American Airlines Pilots Push Back Against Carrier's Refusal to Reimburse Uber Black Rides

American Airlines Pilots Push Back Against Carrier's Refusal to Reimburse Uber Black Rides

BY COLLIN SMITS Published 12 hours ago 0 COMMENTS

American Airlines pilots are pushing back against a company policy that prevents them from expensing Uber Black rides, the premium tier of the ride-hailing service. 

 

Photo: AeroXplorer / Collin Smits

 

The Uber Black Dispute

 

The Allied Pilots Association argues that American Airlines should reimburse the cost of Uber Black when standard ground transportation options fall short. Pilots contend that the premium service offers larger vehicles better suited to carrying flight cases, luggage, and multiple crew members between airports and hotels during layovers.

 

According to the union, American Airlines currently reimburses pilots only for the standard UberX service. Any pilot who chooses Uber Black must absorb the price difference personally, a policy the union describes as out of step with the demands of the job.

 

Pilots have raised concerns that standard UberX vehicles are often too small to accommodate the equipment they must carry, including roller bags, flight kits, and uniform garment bags. When traveling as a full crew, the space constraints become even more pronounced, sometimes forcing pilots to book multiple vehicles instead of one larger ride.

 

The union has also pointed to safety and reliability concerns. Uber Black drivers are typically required to meet higher standards, including commercial licensing in many jurisdictions, and the vehicles themselves tend to be newer and better maintained. Pilots argue these factors matter when they are traveling to and from airports at unusual hours, often after long duty periods.

 

American's Position

 

American Airlines has maintained its position that UberX provides adequate transportation for crew members and that expanding reimbursement to cover Uber Black would create unnecessary costs. The airline has not publicly indicated any willingness to revisit the policy.

 

The cost gap between UberX and Uber Black can be significant. A typical Uber Black ride can run two to three times the price of the equivalent UberX trip, depending on the market and time of day. For an airline operating thousands of crew movements each day, expanding reimbursement across the network would carry a meaningful financial impact.

 

Broader Labor Tensions

 

The Uber Black issue is one of several grievances the APA has raised in recent months, alongside complaints about lost internal tools, layover hotel selection, scheduling practices, and route decisions. Pilots argue that these seemingly minor issues are symptomatic of a wider pattern in which the airline pushes back on expenses and working conditions they consider reasonable.

 

The disagreement comes at a time when American Airlines and its pilots have clashed on several significant operational and leadership matters. The APA has demanded meetings with the airline's board of directors over what it describes as persistent management failures under CEO Isom, and the Association of Professional Flight Attendants has called for Isom to step down entirely. The union has made clear it wants American Airlines to compete and win against Delta and United, not merely survive.

 

Other major carriers have taken different approaches to ground transportation reimbursement. Some airlines contract directly with car services for crew transport, while others provide broader latitude on ride-hailing choices. The variation across the industry has given American pilots a point of comparison when arguing for changes at their own airline.

 

Pilots argue that the calculation should account for more than just the price of the ride. They point to the wear and tear of squeezing gear into small vehicles, the delays caused by needing multiple cars, and the fatigue factor associated with cramped transport after long flights. The union frames the issue as one of professionalism and respect for the working conditions of flight crews.

 

For now, the policy remains unchanged, and pilots who prefer Uber Black continue to pay the difference out of pocket. Whether the issue gains traction in future contract discussions or remains a background irritant will depend on how forcefully the union chooses to press the matter in the months ahead.

 

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Collin Smits
Aviation Photographer and Writer/Editor, Mechanical Engineering Student

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