Spirit Airlines may have another life. A Texas-based company called Mooney International has formally submitted a bid to acquire the bankrupt ultra-low-cost carrier, announcing plans to revive the Spirit brand while combining it with its own aviation operations and a seaplane company called SEAir.
The proposal is heavy on vision and light on specifics. Mooney International says it wants to preserve the Spirit brand, expand affordable travel options, invest in fleet and technology upgrades, and advance sustainable aviation fuel initiatives. What the announcement conspicuously leaves out: any financial terms, a transaction timeline, or clarity on whether other bidders are in the mix.
Mooney International is best known as a manufacturer of small general aviation aircraft — not exactly the obvious profile for someone swooping in to resurrect one of America’s largest ultra-low-cost carriers. That disconnect is worth watching closely as this develops.
Spirit filed for bankruptcy in late 2024 after a failed merger attempt with Frontier and a blocked acquisition by JetBlue. The airline served dozens of destinations across the U.S., Latin America, and the Caribbean before suspending operations.
Why It Matters: Spirit’s collapse removed millions of ultra-cheap seats from the market, and fares on routes it once served have climbed since. If any acquisition actually closes and Spirit returns to flying, budget travelers would feel it immediately at the booking screen.
Source: CBS News Miami




