04/27/2026
Pan American World Airways, one of the most iconic airlines in aviation history, is officially making a comeback. After ceasing operations in 1991, the legendary American carrier has been gone for more than three decades. Now it is moving again. Here is the full story.
🔹 It started with new ownership in 2024. A group led by Steven Craig of Craig Realty Group, alongside CEO Craig Carter, acquired the rights to the Pan Am brand. Their goal is to bring the airline back as a real, flying airline.
🔹 The brand is already back in the sky, but only for the rich. Since June 2025, the new Pan Am has been operating private luxury charter flights. The latest one, called Tracing the Transpacific, departed San Francisco on April 11, 2026. Tickets cost $94,495 per person.
🔹 The big news: Pan Am has filed for full FAA certification. On October 9, 2025, Pan Am formally began the FAA Part 121 certification process. This is the same certification that American, Delta, and United hold. It allows an airline to fly scheduled commercial service.
🔹 Will normal people be able to book Pan Am flights? Eventually, yes. But it is not happening yet. Pan Am has not announced any routes or launch dates. For now, the only way to fly Pan Am is the luxury charter trips. Avi8 Air Capital, the company leading the effort, hopes to start scheduled service sometime in 2026.
🔹 Will it have the same logo and livery? Yes. The classic blue and white Pan Am livery, the famous globe logo, and the iconic crew uniforms are already being used. The new ownership is fully leaning into the brand's heritage.
🔹 The plan: Miami, Airbus, and growth. The new Pan Am will be headquartered in Miami. The fleet will be made up of Airbus aircraft, starting with 4 and growing to 16 over the first 4 years.
🔹 The bigger picture. This is not the first time someone has tried to bring Pan Am back. Several previous attempts in 1996, 1998, 2004, and 2011 all failed. The new ownership group says this time is different.