Air Canada aircraft at the Vancouver International Airport in August. The airline has lowered its guidance for the year after taking a hit from this summer's flight attendant strike.

Air Canada AC-T has lowered its guidance for the year after taking a hit from the flight attendant strike that took place earlier this summer.

The Montreal-based airline said in a press release that it estimates the cost of the labour disruption was $375-million on operating income and adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization.

Air Canada said that it now expects to make between $2.9-billion and $3.1-billion in adjusted EBITDA for the full year. This is in comparison the airline’s previous 2025 guidance that it suspended in August, which had projected adjusted EBITDA between

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