United Airlines adding more Las Vegas flights for CES
United Airlines is adding a slew of additional flights for tech fans to get to CES 2019 in Las Vegas.
United is adding a total of 8,500 seats from its major hubs and other cities to the annual technology fest where big ticket tech innovations are unveiled each year.
United will operate up to 48 nonstop daily flights to Las Vegas from major hub airports Chicago, Denver, Houston, Los Angeles, New York/Newark, San Francisco and Washington, DC from January 6-12, 2019.
Additionally some flights from Newark and San Francisco will be upgraded with Boeing 777-200 widebody aircraft, offering more seat capacity.
The airline is also providing nonstop service from eight other cities – Austin, Fort Lauderdale, Raleigh-Durham, NC, San Jose, Boston, Pittsburgh, San Diego, and Seattle.
United said it will resume regular scheduled Las Vegas services from its hubs beginning on January 13.
TravelMole Editorial Team
Editor for TravelMole North America and Asia pacific regions. Ray is a highly experienced (15+ years) skilled journalist and editor predominantly in travel, hospitality and lifestyle working with a huge number of major market-leading brands. He has also cover in-depth news, interviews and features in general business, finance, tech and geopolitical issues for a select few major news outlets and publishers.
Have your say Cancel reply
Subscribe/Login to Travel Mole Newsletter
Travel Mole Newsletter is a subscriber only travel trade news publication. If you are receiving this message, simply enter your email address to sign in or register if you are not. In order to display the B2B travel content that meets your business needs, we need to know who are and what are your business needs. ITR is free to our subscribers.
































Qatar Airways offers reduced timetable to over 60 destinations
Hands In, UATP join forces for airline multi-card payments
AirlineRatings reveals world's safest airline rankings for 2026
Vietnam warns airlines of possible flight reductions amid jet fuel shortages
Fliggy opens AI-powered travel bookings and developer tools