Passenger Revenue per ASM
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Passenger Revenue per ASM
Definition
Revenue from passenger tickets divided by available seat miles, a core profitability gauge
Passenger Revenue per Available Seat Mile (PRASM) is the US-market convention for measuring unit passenger revenue, equivalent to RASK (Revenue per ASK) but calculated using statute miles rather than kilometers. It is computed by dividing total passenger revenue by total Available Seat Miles (ASMs) and is the standard unit revenue metric reported by US carriers to the DOT and in earnings disclosures.
What Is Passenger Revenue per Available Seat Mile (PRASM)?
PRASM is the passenger-revenue-focused cousin of total RASM, which includes cargo and other non-passenger income. While RASM captures all revenue streams per unit of capacity, PRASM isolates the ticket and transportation-related revenue dimension. US airlines report PRASM because the Bureau of Transportation Statistics (BTS) collects and publishes it as part of the Form 41 financial reporting system, creating a standardized, publicly accessible database of carrier-level unit revenue going back decades. This makes PRASM one of the most thoroughly documented airline financial metrics available for academic and investment research.
How It Works in Practice
PRASM is analyzed alongside CASM (Cost per Available Seat Mile) to compute the unit economics spread. When an airline's PRASM rises faster than CASM, the margin expands; when CASM rises faster, it compresses. Revenue management teams track PRASM on a forward-looking basis using booking pace and yield data to project whether the upcoming quarter will meet, beat, or miss PRASM guidance. Airlines frequently provide PRASM guidance in investor presentations and earnings calls, and quarterly PRASM changes versus the prior year period are a key metric in quarterly earnings assessments by equity analysts.
Why It Matters
PRASM trends reveal whether an airline is successfully monetizing its capacity. A carrier that grows ASM capacity aggressively to capture market share but sees PRASM fall may be diluting unit economics even if total passenger revenue grows. Conversely, disciplined capacity management that produces rising PRASM on flat or modestly growing ASMs demonstrates pricing power. PRASM and CASM together define whether an airline's business model is structurally sound or dependent on favorable external conditions like low fuel prices or suppressed competition to appear profitable.
Key Facts and Figures
- US legacy carrier PRASM typically ranges from 14 to 18 US cents in recent years
- Southwest Airlines, despite being a low-cost carrier, achieves PRASM closer to legacy carriers due to its focus on revenue passengers rather than the deepest-discount ULCCs
- PRASM declined 40 to 60 percent during COVID-19 as airlines flew at minimal load factors
- A 1-cent PRASM increase translates to $750 million to $1.5 billion in annual revenue for a major US carrier with 75 to 150 billion ASMs
- International PRASM is typically lower in cents-per-mile terms than domestic PRASM because long-haul fares per mile are lower than short-haul fares per mile
- DOT Form 41 PRASM data is available publicly at the BTS website for all US reporting carriers
Related Concepts
Revenue per Available Seat Kilometer (RASK), Cost per Available Seat Kilometer (CASK), Passenger Revenue, Available Seat Kilometer (ASK), Stage Length
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Passenger Revenue per ASM (PRASM)?
What does PRASM stand for?
Why is Passenger Revenue per ASM (PRASM) important in aviation?
Industry Metrics
- Revenue Passenger Kilometer (RPK)
- Available Seat Kilometer (ASK)
- Load Factor (LF)
- Yield per RPK
- Yield (Airline)
- CASK (CASK)
- RASK (RASK)
- On-Time Performance (OTP)
- Completion Rate
- Fleet Utilization
- Operating Margin
- Fleet Age
- Break-Even Load Factor (BLF)
- Passenger Count (PAX)
- Route Profitability
- Aircraft Turnaround Rate
- Break-Even Load Factor (BELF)
- Market Share
- Passenger Revenue
- Stage Length
- Cost per Block Hour
- Fuel Cost per ASM
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