
Guadeloupe, France: French Caribbean regional carrier Air Antilles has officially ceased operations after a commercial court in Guadeloupe ordered the airline into judicial liquidation, bringing an end to more than two decades of inter-island services across the Caribbean.
The Mixed Commercial Court of Pointe-à-Pitre on April 27, 2026, ordered the immediate cessation of all activities after rejecting multiple takeover proposals submitted during the airline’s restructuring process. The court ruled that none of the offers provided sufficient guarantees to ensure the long-term survival of the company or preserve employment.
The liquidation concludes months of financial and operational turmoil for the Guadeloupe-based airline, which had already suspended flights in December 2025 after French aviation authorities grounded the carrier over deficiencies identified during a safety and operational audit. The suspension of the Air Operator Certificate (AOC) halted all commercial activity at the height of the Caribbean tourist season, cutting off the airline’s primary revenue stream.
Air Antilles later filed for insolvency with the Pointe-à-Pitre court in January 2026, citing its inability to meet financial obligations following the regulatory suspension. In February, the court placed the airline under a six-month court-supervised restructuring procedure instead of immediate liquidation, giving management time to secure investors, restore its operating certificate, and present a recovery plan.
Despite several rescue attempts, administrators overseeing the process concluded that continued operations were no longer viable. According to court documents, three takeover bids were examined but ultimately rejected due to insufficient financial guarantees, limited employee retention commitments, and uncertainty surrounding future regulatory approvals. One proposal reportedly sought to rehire only about 12 percent of the workforce, while another targeted only selected assets without preserving jobs.
The collapse leaves approximately 116 employees without jobs and further disrupts regional connectivity across the French Caribbean. Air Antilles had operated essential short-haul services linking Guadeloupe, Martinique, Saint Martin, Saint Barthélemy, Dominica, Saint Lucia, and other nearby islands, routes often considered critical where ferry travel is impractical or time-consuming.
The airline’s shutdown highlights the fragile economics of regional aviation in the Caribbean, where small operators face high operating costs, limited passenger demand, regulatory pressure, and dependence on seasonal tourism traffic. The disappearance of Air Antilles is expected to reduce competition on several routes and could lead to higher fares and reduced connectivity for residents and travelers.
Founded in 2002 as Air Antilles Express, the carrier later rebranded as Air Antilles and expanded regional operations using ATR turboprop aircraft and DHC-6 Twin Otters. After the collapse of parent group CAIRE in 2023, the airline was partially revived under a public-private structure backed by the Collectivity of Saint Martin and infrastructure company EDEIS. Local authorities reportedly injected more than €20 million into the airline in an effort to sustain operations and protect regional air links.
At the time of its closure, the airline’s fleet reportedly included ATR 72s, an ATR 42, and a DHC-6 Twin Otter. Court proceedings also extended to associated aircraft-holding entities tied to the carrier’s fleet.
Passengers affected by the shutdown continue to face uncertainty regarding refunds and future travel arrangements as liquidation proceedings move forward under court-appointed administrators.



















