keady - let's see if this guy can raise money. If so i am recommending they 
start China Clipper seaplane service and I will become general manager at 
Niihau.

The Airline That Built Hawaii Air Travel Makes Comeback Move
Hawaii Travel News / February 6, 2026 / 8 Comments
For more than three decades, reviving Pan Am has been Hawaii aviation’s 
favorite dead-end fantasy. The name reappears, excitement flares briefly, and 
then the effort collapses before a single ticket is ever sold. Hawaii travelers 
have seen this cycle repeat itself six times since Pan Am shut down in 1991, 
which is why most new announcements tied to the brand barely register anymore.

That changed this week. The latest Pan Am revival effort quietly crossed a line 
none of the previous attempts ever reached by signing on with the same 
reservation and airline technology platform used by major US airlines to 
distribute and sell flights today. This is the infrastructure real airlines put 
in place before they sell tickets, not just the window dressing of a rebrand 
exercise. And it raises a question that has lingered since we began covering 
this revival: is this finally a Pan Am comeback that has a chance of becoming 
real, and if so, where does Hawaii fit into it?

Pan Am signed a Letter of Agreement with Amadeus.

This action is significant. Amaeus is the global airline technology firm 
through which airlines, including American, Delta, and United, distribute and 
sell flights. The agreement covers core infrastructure that manages how flights 
are booked, how seats are sold and managed, and how Pan Am flights appear in 
search results and distribution systems used by travelers.

An airline cannot sell a single ticket without this backbone in place. None of 
the six previous Pan Am revival attempts ever reached this stage. Those efforts 
stalled at branding exercises, basic concepts, or vague announcements that 
never progressed to airline-level systems capable of supporting scheduled 
commercial service.

Leadership has also seen a meaningful change this time. CEO and co-founder Ed 
Wegel is not an outsider, as he worked at the original Pan Am as Director of 
Operations, overseeing the Pan Am Shuttle and Pan Am Express, and earlier had 
roles at Eastern Air Lines. This revival is headed by someone with direct 
experience inside the airline whose name is being revived, rather than by a 
purely financial or branding entity.

These mark the first time a Pan Am comeback attempt has moved beyond nostalgia 
and into the mechanics of building what was Hawaii’s favorite airline.

Where things stand with Pan Am.

Pan Am entered the FAA Part 121 certification process last year, which is the 
regulatory path to operating scheduled commercial airline service. The airline 
has said it plans to be headquartered in Miami once it receives regulatory 
approval.

In December, Wegel said the new Pan Am tentatively plans to operate Airbus 
A320neo aircraft. That aircraft does not have the range to fly from the West 
Coast to Hawaii, while the A321neo, a larger variant in the same Airbus family, 
does. The point is that no aircraft have been ordered or leased, and no routes, 
schedules, pricing, or launch dates have been announced yet.

There are still many unanswered questions. But the presence of certification 
work, an experienced leadership team, and real airline systems puts this effort 
in a different category from those that came before it. Based on the fleet plan 
described so far, however, Hawaii may or may not be part of any early route map 
depending on final aircraft choices.

Why Hawaii is still at the core of the conversation.

Pan Am’s connection to Hawaii is at the foundation of commercial aviation 
history across the Pacific. That legacy, and the emotional response it still 
generates among Hawaii travelers, is already long established and does not need 
to be retold here.

What is new is how that history collides with today’s world. In statements tied 
to the revival effort, Pan Am has said it is exploring “historically 
significant markets,” language that keeps putting Hawaii back into the core 
conversation. But the fleet plan as described thus far does not support early 
Hawaii routes.

Why this attempt feels different.

Reader response to our Pan Am coverage last year was unusually strong, and not 
because of blind nostalgia. The comments were personal and often emotional, yet 
grounded in experience. Many readers flew Pan Am to Hawaii, worked for the 
airline, or passed through Honolulu during its final decades. Just as 
importantly, many also voiced doubts that a modern revival could ever recreate 
what Pan Am once represented, especially under today’s economic realities.

Every prior attempt to revive Pan Am leaned on memory and branding, with the 
idea that the name alone could carry the airline forward. BOH readers made 
clear they are not looking for a logo on a tail. They are looking for proof 
that a new airline is actually being built.

This is where the current effort is different. Certification is underway. 
Airline-grade systems are being implemented. Leadership includes executives 
with direct operational ties to the original carrier rather than outside brand 
licensees. There are no guarantees of success, but previous revival attempts 
never reached these milestones.

Hawaii, for many readers, remains the key emotional benchmark. At the same 
time, the fleet plan described so far does not support Hawaii service early on, 
which reinforces a theme that surfaced repeatedly in the comments: belief in 
the brand has become conditional. If Pan Am returns, it will be judged not by 
its past, but by what it can do in the present.

If that day comes, would you actually choose a revived Pan Am for a Hawaii 
flight, or does the airline belong to a different era that can never return?

Image: Amadeus

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