'Let's Buy Spirit': Why Thousands Have Pledged $88M for Airline Campaign – Image for illustrative purposes only (Image credits: Flickr)
In the wake of Spirit Airlines’ sudden shutdown early on May 2, 2026, a TikTok video sparked an extraordinary response from everyday travelers. Content creator Hunter Peterson proposed a collective buyout, and within days, tens of thousands registered non-binding pledges totaling more than $88 million.[1][2] The campaign, now envisioning a community-owned “Spirit 2.0,” highlights widespread frustration with budget air travel’s instability and a desire for passenger-led control.
Spirit Airlines’ Final Flights Grounded
Spirit Airlines halted all operations at 3 a.m. on May 2, 2026, marking the end of a 34-year run plagued by financial woes. The ultra-low-cost carrier had filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy twice in recent years, most recently in August 2025, amid failed merger attempts with JetBlue and Frontier, soaring fuel costs, and an inability to secure hundreds of millions in additional liquidity.[2][3] Its final revenue flight touched down at Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport, leaving 44 million annual passengers from the prior year without their go-to affordable option.
Company leadership cited insurmountable debt loads and market pressures. President and CEO Dave Davis explained that sustaining the business demanded funds the airline could not obtain, a development no one anticipated.[2] Assets like planes, routes, and airport slots now enter liquidation, drawing interest from private equity firms.
A Jokey TikTok Ignites National Buzz
Hunter Peterson, a voice actor known for credits in games like Hyrule Warriors and Honkai: Star Rail, turned a personal affinity for Spirit into a rallying cry. He had documented extreme feats, such as flying Spirit for 24 hours straight in 2025. Hours after the shutdown, his TikTok video proposing a public crowdfunding buyout exploded to 4.6 million views.[2]
Peterson pitched a simple math: With 250 million U.S. adults, a 20% participation rate at $30 to $40 each – the average Spirit fare – could fund the acquisition. He framed it as nationalizing the airline for public ownership. Less than three hours later, he launched letsbuyspiritair.com, where users pledge intent without immediate payment.[1] An Instagram account, @spiritair2.0, quickly amassed over 163,000 followers.[2]
Spirit 2.0: A Co-op Model for the Skies
The campaign reimagines Spirit as the first community-owned U.S. airline, modeled after the Green Bay Packers’ structure. Pledge holders would gain co-ownership with one member, one vote on major decisions like routes and leadership. Proposed profit-sharing would scale with pledge size, while workers receive equity through an employee stock ownership plan.[1][4]
Core principles emphasize affordability without shareholder pressures, full transparency via open books, and capped executive pay tied to median worker compensation. Organizers blame Wall Street debt-loading for Spirit’s fall, not lack of demand. Pledges start at $45, symbolizing one ticket’s cost, positioning aviation as a public good.[1]
- Democratic governance: Equal votes prevent dominance by large stakeholders.
- Profit reinvestment: Focus on low fares over extraction.
- Worker involvement: ESOP for employee shares.
- Transparency: Public access to financials.
Pledges Surge, Site Buckles Under Demand
Before technical overloads, 124,755 founding patrons pledged $88,071,428, averaging $667 per person. The site crashed twice from traffic, pausing new registrations as developers upgrade infrastructure – expected resumption in 24 to 48 hours.[1][4] All commitments remain preserved, with 142,505 emails in verification queue.
Peterson, learning on the fly, recruits aviation lawyers, executives, PR experts, and developers via social media. He stresses no funds move yet; pledges demonstrate coalition strength for a formal bid before private buyers swoop in. Google searches for the site spiked 1,000%, underscoring the fervor.[2]
Feasibility Questions Loom Large
While enthusiasm runs high, aviation analyst Robert W. Mann Jr. doubts revival under the Spirit name. Assets face court-ordered liquidation to pay creditors, with planes repainted, slots reassigned, and staff rehired elsewhere.[2] The $1.75 billion target dwarfs current pledges, demanding regulatory hurdles and massive coordination.
Peterson acknowledges the long odds but presses forward, committed to the concept. This movement captures a rare post-collapse window, channeling public discontent into action. Whether it soars or stalls, it spotlights demands for accessible air travel owned by those who fly it most.
