Alaska Airlines Hit With Fine for Boarding Drunk Flyers

SEATTLE — Alaska Airlines faces a proposed $165,000 FAA fine for allegedly allowing visibly intoxicated passengers to board 11 flights between February 2024 and February 2025.

By Bob Vidra 5 min read
Image Credit: Kyo46 - stock.adobe.com
SEATTLE — The Federal Aviation Administration isn't happy with Alaska Airlines. Not happy at all. On May 26, the agency proposed a $165,000 civil penalty against the Seattle-based carrier for allegedly allowing visibly intoxicated passengers to board 11 different flights over the course of a year. That's not one or two slip-ups; it's a pattern, and the FAA is making it clear that kind of pattern comes with a price. The alleged incidents took place between February 2024 and February 2025, according to TravelPulse. Federal regulations are pretty straightforward on this: airlines can't let anyone who appears intoxicated board an aircraft. It's not a suggestion or a guideline you follow when it's convenient. It's the rule. And according to the FAA, Alaska Airlines didn't follow it 11 times in 12 months.

What the Rules Actually Say

The regulation in question isn't obscure or buried in some dusty FAA manual. It's clear: no airline may allow any person who appears to be intoxicated to board an aircraft, according to the Federal Aviation Administration. The responsibility falls squarely on the carrier and its crew to assess passengers before they step onto the plane. That means gate agents, flight attendants, and anyone else in a position to make the call needs to be watching, evaluating, and willing to say no when someone's had too much. It's not an easy judgment call, to be fair. What does "appears intoxicated" really mean? Is it stumbling? Slurred speech? The smell of alcohol? All of the above? The FAA doesn't spell out a checklist, which leaves airlines and their staff to make real-time decisions that can be uncomfortable, confrontational, and sometimes just plain difficult. But the rule exists because intoxicated passengers pose genuine safety risks: they're more likely to become disruptive, they may not be able to follow crew instructions in an emergency, and they can escalate tense situations in a confined space at 35,000 feet.

The Investigation and the Process

The $165,000 proposed penalty didn't come out of nowhere. The FAA conducted an investigation and determined that the passengers in question were visibly intoxicated, according to Simple Flying. The agency reviewed the incidents, likely examined gate logs, crew reports, and possibly passenger complaints or incident reports, and concluded that Alaska Airlines failed to comply with federal regulations on multiple occasions. Now Alaska Airlines has 30 days from receiving the FAA's enforcement letter to respond, according to TravelPulse. The carrier can pay the fine, negotiate a settlement with the agency, or contest the allegations through the FAA's administrative process. We don't yet know which route Alaska will take, or what the airline's defense might be. Did gate staff miss the signs? Was there confusion about who had the authority to deny boarding? Were employees worried about confrontation or customer complaints? Those are all questions that could come up if the airline decides to push back.

Breaking Down the Numbers

The proposed fine works out to an average of about $15,000 per alleged incident. That's not chump change for any airline, even a major carrier like Alaska. But it's also not astronomical in the context of aviation penalties. The FAA has levied much larger fines for maintenance violations or egregious safety lapses. Still, $165,000 is enough to get attention, and that's probably part of the point. The FAA is signaling that allowing intoxicated passengers to board isn't a minor procedural hiccup; it's a safety issue that warrants serious consequences.

Why This Matters Beyond One Airline

This isn't just an Alaska Airlines problem. The broader aviation industry has been grappling with a surge in unruly passenger behavior since the pandemic, and alcohol is a common thread. The FAA has been tracking incidents, issuing fines to passengers, and now, apparently, holding airlines accountable when they let the problem start on the ground instead of stopping it at the gate. What's notable here is the shift in enforcement strategy. For years, the focus has been on punishing passengers who act out once they're on board. This case flips the script: it puts the spotlight on the airline's responsibility to prevent the problem in the first place. If you're visibly drunk before you board, you shouldn't be getting on the plane. And if the airline lets you on anyway, the FAA is saying that's on them, not just on you.

Where the Training Question Comes In

One of the big open questions is whether Alaska Airlines and other carriers are doing enough to train their gate and cabin crew to identify and handle intoxicated passengers. It's one thing to have a rule; it's another to equip your frontline employees with the tools, authority, and support to enforce it consistently. Do gate agents know what to look for? Are they empowered to deny boarding without fearing blowback from management or angry passengers? Is there a clear escalation path when someone challenges the decision? The 11 incidents over 12 months suggest that something in the system isn't working. Maybe it's training. Maybe it's enforcement at the gate. Maybe it's inconsistent standards across different airports or crews. Whatever the root cause, the FAA is clearly saying it needs to be fixed.

Should This Change How You Think About Flying?

If you're a passenger, this enforcement action probably won't change your day-to-day flying experience. But it does underscore a reality: airlines have a legal obligation to keep you safe, and that includes making tough calls about who gets on the plane. You want your gate agent and flight crew to be vigilant, even if it means someone else's trip gets canceled. For frequent flyers, especially those who've witnessed or been seated near disruptive passengers, this case might feel like overdue accountability. Intoxicated passengers aren't just annoying; they can be dangerous. They slow down evacuations, ignore safety instructions, and create chaos in situations where calm and order are critical. The FAA's willingness to fine airlines for letting them board in the first place is a sign that regulators are taking the issue seriously, not just reacting after the fact. As for Alaska Airlines, the carrier now faces a choice: pay up, negotiate, or fight. Whatever they decide will likely set a tone, not just for this case, but for how the industry handles similar situations going forward. Other airlines are almost certainly watching closely. And if the FAA follows through with this penalty, you can bet gate procedures and crew training around intoxication screening are about to get a lot more scrutiny across the board.

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