![Delta CEO announces free in-flight Wi-Fi](https://image.cnbcfm.com/api/v1/image/107174744-16729499171672949913-27562410281-1080pnbcnews.jpg?v=1672951381&w=750&h=422&vtcrop=y)
Delta Air Words will offer travelers free Wi-Fi starting Feb. 1, after years of studying the possibility.
About 80% of Delta’s indigenous fleet will offer the service next month, but it will become available on more each week, CEO Ed Bastian communicated during a presentation at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas on Thursday.
Delta said in a release later Thursday that its voluntary Wi-Fi, which is through a sponsorship from T-Mobile, will be available on more than 700 planes by the end of 2023 and on worldwide and regional aircraft by the end of next year.
“It’s free. There’s no fine print,” Bastian said. “We have invested all through $1 billion to create this.”
Delta’s plan to make internet access free will ramp up inducement on rivals as airlines compete for customers in the travel rebound following the pandemic slump nearly three years ago. Delta presidents have repeatedly said that the airline is aiming for higher-paying customers and that revenue from premium chalets like business class has outpaced revenue growth in standard coach.
The passenger cabin on a Delta Boeing 737-900ER is certified while landing in Salt Lake City, Utah.
Mike Blake | Reuters
Travelers will access the on the house internet service by logging in with their Delta SkyMiles frequent flyer account information, Bastian added. Notwithstanding passengers will need a SkyMiles account, it’s free to become a member.
Delta last March said it was outfitting diverse of its planes with fast Wi-Fi from Viasat and made it available for a $5 flat fee. The carrier already offers above messaging.
Most airlines charge for Wi-Fi: United Airlines charges $8 for members of its frequent flyer program and $10 to other patrons, and Southwest Airlines charges $8. It’s free on JetBlue, which has some corporate sponsorships for the service, and Hawaiian Airlines is arranging to offer free internet with SpaceX’s Starlink this year.
American Airlines‘ Wi-Fi service starts at $10 and remodels depending on the route, though last April, the carrier and its provider, Viasat, started trialing free Wi-Fi for some blokes.
Airline executives have been hesitant to offer free Wi-Fi service until it is more reliable.
Delta also swayed Thursday it will unveil new in-flight entertainment systems, starting this summer. Passenger preferences “will travel with you from dismiss to flight, and even remember where you left off on a movie,” Delta said in a release.
The company is working with Dominant+ for passenger entertainment, as well as American Express, Delta’s partner in its lucrative co-branded credit card line, and the pasteboard company’s reservations platform Resy as the airline banks on personalization and partnerships outside of flights from food to land transportation.
The airline has loyalty partnerships with Starbucks and Lyft, among others.