder travelers. Through the joint venture, you can connect to over 100 codeshare destinations in the US via Air Canada and 25 Canadian cities via United. A passenger flying Air Canada from Vancouver to Toronto can seamlessly connect to a United flight from Toronto to Dallas on a single ticket.
Winner for global network: United. Nearly double the destinations.
Winner for Canadian domestic coverage: Air Canada. No contest.
Winner for transborder convenience: tie. The codeshare makes both networks available regardless of which airline you book.
Loyalty programs: Aeroplan vs MileagePlus
Aeroplan offers cheaper award redemptions. MileagePlus earns faster. The better program depends on whether you prioritize burning points or accumulating them.
This is the most consequential difference for frequent cross-border travelers, and both programs changed significantly in the past year.
Earning rates. MileagePlus awards 5 miles per US dollar spent on United flights. Aeroplan moved to a revenue-based model starting January 1, 2026, earning roughly 1 point per Canadian dollar spent. At current exchange rates, MileagePlus earns approximately three to four times faster per dollar.
Redemption rates. Aeroplan consistently prices awards lower than MileagePlus for the same routes and classes. A Star Alliance economy award that costs 30,000 MileagePlus miles might cost 20,000 to 25,000 Aeroplan points. This advantage is significant on premium cabin redemptions, where the gap can be tens of thousands of points.
Partner booking fee. Aeroplan charges a 31 dollar fee when booking partner airline flights (including United). MileagePlus does not charge a similar fee. This erodes some of Aeroplan’s redemption advantage on cheap economy awards.
Elite status. Aeroplan now awards status based entirely on spending, not miles flown. MileagePlus uses Premier Qualifying Points earned through flying and spending. For a cross-border traveler who splits flights between Air Canada and United metal, MileagePlus is slightly more flexible because both airlines’ flights count toward status without conversion penalties.
Credit card ecosystem. In the US, Chase co-brand cards earn MileagePlus miles directly. In Canada, TD and CIBC co-brand cards earn Aeroplan points. The transferable points ecosystem (Amex, Chase Ultimate Rewards, Capital One) feeds both programs, but MileagePlus has a slight edge in US transfer partner coverage.
Winner for earning: MileagePlus. Three to four times the earning rate per dollar.
Winner for redemption: Aeroplan. Lower award costs on most routes and classes.
Winner for cross-border status earning: MileagePlus, with slightly more flexible qualifying criteria.
Who should pick Air Canada
- You live in Canada and need strong domestic connections through Toronto, Montreal, or Vancouver
- You value Aeroplan’s cheaper redemption rates and plan to use points for premium cabin awards
- Cabin comfort matters to you, especially recline on long-haul economy flights
- You fly primarily to Europe or Asia from Canadian gateways, where Air Canada is expanding its network for Summer 2026
- You hold a TD or CIBC Aeroplan credit card and want to earn within the Canadian banking ecosystem
- You prioritize service quality and cabin experience over strict punctuality
Who should pick United
- You live in the US and need access to United’s seven major domestic hubs
- You want to earn MileagePlus miles faster at 5 miles per dollar
- On-time reliability is critical to your travel, especially for connecting flights or business trips
- You fly domestically within the US more often than internationally
- You hold a Chase United credit card or earn Chase Ultimate Rewards points
- You want the largest possible route network, with over 300 destinations available on a single airline
- You value United’s Polaris Lounges at hub airports for premium cabin travel
The bottom line
This is not a comparison where one airline is clearly better. Air Canada and United serve different home markets, and the Star Alliance codeshare means you often do not have to choose at all. On many transborder routes, the same flight exists under both airline codes.
If you are forced to pick one loyalty program and one default carrier, follow the hubs. A traveler based in Toronto, Montreal, or Vancouver gets more value from Air Canada and Aeroplan. The cheaper redemptions, better cabin recline, and Canadian domestic network compound over time. A traveler based in Chicago, Denver, Houston, Newark, or San Francisco gets more from United and MileagePlus. The faster earning rate, better punctuality, and deeper US route map matter more for someone who connects through American airports weekly.
The one clear gap is reliability. United arriving on time 78.49 percent of the time versus Air Canada at 61.30 percent is not a rounding error. If you have a 2 PM meeting in another city and only one shot to get there, United is the safer bet right now. Air Canada proved it can do better (77.15 percent in mid-2025), so this gap may narrow, but as of spring 2026, it has not.