Will airlines get a free pass from the government?

airlines get a free passAirlines get a free pass from the government. A proposed policy change would eliminate most airline fines.

Here’s how it could affect passengers.

Picture this: You’re driving 85 in a 65-mph zone, and a state trooper pulls you over. But instead of a $200 ticket, he hands you a warning and a pamphlet on the importance of speed limits.

That may not be a “what if” scenario for airlines. Under a proposed rule from the Department of Transportation (DOT), the agency charged with enforcing consumer protection regulations for airline passengers would trade its ticket book for a stack of warning letters.

The DOT is trying to add the rule quietly. It posted the revised policy and invited public feedback in early January and, as of early this week, had received only three comments (one, from the International Air Transport Association, “strongly” supported the proposed rule, of course). But airline passengers are unlikely to find much to cheer about once they learn the details.

The government goes from cop to coach under proposed rules.

The DOT’s Office of Aviation Consumer Protection has long been the cop on the beat for the airline industry, empowered to fine carriers for everything from stranding passengers on tarmacs to refusing legally mandated refunds.

But the new rule is part of a fundamental shift under the current administration. The agency explicitly wants to move its focus on ensuring compliance “rather than finding and penalizing entities for violations.” If the DOT finds a violation, its first step will now be a warning letter to resolve the issues before pursuing enforcement action. Formal fines and civil penalties are to be reserved only for “widespread, systemic, egregious, or intentional violations,” according to the government.

In plain English, the DOT is moving from an enforcement-first model to a consultant-first model. For the average passenger, this means your rights — to a refund, to timely baggage, to accessible service — are now protected by a system that prioritizes teamwork with an airline over punishment.

The system has stopped working. DOT doesn’t follow the rules, they change them.

Get refunds in cash when airlines cancel your flightThe proposed rule is unnecessary, since the DOT has stopped most enforcement.

During the first Trump administration, the DOT adopted a similar constrained approach to enforcement. The result was a staggering 88 percent drop in the total dollar amount of fines levied against major airlines compared to the end of the Obama era. In 2018, total penalties plummeted to just $560,000, down from $4.7 million only two years before.

During the Biden administration, DOT stepped up its enforcement efforts, issued a record $64 million in penalties — more than 10 times the entire four-year total of the previous administration. By early 2025, the agency had issued over $225 million in total penalties since 2021, compared to just $70 million issued collectively between 1996 and 2020.

The second Trump administration quickly began dismantling this aggressive stance. In addition to the proposed “warning letter” rule, they have paused the implementation of new refund requirements until mid-2026 and withdrawn rules designed to protect passengers from junk fees.

Which enforcement policy is better for passengers?

The danger of the free pass or compliance.

The logic behind the culture of compliance is that it’s more efficient. It actually works.

Research into traffic violations offers a sobering answer. A 2023 study found that while written warnings might work for low-risk, one-time traffic offenders, they have virtually no effect on high-risk, repeat violators. This is the bucket airlines fall into when they systematically delay refunds to preserve cash flow. In New Zealand, police this year abandoned a policy of issuing verbal warnings in favor of strict and often automatic fines. (And yes, I realize a car is not a commercial aircraft, but a fine is a fine.)

Even the DOT’s Inspector General warned in a September 2025 report that the agency was already failing to hold airlines accountable. It relied on the airlines’ self-certification of refund data. The IG noted that, without verifying this data and applying consistent penalties, the DOT risks failing to deter airlines from violating consumer protection regulations.

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What does this mean to you?

For an airline, a $100,000 fine is a line item, but a warning letter is a souvenir. It is nothing but an ineffective shot across the bow of the airships. By officially adopting a policy of leniency, the DOT is effectively telling the airlines that the cost of violating your rights is now zero.

Specifically, here’s what could happen:

Return of bait-and-switch pricing.

The erosion of price-display enforcement is a permission slip for drip pricing, where the initial fare looks low but mandatory junk fees for baggage, seats, and service are added only at the final checkout screen after the passenger has invested time in the booking.

Evasion of flight delay compensation.

Airlines frequently mislabel controllable delays (like staffing or maintenance) as “weather-related” to avoid paying for hotels or meals; without DOT audits, passengers have no way to verify the airline’s excuse and lose their leverage for compensation.

Refunds become interest-free loans.

Without the threat of immediate fines, airlines can intentionally slow-walk refund processing to keep cash on their own balance sheets, effectively treating passenger money as an interest-free loan for months at a time. That happened during the pandemic, when passengers waited months — and in some cases, years — for their refunds.

Deterioration of disability services.

Aggressive fines have been the primary driver for improvements in wheelchair handling and cabin accessibility; switching to “warning letters” signals that expensive equipment upgrades and specialized training are now lower-priority expenses.

The next time you’re stuck on a tarmac or fighting for a refund, remember the Highway Patrol. A culture of compliance may be great for the people in the driver’s seat. But for the passengers in the back, it’s a long, expensive road ahead.


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