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Alaska Airlines Europe flights 2026 are almost here, and this is a pretty big deal for a carrier that built its reputation on the West Coast, Alaska milk runs, and getting you to Orange County without drama. On April 28, 2026, Alaska launches Seattle to Rome on a Boeing 787-9 Dreamliner wearing its new global paint job, inspired by the Aurora Borealis. As a bit of a livery aficionado, I’m a fan.
That Rome flight is the start of Alaska’s first real transatlantic push from Seattle. Rome begins April 28 as a daily seasonal route, London Heathrow follows on May 21, and Reykjavik joins on May 28. For an airline that spent decades staying mostly closer to home, this is a real identity shift.
If you are watching Alaska Airlines Europe flights 2026 from the West Coast, this is more than airline geekery. It changes how you can get to Europe without defaulting to Delta or building some cursed two-connection itinerary. We have already covered the 787 cabin in depth, so here we are focusing on what matters most: which route makes sense, what product you are actually getting, how the fares look, and whether or not Alaska has an edge.
One quick heads-up before the hype train gets too fast: Starlink Wi-Fi will not be live at launch on these flights. Alaska expects that upgrade later in 2026 or into 2027. For now, plan on an old fashioned, analog crossing—no IG, just the ocean and whatever you downloaded before boarding.
Skip to the Good Part
ToggleAlaska is entering Europe with a pretty focused strategy. It is not trying to out-United United. It is leaning into Seattle and picking routes that each do something different.
The Seattle to Rome route is the emotional centerpiece. It is also personal for CEO Ben Minicucci, who has spoken about his family’s Italian roots and framed the launch with a simple line that fits the moment: “Andiamo — let’s go!” Rome starts April 28 as a daily seasonal route, and fares start at $599 roundtrip.

London Heathrow is the prestige play. It launches May 21, runs daily, and puts Alaska right into the ring with Delta, British Airways, and Virgin Atlantic. If you care about schedule reliability or business travel utility, London is the most practical route in the bunch. Intro fares start at $699 roundtrip.
Then there is Reykjavik. This one needs a quick correction, because it is easy to lump all three routes together and assume the same onboard experience. The Reykjavik route is a different animal. Alaska operates SEA-KEF on a 737 MAX 8 — no private suites, no lie-flat. You get first class recliners up front, which is a respectable product for a ~7-hour flight, but it’s a materially different experience than Rome or London.
That does not make Reykjavik a bad option. It just makes it a different one. Iceland is still a strong summer destination, and KEF can work as a useful jumping-off point for onward travel.
| Route | Aircraft | Business Product | Starting Price | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Seattle–Rome (SEA-FCO) | Boeing 787-9 | 34 suites with doors, lie-flat seats | $599 RT | Summer leisure trips, premium-cabin curiosity, Italy-first itineraries |
| Seattle–London Heathrow (SEA-LHR) | Boeing 787-9 | 34 suites with doors, lie-flat seats | $699 RT | Business travel, year-round Europe access, Delta comparison shoppers |
| Seattle–Reykjavik (SEA-KEF) | Boeing 737 MAX 8 | First class recliners, no lie-flat suites | Varies | Iceland trips, shorter overnight flights, simpler summer escapes |
The aircraft doing the heavy lifting on Rome and London is the Boeing 787-9 Dreamliner. These 787-9s mark the debut of Alaska’s own branded widebody experience, and the airline clearly wants that first impression to land well.
Here is the quick version. The headline feature is still the 34 private suites with doors, which is what most people care about on an overnight to Europe. The cabin uses a 1-2-1 configuration, so every suite gets direct aisle access. Add Filson-designed bedding, and Alaska has the two easiest selling points covered: privacy and a sleep setup that feels meaningfully better than the usual long-haul compromise.

The soft product has a few useful details too. Catering includes route-specific touches, and London is expected to feature a full English breakfast before arrival, which is a nice way to lean into the destination without getting too theme-park about it. Also, for clarity: Salt & Stone is the skincare brand in the amenity kits. Salt & Straw is the ice cream. Don’t eat the hand lotion.
If you want the full hardware breakdown, go straight to The Seat. That post is the deep dive on layout, storage, and whether the suite actually holds up once the door gimmick stops being new.
Now for the part that matters to your wallet. Alaska is coming in with starting roundtrip fares of $599 to Rome and $699 to London. Those are the baselines you should use for every points-versus-cash decision. If fares are already that low, the better question is not just “Can I redeem miles?” It is whether you are getting enough value back in schedule, comfort, and status earning to make Alaska the smarter move.
For West Coast travelers in places like SFO or LAX, the Seattle connection is the real play. On paper, routing through JFK or another big East Coast hub looks normal. In practice, it often means more terminal-hopping, more chances for a messy misconnect, and a more annoying day before your overnight even starts. Seattle is cleaner.
There is also some simple arrival logic here. If your goal is to get to Rome or London with as little friction as possible, leaving from SEA keeps the itinerary straightforward. You board, sleep, and arrive. That is the dream. Or at least the airline version of one.

The competitive angle is also interesting. Delta launches its own Seattle to Rome service on May 6, so Alaska gets a short head start on the same city pair. Delta still has more scale. But Alaska has a more interesting product story, a stronger hometown narrative, and a premium cabin that feels built to win attention. Seattle isn’t where I’m from, but I love a hometown airline (RIP Northwest, Sun Country).
And then there is the hidden upgrade perk. Atmos Titanium status holders are set to get complimentary lie-flat upgrades on these intercontinental routes, subject to availability. That is a genuinely strong differentiator if you can make it clear. You can read more on Alaska’s official Atmos Rewards complimentary upgrades.
The earn side matters too. Through Atmos Rewards 2026, travelers earn 1 mile plus 1 status point per mile flown, which makes these lower launch fares interesting for status chasers. You are not just buying a cheap seat to Europe. You are also buying a useful chunk of elite progress.
If you want to price it out yourself, Alaska’s booking engine is the cleanest place to start: Alaska Airlines booking.
We also recommend checking partner options. Since Alaska is in oneworld, you may find some value using British Airways Avios or American Airlines miles, though Alaska’s own program will usually be the most straightforward way to compare total cost and perks.
If you want to get a little cute with the itinerary, there is a solid Nordic-Med loop here. Fly into Rome, train through Italy, maybe pretend you are the kind of person who casually does “summer in Bologna,” then check partner options like using Alaska Miles (Atmos) for an Icelandair leg—recent partner searches show awards starting around 27,500 miles—to bridge the gap between Reykjavik and the continent.
It also fits Alaska’s longer-term plan. The airline has said it wants to build to 12 intercontinental destinations by 2030, so these three routes are not just random darts on a map. They are the opening act.
For years, Seattle international flying has been dominated by Delta’s blue tails. Alaska’s move into Europe is a direct challenge. Delta has the larger network, obviously. Alaska has the local loyalty, the better hometown story, and a product that feels a bit more human.
Delta’s A350s and A330neos are excellent airplanes, and if onboard Wi-Fi matters a lot to you, Delta has the edge today. That matters, especially on a long flight. But Alaska is betting travelers will care more about the suite doors, the West Coast flavor, the Filson bedding, and the novelty of a fresh long-haul product.
That is a fair bet on Rome and London. It is less of a direct apples-to-apples fight on Reykjavik, since Alaska is using a 737 MAX 8 there rather than the 787-9 flagship setup.

For the frequent flyer, this competition is a massive win. More seats to Europe means more award availability and more competitive pricing. Even if you don’t fly Alaska this summer, their presence in the market is making your Delta ticket cheaper.
When do Alaska’s Europe flights start?
Rome launches April 28, 2026. London Heathrow starts May 21, 2026. Reykjavik begins May 28, 2026.
Which routes get the 787-9 suites?
Rome and London do. Those flights use Alaska’s Boeing 787-9 with 34 business class suites with doors.
Does Alaska Airlines have business class to Europe?
Yes. Alaska’s Boeing 787-9 routes to Rome and London feature 34 enclosed Business Class suites with sliding privacy doors, fully lie-flat seats, and direct aisle access in a 1-2-1 layout. The Reykjavik route uses a 737 MAX 8 with first class recliners, not suites.
Does Reykjavik get the same suite product?
No. Seattle to Reykjavik uses a Boeing 737 MAX 8 with first class recliners up front, not lie-flat suites.
Do Atmos Titanium members get upgrade perks on these flights?
Yes, subject to availability. Alaska says Atmos Titanium members are eligible for complimentary lie-flat upgrades on intercontinental routes. The official details are on the Atmos Rewards status benefits.
Will these flights have Wi-Fi at launch?
No. Starlink is not expected to be live at launch, so passengers should expect no inflight Wi-Fi for now.
Is Alaska a better booking than Delta?
It depends on what you value. If you want a fresh suite product and a cleaner Seattle-based itinerary, Alaska looks compelling on Rome and London. If you care most about network scale and onboard Wi-Fi, Delta still has some advantages.
Alaska Airlines Europe flights 2026 are one of the more interesting airline launches of the year because they are not just about adding routes. They are about Alaska trying to redefine what kind of airline it wants to be.
Rome and London are the headline routes because they get the full 787-9 experience. Reykjavik is the outlier, but still useful if you know what you are booking. That is really the theme here: Alaska has some real strengths, but the details matter. A lot.
If you are comparing Alaska with Delta, eyeing those Atmos perks, or just wondering whether Seattle has a new best way to cross the Atlantic, this launch is worth watching closely.
Are you planning to book one of Alaska’s new Europe routes, or are you sticking with the tried-and-true legacy carriers for your transatlantic hauls? Does the addition of a privacy door in Business Class make you more likely to switch your loyalty to Alaska? Drop a comment below and let us know your strategy for the summer travel season!
Tagged as: Airline News, Alaska Airlines, Alaska Airlines 2026, Alaska Airlines Business Class, Alaska Airlines Europe, Atmos Rewards, Atmos Titanium, Boeing 787-9, Delta vs Alaska, oneworld, SEA-FCO, SEA-KEF, SEA-LHR, Seattle to London, Seattle to Rome, Seattle-Tacoma Airport, Transatlantic Flights, Travel 2026, West Coast Travel.
Modhop Host & Founder Jake Redman brings years of global exploration and travel tips to the podcast and our videos at Modhop. Jake is also a Producer and Host for SiriusXM.
If you’ve checked into a hotel recently and felt a strange sense of déjà vu, like you’ve been in this exact room before, even though the sign outside says “Brand […]
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