DENVER — Denver-based Frontier Airlines is reducing its flight roster this month, reversing course after multiple rounds of adding routes this year. The low-fare carrier confirmed to the Denver Business Journal its plans to cut 43 routes from its network of airports nationwide, citing an "imbalance" between industry supply and demand. "We will evaluate individual markets for potential resumption in 2025 based on relevant seasonal performance," said Frontier spokesperson Jennifer de la Cruz in a statement.

De la Cruz confirmed that the full list of routes first reported by travel blog The Points Guy are accurate. The cut routes stretch across the U.S.

and Mexico, with multiple routes removed from Cleveland Hopkins International Airport, Cancun International Airport, Orlando International Airport and Philadelphia International Airport. The reduction cuts one route from Denver International Airport that flew to Norfolk International Airport in Virginia. Most route cuts are effective within the next week.

Some of the cut routes were those that were added by Frontier earlier this year. That includes some of the 8 routes Frontier is eliminating from Philadelphia International Airport, where it's the airport's second-largest carrier. > Read the full story at the Denver Business Journal.

.