Alaska Airlines takes top spot in latest airline quality rankings

Airlines provided the highest quality service since 1991, researchers said.

The Airline Quality Rating report, a joint project between Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University and Wichita State Universities, measured four publicly available metrics: on-time performance, involuntary denied boardings, mishandled bags and customer complaints.

On-time performance for the whole industry in 2017 was 80.2 percent, down 1.2 percent from 2016.

Though this particular area was worse, the authors of the study told reporters on Monday that the total airline quality score for 2017, across the entire industry, is the best ever; three of the four metrics measured by the report have improved since 2016.

"The best-ever industry AQR score for 2017 is largely due to improvements in the rate of involuntary denied boardings and the rate of mishandled bags," said Dean Headley, associate professor of marketing at Wichita State University. "Consumers have demanded this, and the industry listened and improved."

Delta led the way in 2017 with 0.05 denied boardings per 10,000 customers. Spirit reported the worst rate with 0.82 per 10,000 customers.

Social media complaints have placed pressure on airlines to respond to issues in real time and change their culture of customer service, one study researcher said.

"2017 was a rough year for the airlines in the public’s eye," said Brent Bowen, professor of aeronautical science at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University. "But the results of the study show that they are making the effort – even if it may seem incremental to the traveling public, the numbers are there."

This is how the 12 largest airlines were ranked for calendar year 2017. Each of their rankings for 2016 are in parentheses:
1. Alaska (1)
2. Delta (2)
3. JetBlue (4)
4. Hawaiian (5)
5. Southwest (6)
6. SkyWest (7)
7. Virgin America (3)
8. United (8)
9. American (9)
10. ExpressJet (10)
11. Frontier (12)
12. Spirit (11)