Socialites, come get into this: Spirit Airlines is back in the national conversation, and this time it’s coming straight from President Donald Trump himself.
Speaking to reporters at the White House on Thursday, Trump said the administration was actively weighing options that range from a financial rescue package all the way to something way more unusual: the federal government potentially buying Spirit outright…
“Spirit is an airline that has faced some problems. They have a few good airplanes, some assets, and when oil prices fall, we will sell it for a profit,” he said Thursday. Now, Trump didn’t go into detail about what a potential deal would actually look like, leaving the idea floating somewhere between bailout talk and full-on federal ownership.
Spirit Airlines, known for its low-cost, bare-bones service model, has been struggling for years. The airline has been circling financial turbulence long before this latest political attention. Even with potential government help on the table, insiders suggest it still might not be enough to stabilize the carrier long-term.
Earlier discussions around support reportedly treated Spirit as a “special case.” During its bankruptcy proceedings, negotiations reportedly reached advanced stages for a possible federal rescue package.
But what Trump hinted at recently goes a step beyond traditional rescue efforts. “The government was considering ‘helping them out, meaning bailing them out or buying it, just buy it,’”
As expected, the White House used the moment to point fingers back at the previous administration, arguing that regulatory decisions helped weaken Spirit’s position in the market.
“Spirit Airlines would be in a much stronger financial footing if the Biden administration hadn’t brazenly blocked Spirit’s merger with JetBlue,” Kush Desai said.
Spirit Airlines itself has stayed quiet on the idea of a government takeover, declining to comment publicly.
Spirit has reportedly been unprofitable since COVID-19 disrupted the travel industry and has already filed for bankruptcy twice, most recently in August 2025. At one point not long ago, the airline even warned it could potentially be forced to exit the market entirely if conditions didn’t improve.
Now, with government intervention being openly discussed at the highest level, Spirit’s future feels like it’s sitting at a crossroads between private survival, federal support, or something completely unprecedented.