Trump budget seeks $372 million cut to US Essential Air Service program
US President Donald Trump’s fiscal 2027 budget proposal takes aim at the Essential Air Service program, calling for a $372 million reduction in discretionary funding while arguing the long-running subsidy system has drifted far from its original purpose.
The White House budget, released April 3, 2026, says EAS now sends taxpayer money to support “half-empty flights” between airports that are often close to one another and says program spending more than doubled between 2021 and 2025.
The administration is not proposing to eliminate the program outright. Instead, the budget says it would “rein in” EAS subsidies through a mix of changes to eligibility rules and subsidy rates, while continuing to support rural communities’ air transportation needs.
But the budget document does not spell out what those reforms would be, leaving airlines, airports and small communities without details on which markets could be affected or how deeply subsidies might be reduced.
The renewed push puts EAS back in the political crosshairs for the second straight year. Congress rejected a similar attempt in the fiscal 2026 budget cycle, when the White House sought to cut the program by about half. Lawmakers instead approved $514 million for EAS in the enacted transportation spending bill and included language aimed at preventing the Department of Transportation from abruptly terminating contracts.
The Department of Transportation says EAS exists to guarantee a minimum level of scheduled air service for eligible communities that might otherwise lose their link to the national air transportation system after airline deregulation.
As of fall 2024, DOT said the program supported 177 communities, including 65 in Alaska and 112 in the contiguous US, Hawaii and Puerto Rico. In many cases, the service consists of two subsidized round trips a day to a hub airport using 30- to 50-seat aircraft or smaller alternatives.
The White House budget argues that some subsidized routes no longer make sense and says the current structure fails to effectively serve many rural travelers.
Supporters of EAS counter that the administration is focusing on outlier cases while overlooking the role the program plays in preserving connectivity for remote regions, particularly in Alaska and small communities with limited highway access or long drives to larger airports.The post Trump budget seeks $372 million cut to US Essential Air Service program appeared first on AeroTime.
US President Donald Trump’s fiscal 2027 budget proposal takes aim at the Essential Air Service program, calling for…
The post Trump budget seeks $372 million cut to US Essential Air Service program appeared first on AeroTime.
