DOT Seeks to Keep Collecting Airline Paperwork
Published Date: 5/21/2026
Notice
Summary
The Department of Transportation wants to keep collecting info from people who want to run airlines or cargo flights. This info helps decide if they’re fit to provide safe and reliable air service. If you’re applying or renewing your airline authority, get ready to share details about your business, and don’t forget to send comments by July 20, 2026!
Analyzed Economic Effects
1 provisions identified: 0 benefits, 1 costs, 0 mixed.
Air Carrier Application Paperwork Burden
If you want initial or continuing authority to operate passenger, cargo, or mail air service, the Department of Transportation will continue requiring detailed business information. The agency estimates 38 respondents, 114 responses, an average burden of 73 hours per respondent, and a total respondent burden of 7,635 hours; comments on the renewal are due by July 20, 2026.
Your PRIA Score
Personalized for You
How does this regulation affect your finances?
Sign up for a PRIA Policy Scan to see your personalized alignment score for this federal register document and every other regulation we track. We analyze your financial profile against policy provisions to show you exactly what matters to your wallet.
Key Dates
Related Federal Register Documents
2026-13805 — Pipeline Safety: Repair Criteria for Hazardous Liquid and Gas Transmission Pipelines
The government wants to update pipeline safety rules to make fixing gas and liquid pipelines smarter, safer, and cheaper. These changes affect pipeline operators who’ll use new tech and clearer guidelines to spot and repair problems faster. Comments are open until September 8, 2026, so get ready to weigh in before the rules get final—and yes, this could save money and prevent accidents!
2026-13675 — Airline Refunds and Other Consumer Protections
If your flight gets a new flight number but still flies on time without big changes, airlines don’t have to treat it as canceled or give you a refund right away. This rule helps airlines and passengers by giving the government more time to update the official cancellation rules. This change affects anyone buying plane tickets and lasts until July 7, 2027.
2026-13450 — Increasing Flexibility on Disclosure of Airline Ancillary Fees
The Department of Transportation is rolling back its 2024 rule about how airlines must share extra fees, like baggage or seat upgrades, with travelers. This change affects airlines and passengers by returning to the older 2011 rules for fee disclosure starting July 2, 2026. It means airlines have more flexibility in how they show these fees, and travelers might see less detailed info for now.
2026-13440 — Enabling Supersonic Overland Flight
The FAA wants to let supersonic planes fly over land again by updating old rules that banned them because of loud sonic booms. Thanks to new tech that keeps booms quiet, this change will open the door for faster, cooler flights across the U.S., helping America lead the world in supersonic travel. People and companies interested in supersonic flight should share their thoughts by August 17, 2026.
2026-13294 — Enhancing Flexibility of Air Fare Price Advertising
The Department of Transportation wants to make air fare ads more flexible by letting airlines show total prices, including taxes and fees, just as boldly as the parts that make up the fare. This change affects airlines and travelers by making price info clearer and easier to understand. Comments on this proposal are open until July 31, 2026, and it could shake up how airfares are advertised without costing extra money.
2026-13126 — Designation-Restrict the Operation of Unmanned Aircraft in Close Proximity to a Fixed Site Facility; Extension of Comment Period
The FAA is giving more time—until August 5, 2026—for people to share their thoughts on new rules that would limit drone flights near important fixed sites like power plants or airports. This affects drone operators and facility owners who want to keep the skies safe and secure. No new costs yet, just extra time to weigh in and help shape the rules.
Previous / Next Documents
Previous: 2026-10229 — Center For Scientific Review; Notice of Closed Meetings
The Center for Scientific Review is holding several closed virtual meetings in June 2026 to review grant applications and contract proposals related to health research. These meetings protect private info and trade secrets while deciding which projects get funding. Scientists and organizations applying for NIH support should note these important review dates.
Next: 2026-10231 — Center for Scientific Review; Notice of Closed Meetings
The NIH’s Center for Scientific Review is holding several closed virtual meetings on June 25, 2026, to review and evaluate important grant applications. These meetings protect private info and trade secrets while deciding which science projects get funding. Researchers applying for grants should note the date, as these reviews impact who gets money for their work.