American and Alaska share a oneworld alliance membership, which means miles earned on one work on the other and status benefits transfer across both carriers and all oneworld partners. But the alliance partnership masks significant differences in reliability, basic economy policies, and the overall flying experience.
The reliability gap is the headline. Alaska posted 79.20 percent on-time in 2025, ranking second in North America per Cirium. American posted 72.66 percent with a 1.93 percent cancellation rate, the worst among major US carriers, and tied for last in the Wall Street Journal’s 2025 airline rankings. Alaska is more than 6 percentage points more punctual.
The basic economy comparison is equally one-sided. Alaska’s Saver fare includes a carry-on bag and earns Atmos Rewards points. American’s Basic Economy includes a carry-on but no longer earns AAdvantage miles or Loyalty Points as of December 2025. On the cheapest fare, Alaska gives you everything American does plus loyalty earning.
Where American wins is network scale. American serves 350-plus destinations across 60-plus countries with eight hubs. Alaska serves 142 destinations, concentrated on the West Coast, with a growing but still limited international network from Seattle.
What We Looked For
- On-time reliability, where the 6-point gap is one of the largest between US legacy carriers
- Basic economy policies, where Alaska’s Saver fare outperforms American’s on loyalty earning
- Route network, 350-plus destinations versus 142 within the same alliance
- Loyalty programs, AAdvantage versus Atmos Rewards for oneworld earning
- Wi-Fi and in-flight experience, where both airlines offer free Wi-Fi to members
- West Coast competition, where Alaska dominates and American competes
Which airline charges less for bags, American or Alaska?
Both include a carry-on on all fares. Checked bag fees are nearly identical. The key difference is that Alaska’s cheapest fare earns loyalty points while American’s does not.
Carry-on. Both airlines include a carry-on on all fares, including their cheapest (American Basic Economy, Alaska Saver). This is a tie on paper, but the details differ. American Basic Economy boards last and no longer earns AAdvantage miles. Alaska Saver includes the carry-on and earns Atmos Rewards points.
Checked bags. American charges 45 dollars for the first checked bag (increasing to 50 dollars for Basic Economy starting May 2026) and 55 dollars for the second. Alaska charges 45 dollars for the first bag (as of April 10, 2026) and 55 dollars for the second. Nearly identical pricing. Both waive fees for elite members, co-branded credit cardholders, and premium cabin passengers.
Personal item. American: 18x14x8 inches. Alaska: must fit under the seat (no strict published dimensions). Standard underseat bags work on both.
For details on your specific bag, use our carry-on size checker or see our guide to avoiding checked bag fees.
- Winner for carry-on inclusion: Tie (both include on all fares)
- Winner for checked bag pricing: Tie ($45/$55 at both)
- Winner for basic economy value: Alaska (Saver earns points, American BE does not)
Is American or Alaska more reliable for on-time arrivals?
Alaska is significantly more reliable at 79.20 percent versus American’s 72.66 percent. This is one of the largest gaps between any two US legacy carriers.
Alaska’s 2025 on-time rate was 79.20 percent according to Cirium, ranking second among the ten largest North American carriers behind only Delta. Alaska ranked fourth in the Wall Street Journal’s 2025 airline analysis, performing well in extreme delay avoidance.
American’s full-year 2025 on-time rate was 72.66 percent. The cancellation rate was 1.93 percent according to DOT data, the worst among major carriers. American tied for last in the WSJ’s 2025 rankings. American’s hub at DFW and its complexity across eight hubs contribute to higher delay exposure.
The 6.54 percentage point gap is significant. On a flight-by-flight basis, you are meaningfully more likely to arrive on time with Alaska. American’s larger network does provide more rebooking options when things go wrong, but Alaska’s lower disruption rate means you need that rebooking less often.
- Winner for on-time arrivals: Alaska (79.20% vs 72.66%)
- Winner for cancellation rate: Alaska (significantly lower than American’s 1.93%)
- Winner for rebooking options after disruption: American (6,700+ daily flights)
Does American or Alaska have more legroom?
Alaska offers 31 to 32 inches of seat pitch versus American’s approximately 30 inches. Both offer solid domestic First Class products.
Standard economy. Alaska: 31 to 32 inches of pitch. American: approximately 30 inches. Alaska provides 1 to 2 additional inches in standard economy, a noticeable difference on longer flights.
Extra legroom. American Main Cabin Extra: approximately 34 inches with priority boarding. Alaska Premium Class: up to 35 inches with priority boarding and complimentary drinks. Alaska offers slightly more pitch and a drink.
Domestic First. American: recliner seats on all mainline narrowbody aircraft, complimentary meals, priority services. Alaska: 41-inch pitch, 20 to 21-inch width, footrests, and tablet holders on 737s. Both are solid domestic First Class products.
International Business. American: Flagship Business with lie-flat suites on widebody aircraft. Flagship Suite with privacy doors on A321XLR. Alaska: new International Business Class Suites with fully enclosed 1-2-1 lie-flat suites on 787-9 Dreamliners, launching spring 2026 to Rome, London, and Reykjavik from Seattle.
Wi-Fi. American: free for AAdvantage members via AT&T on approximately 90 percent of fleet (launched January 2026). Alaska: free Starlink for Atmos Rewards members (rolling out through 2026), plus free Wi-Fi for T-Mobile customers on non-Starlink planes. Both are strong on Wi-Fi.
Entertainment. American: free streaming to personal devices via the American Airlines app. No seatback screens on narrowbody aircraft. Alaska: free streaming to personal devices. No seatback screens on most aircraft (787s have seatback screens). Similar offerings, with American’s Apple TV+ content as a differentiator.
- Winner for standard legroom: Alaska (31-32” vs ~30”)
- Winner for extra legroom: Alaska (Premium Class, up to 35” with drink)
- Winner for Wi-Fi: Tie (both free for loyalty members)
- Winner for international business class network: American (wider network)
- Winner for new business class hardware: Alaska (enclosed suites on 787-9)
Does American or Alaska fly to more destinations?
American serves over 350 destinations across 60-plus countries. Alaska serves 142 destinations with a rapidly growing international network from Seattle.
American flies to over 350 destinations in more than 60 countries. Eight major hubs at DFW, CLT, MIA, ORD, PHL, LAX, PHX, and DCA. As a founding oneworld member, American provides the alliance’s largest US presence with connections to British Airways, Japan Airlines, Cathay Pacific, Iberia, and Qantas.
Alaska serves approximately 142 destinations, concentrated on the West Coast, with Seattle-Tacoma as its primary hub. The Hawaiian Airlines integration (completed February 2025) adds Honolulu and Pacific island routes. Alaska joined oneworld in March 2021, with Hawaiian joining in April 2026, providing combined access to 1,500-plus daily flights.
Alaska’s 2026 international expansion marks a new era: nonstop from Seattle to Rome, London Heathrow, Reykjavik, Tokyo Narita, and Seoul Incheon on 787-9 Dreamliners. Alaska plans 12-plus intercontinental destinations from Seattle by 2030 using up to 17 Dreamliners.
However, Alaska is also pulling back from airports where it cannot compete: SFO capacity cut by 24 percent in July 2026, dropping routes to Austin, Boston, and Newark. Alaska is pivoting toward San Diego (plus 35 percent capacity) and Portland (4 new routes) where it can dominate.
Both airlines are in oneworld, so a ticket on one can connect to the other and to all alliance partners. The network gap is real for own-operated flights, but alliance membership narrows it for connections.
- Winner for international reach: American (350+ destinations, 60+ countries)
- Winner for West Coast and Pacific: Alaska (dominant at SEA, Hawaiian integration)
- Winner for Hawaii: Alaska (Hawaiian Airlines integration)
- Winner for oneworld connectivity: Tie (both are oneworld members)
Is AAdvantage or Atmos Rewards the better loyalty program?
Both are oneworld programs. Atmos Rewards offers better per-point value and more flexible earning. AAdvantage offers a broader global network for earning and spending.
AAdvantage earns miles based on ticket price. Miles average approximately 1.3 cents each. Elite tiers (Gold, Platinum, Platinum Pro, Executive Platinum, ConciergeKey) unlock complimentary upgrades, preferred seating, and Admirals Club access. Miles earn and burn across all oneworld partners. Note: Basic Economy no longer earns miles as of December 2025.
Atmos Rewards (formerly Mileage Plan) offers flexible earning: distance, segments, or spend (member’s choice starting 2026). Points average 1.47 to 1.5 cents each, with domestic Alaska redemptions reaching 1.93 cents or higher. Combined Alaska plus Hawaiian earning and redemption. Miles earn and burn across oneworld partners. Saver fares earn points (unlike American Basic Economy).
For travelers focused on maximum per-point value and West Coast or Pacific flying, Atmos Rewards delivers better returns. For travelers who need the broadest possible oneworld earning across a large US network, AAdvantage covers more airports.
Since both are oneworld members, you can earn on one and fly on the other. Some travelers maintain status on both.
- Winner for per-point value: Atmos Rewards (~1.5 cents vs ~1.3 cents)
- Winner for earning flexibility: Atmos Rewards (distance, segments, or spend)
- Winner for basic economy earning: Atmos Rewards (earns on Saver vs no earning on American BE)
- Winner for network coverage: AAdvantage (more US airports in the program)
- Winner for Pacific redemptions: Atmos Rewards (Alaska + Hawaiian combined)
Who Should Pick American
- You need the broadest possible US route network across eight hubs
- You fly internationally to destinations beyond the West Coast gateways
- You already have high AAdvantage status and value the upgrade path
- You fly frequently from DFW, CLT, MIA, ORD, or PHL
- You want Flagship Business on a wide range of international widebody routes
- You prefer Admirals Club access through your credit card or status
Who Should Pick Alaska
- You fly primarily on the West Coast, to Hawaii, or through Seattle
- You want a significantly more on-time airline (79.20% vs 72.66%)
- You want a basic economy fare that earns loyalty points
- You want higher per-point value from your loyalty program
- You are interested in Alaska’s new nonstop international service from Seattle
- You prefer an airline with a stronger reliability track record and lower cancellation rate
- You value flexible earning structures and combined Alaska/Hawaiian Pacific access
The Bottom Line
American and Alaska are oneworld partners, and on paper they complement each other: American for global reach, Alaska for West Coast depth. But the flying experience is not equal.
Alaska is more on-time by 6.54 percentage points, offers a basic economy fare that earns loyalty points (while American’s does not), and delivers higher per-point value in its loyalty program. Alaska’s expanding international network from Seattle with new enclosed business class suites makes it a growing competitor, not just a regional feeder.
American’s advantages are scale and coverage. It serves 350-plus destinations, operates from eight major hubs, and offers Flagship Business on a wide range of international routes. If you need to fly somewhere Alaska does not serve, American is the answer.
For West Coast travelers, Alaska is the better airline by reliability, basic economy value, and loyalty earning. For travelers who need nationwide or global coverage beyond what Alaska and its oneworld partners can provide, American fills gaps that Alaska cannot. The good news is that both airlines are in oneworld, so you do not have to choose exclusively.