Spirit Airlines’ renewed bankruptcy and American Airlines’ sudden appearance in the case have revived questions about whether a larger move, including a possible merger or sale, could be taking shape. Spirit has already acknowledged that a merger or sale may be the “value-maximizing outcome,” drawing fresh attention to any signs of outside interest.
Americans’ request to receive all filings in Spirit’s bankruptcy and its recent purchase of two Spirit gates at Chicago O’Hare have only added fuel to the speculation. While neither airline has indicated a merger is underway, the timing of American’s actions has raised understandable curiosity about what might come next.
Why American Appeared in Spirit’s Bankruptcy Case
According to an article by Reuters: On 7 December 2025,
American Airlines (AA) filed a “notice of appearance” in the bankruptcy proceedings of Spirit Airlines, formally requesting to receive all future court documents, operating reports, reorganization plans, liquidation statements, etc. The filing, according to an AA spokesperson, is tied to an “airport-specific agreement” between the two carriers, not a public acquisition bid or merger proposal.
Spirit, having filed for bankruptcy for the second time in a year, has said it is exploring all potential paths forward, including a merger or sale. By entering the case as a “party in interest,” American is positioning itself to be notified of any restructuring developments that might impact those airport-specific agreements or assets they share, though for now, its involvement appears purely defensive or precautionary in nature. Spirit Airlines recently said:
“The value maximizing outcome may be a merger or sale of the company; Spirit is actively working to explore all potential opportunities. The company is actively engaged in discussions with a number of interested counterparties.”
The O’Hare Gate Sale: Meaningful Signal or One-Off Transaction?
In what appears to be the first public asset sale since Spirit’s bankruptcy filing, American purchased two of Spirit’s preferential-use gates at
Chicago O’Hare International Airport, specifically gates G8 and G10, for about $30 million, View From The Wing reports. Spirit had sharply reduced its flight schedule at O’Hare, cutting peak daily departures by roughly half and no longer requiring all four of its previously assigned gates.
According to the source reporting the sale, Spirit is not characterizing the transaction as a cash-flow lifeline; rather, the funds are being used to prepay debtor-in-possession (DIP) loans, a standard bankruptcy financing tool. That suggests the sale is part of a broader restructuring strategy, aimed at streamlining assets rather than signaling an imminent takeover by American.
Still, the timing naturally fuels speculation. American Airlines already has legal disputes over gate allocations at O’Hare (after previously losing gates to another competitor under a city-led reallocation plan). By acquiring these gates, AA strengthens its foothold at a major hub, a move some might interpret as opportunistic positioning, adding weight to the theory that the airline could be preparing for more than just a one-off asset purchase.
Spirit Airlines Backtracks On Plan To Furlough Up To 365 Pilots Next Quarter
The airline is also drastically reducing the number of captains to get downgraded.
Does This Mean A Merger Is Likely, Or Even Underway?
At present, there is no public bid or takeover proposal from American for Spirit. The bankruptcy filing was explicitly tied to an airport-specific agreement. Spirit itself has told investors it is “engaged with a number of interested counterparties” and that a merger or sale could represent the “value maximizing outcome.” But that language leaves the path open to multiple possibilities, including restructuring as a standalone carrier, liquidation, or sale to another buyer.
Any full merger or acquisition would also face significant hurdles. Given regulatory scrutiny on airline consolidations in the US and the history of blocked mergers in the sector, a union between AA, one of the largest legacy carriers, and Spirit, a budget airline, would likely attract close antitrust attention. On top of that, Spirit’s restructuring plan appears focused on shedding unneeded assets, cutting costs, and salvaging liquidity, rather than preparing for an outright absorption by another carrier. The gate sale at O’Hare, for example, was motivated by reduced operations and restructuring needs.
In short, while nothing rules out a merger, the signals so far point toward asset liquidation and restructuring rather than an imminent AA-Spirit consolidation. The recent moves, filings, and gate sales are more consistent with protective positioning and financial housekeeping than merger preparation. The door remains open, but a clear path to a full merger has yet to be carved.






