The problem with planes these days — aside from falling apart midair — is that they don’t cater to dogs. Enter Bark Air, a new way to travel that considers the needs of its furst-class passengers.
Launching May 23 in the Los Angeles, New York City, and London areas, Bark Air comes via Bark, the company behind BarkBox subscriptions.
We can’t exactly ask them, but the idea is that travel can be uncomfortable for dogs — whether they’re stuck in a pet carrier under a seat or flying in cargo — and stressful for their humans.
Bark Air is a private charter, so there’s a separate check-in process — no TSA checkpoints — where dogs meet one another and go to the bathroom in a designated area before boarding. Plus:
… that this luxury service is for the most pampered pooches. Each one-way flight only sells 10 tickets (one dog, one human per) for $6k-$8k each, with additional human tickets available for an extra cost.
That’s way more than a standard flight, but seemingly par for the course. A similar air service, K9 Jets, is similarly priced, per The Washington Post.
It’s unclear how high demand will be at that price, but spending on pets is up — and that includes luxury items.
But what we need to know is: How much to fly on a plane full of dogs even if we don’t have one?