Federal News
Avelo Airlines Ends ICE Flight Contract
March 15, 2026
Avelo Airlines announced it will terminate its subcontractor role for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) deportation flights effective January 27, 2026, citing political controversy and operational challenges. Despite this subcontractor withdrawal, the Department of Homeland Security continues to fund the prime contract with CSI Aviation, which holds a contract valued up to $585 million running through February 2026 to provide deportation flight services. This development signals potential shifts in subcontractor participation and operational dynamics within ICE's air transportation procurement, impacting contractors and procurement officials managing or bidding on related aviation service contracts.
- The prime contract for ICE deportation flights remains active with CSI Aviation, indicating ongoing government investment in this service.
- Subcontractor withdrawal due to political and operational issues highlights risks contractors may face in politically sensitive government aviation contracts.
- Procurement professionals should assess subcontractor stability and political risk factors when planning or managing ICE-related aviation contracts.
- Opportunities may arise for other aviation service providers to fill subcontractor roles or support ICE flight operations as Avelo Airlines exits the program.
The program provided short-term benefits but ultimately did not deliver enough consistent and predictable revenue to overcome its operational complexity and costs.
— Andrew Levy, CEO of Avelo Airlines
This is exactly what we told management from the beginning ICE flying would be bad for the airline! Good that it is finally ending.
— Avelo flight attendant union
Agencies
Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Department of Homeland Security
Vendors
Avelo Airlines, CSI Aviation
Contracts
up to $585 million