Southwest Airlines reported a Q1 net income of $227 million on record operating revenues of $7.2 billion, which were up 12.8% year over year. Bob Jordan, Southwest’s President and CEO, stated, “First quarter 2026 marked a turning point for Southwest, as our broad set of commercial, operational, and cost initiatives is now translating into terrific results. Demand for our new product offerings drove record first-quarter revenues, double-digit revenue growth, and significant improvement in earnings and margins.”

Financial Highlights
During the quarter, operating revenues reached $7.2 billion, up 12.8% year-over-year. Net income was $227 million, or $0.45 diluted earnings per share. Operating margin, adjusted, was 4.6% and showed a 6.6-point improvement year-over-year. Operating cash flow generated $1.4 billion, up 65% year-over-year. The company also returned $1.3 billion to shareholders through dividends and share repurchases.
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Start My Test Flight →Perhaps most importantly, there was a much stronger customer buy-up, with approximately 60% customers upgrading from the base product during the quarter, versus about 20% in 2025. Rapid Rewards enrollment was up 37%, with tier-status earners increasing 62%, both year-over-year.
Operating Results
The following Consolidated Income Statements compare 2026 and 2025 results for the airline, which reversed a Q1 2025 loss into a Q1 2026 profit.

Guidance and Outlook
Amid the significant economic and geopolitical uncertainty, Southwest will monitor conditions and provide updates to guidance as appropriate. For the second quarter, “we expect EPS in the range of $0.35 to $0.65 using an average fuel price of $4.10 to $4.15.” Management reiterated that Southwest’s initiatives are working, its core strengths remain, and that combination is producing top of industry margins.
The Bottom Line
Given the current disruption in fuel flow in the Strait of Hormuz, it isn’t possible to provide meaningful full-year guidance. But recognizing that all US airlines are in the same boat, with little hedging, the key is how much of the fuel costs can be recovered in fares. Southwest, whose initiatives announced 18 months ago have now taken full effect, has the carrier in a better position than most, remaining one of only three investment-grade airlines. With 5 industry price increases holding since the first of March, it appears that more of the oil spike is being recovered, and with strong bookings, it has not seen a major elasticity impact as yet. If that remains the case, Southwest will have better-than-expected performance, based on prior fuel spikes and industry downturns.
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