NEW YORK- JetBlue Airways (B6) has removed its New York to Amsterdam service from future schedules, ending flights between New York John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK) and Amsterdam Schiphol Airport (AMS).
The route was operated using the Airbus A321LR and represented a key part of JetBlue’s Europe expansion.
While New York service has been discontinued, JetBlue will continue flying to Amsterdam from Boston Logan International Airport (BOS).
Reported by Simple Flying, the change underscores a broader network shift that increasingly favors Boston over New York for JetBlue’s transatlantic operations.
Photo: Clément Alloing
JetBlue Ends New York to Amsterdam Route
JetBlue launched flights to Amsterdam in August 2023, initially from New York JFK, followed by Boston one month later.
The JFK–Amsterdam route spanned 3,166 nm, or 2,751 km, each way, making it JetBlue’s longest European route at the time of launch. Had it continued into 2026, it would have ranked as the airline’s third-longest European service, behind Boston–Milan and Boston–Barcelona.
The route was originally planned as a year-round operation but was later reduced to a summer-only service. Until a recent schedule update, flights were expected to resume on March 29 with the start of the Northern Hemisphere summer timetable.
That resumption has now been canceled, and the route has been fully removed from JetBlue’s forward schedule.
With the withdrawal, Schiphol’s slot coordinator is expected to reallocate the valuable summer slots. These slots are in high demand, and other carriers may seek access.
Etihad Airways (EY) is a potential beneficiary, as its second daily Amsterdam frequency currently holds slots only from February 1 through March 28.
Scheduled Frequencies Before Cancellation
Before the route was removed, JetBlue planned to operate the JFK–Amsterdam service daily during the summer season.
DepartureArrivalDeparture TimeArrival TimeNew York JFKAmsterdam7:40 PM9:20 AM +1AmsterdamNew York JFK1:40 PM4:27 PM
These times were scheduled for the first week of April 2026 and were displayed using Simple Flying’s updated time format.
Photo: By Adam Moreira (AEMoreira042281) – Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=87365424
Boston to Amsterdam Operating Pattern
JetBlue’s Boston to Amsterdam route has followed a notably different trajectory. Although it also began as a year-round service, it later became summer seasonal before being scheduled to operate during the winter 2025–2026 season.
This adjustment aligns with JetBlue’s reduced presence at JFK, effectively halving its winter capacity to Amsterdam compared with a dual-city operation.
Operating from Boston allows JetBlue to retain market access at Schiphol while managing fleet deployment more conservatively. The shift reflects a clear prioritization of Boston as the airline’s primary European gateway.
Photo: JetBlue
Passenger Demand and Load Factor Performance
US Department of Transportation data for January through September 2025 shows that JetBlue carried approximately 59,400 round-trip passengers between JFK and Amsterdam.
The route achieved an average seat load factor of 79 percent, which was two percentage points below JetBlue’s overall European average.
By comparison, competing carriers posted stronger results in the same market. Delta Air Lines recorded an average load factor of 86 percent, while KLM reached 88 percent.
Within JetBlue’s own European network, JFK–Amsterdam ranked as its third-lowest performing route by load factor.
Monthly performance data further illustrates the challenge. Load factors fell to 73 percent in May, 77 percent in January, and 77 percent in February.
August was the strongest month, with 86 percent of seats filled, yet even this result ranked only sixth among JetBlue’s European routes during that period.
Other seasonal routes also struggled, including JFK–Edinburgh at 75 percent and JFK–Dublin at 76 percent.
Competitive pressure remains intense, particularly with American Airlines (AA) planning to introduce Airbus A321XLR service from New York to Edinburgh.
Photo: Wallpaper.com
JetBlue’s Primary European Hub
Despite the loss of JFK–Amsterdam, JetBlue’s overall European capacity continues to grow. Current schedules indicate up to 14 daily departures to Europe during peak summer periods, an increase from 13 daily flights in July 2025.
JetBlue now plans 13 European routes, down from 14 year over year, though further changes remain possible.
Nine of these routes will operate from Boston, serving Amsterdam, Barcelona, Dublin, Edinburgh, London Gatwick, London Heathrow, Madrid, Milan Malpensa, and Paris Charles de Gaulle. Only four European routes will remain from New York JFK.
As a result, nearly two-thirds of JetBlue’s transatlantic flights will depart from Boston, accounting for approximately 64 percent of its European operations.
Cirium data shows Boston’s share of JetBlue’s Europe capacity rising steadily, from 33 percent in July 2023 to 38 percent in July 2024, and reaching 54 percent in July 2025.
JetBlue has previously signaled frustration with limited access at constrained European airports. As with Amsterdam, the airline has threatened legal action over restricted market entry, including potential future service from Boston to Lisbon.
Stay tuned with us. Further, follow us on social media for the latest updates.
Join us on Telegram Group for the Latest Aviation Updates. Subsequently, follow us on Google News