One actually crosses the Atlantic on widebodies; the other is a regional-jet operator just dipping a wingtip across the ocean — and that single difference decides almost everything.
On paper these look like twins: two Canadian carriers, both filed as “classic” full-service, both charging for the cheapest seat, both Skytrax-adjacent leisure brands. In reality they barely compete. Air Transat is a dedicated transatlantic specialist flying 45 destinations and 114 routes on modern Airbus A321LR and A330 widebodies — France, the UK, Spain, Portugal, Greece, plus winter sun. Porter Airlines is the darling of Canadian short-haul: an all-Embraer E195-E2 fleet, the youngest in North America at just three years average age, famous for free beer and no middle seats — now cautiously reaching Europe (Paris, Lisbon) on those narrowbody jets. For a European booking the cheapest fare home to Canada, one of these is the workhorse and the other is a niche curiosity. Here’s exactly where each one wins.
Book Air Transat if you’re genuinely crossing the Atlantic — it flies widebodies to a dozen European cities Porter can’t reach, with seatback screens and a proper hot meal. Book Porter for North American hops, the Paris/Lisbon E2 run, or if free wifi, free wine and zero change fees matter more than network. In short: Transat for the ocean, Porter for the experience.
Side-by-side, on real numbers
The figures below come from the live fares aifly tracks plus current published policy and our sourced cabin data — not vague “Standard / Standard” filler.
| Air Transat | Porter Airlines | |
|---|---|---|
| aifly comfort tier | Classic | Classic |
| Skytrax rating | 4-star ✅ | 3-star |
| Economy seat pitch | 30″ | 30″ |
| Fleet average age | 9.0 yrs | 3.0 yrs ✅ |
| On-time performance | 75% | 80% ✅ |
| Checked bag, cheapest fare | 0 kg | 0 kg |
| Change fee | ~€100 | ~€0 ✅ |
| Network (tracked by aifly) | 45 destinations ✅ | 40 destinations |
| Wifi (economy) | Paid, affordable | Free Starlink (all) ✅ |
| Alliance | None — no global alliance; BonBon rewards ended 2025, new Desjardins/Visa loyalty programme launching H2 2026 | None — no global alliance; VIPorter loyalty, points redeem on Porter, Air Transat and Alaska (since 2025) |
| Free wifi | None on A321LR Atlantic fleet | Free Viasat on every E195-E2 ✅ |
| Onboard catering (economy) | Hot meal on transatlantic (paid on Eco Budget) ✅ | Free beer/wine + snacks, no hot meal |
| Change fee (cheapest fare) | €100 | €0 ✅ |
| Loyalty & alliance | No alliance; new Desjardins programme H2 2026 | No alliance; VIPorter, cross-redeems Transat + Alaska ✅ |
Comfort/fleet/OTP from sourced 2025–26 ratings; bag and fee figures reflect each airline’s cheapest bookable fare and can change — always confirm at booking.
Network & hubs: the transatlantic specialist vs the regional upstart
This is the whole story. Air Transat exists to fly Canada to Europe and the sun — 45 destinations, 114 routes, widebody A330s and long-range A321LRs out of its Montréal–Trudeau (YUL) home and a Toronto Pearson base. If you’re in Nice, Athens, Valencia, Lisbon or Porto and heading to Montréal or Toronto, Transat probably has a nonstop. Porter’s roots are Billy Bishop Toronto City (YTZ), the downtown island airport, but its E195-E2 jets now fly mostly from Toronto Pearson, Ottawa and a new Montréal base. Its 40 destinations and 89 routes are overwhelmingly North American; its entire European footprint is Paris and Lisbon, flown on 130-seat regional jets stretched to their range limit. For an aifly reader in continental Europe, that matters bluntly: Air Transat likely serves your city, and Porter almost certainly does not.
Porter's regional jets keep you online for a 90-minute hop; Air Transat leaves you offline for a seven-hour ocean crossing.
The cheapest fare: what Eco Budget and Basic actually strip
This is where aifly readers live, and both airlines play the unbundling game hard. Air Transat’s Eco Budget includes zero checked bags on every route and pushes the meal into a paid add-on — but crucially, on Europe routes it still bundles a free full-size carry-on (unlike its sun and US flights, which give you a personal item only). Porter’s Basic is personal-item-only on North American routes, though it too includes a carry-on to Europe and Africa; a checked bag starts around C$40. The tiebreaker is the fine print most people ignore: Porter’s Basic charges zero change fees and still throws in free wifi and free beer or wine, while Transat’s cheapest fare carries a €100 change fee and no wifi at all. Neither includes free seat selection. For pure flexibility on a cheap seat, Porter’s Basic is the more forgiving buy.
Cabin & comfort: youngest jet in the sky vs the seatback screen
Both quote a 30-inch economy pitch, which is tight — but the feel is completely different. Air Transat crams 3-3 into the A321LR at a 17-inch width, standard leisure-longhaul density, and its trump card is a proper 13.3-inch seatback touchscreen with real in-flight entertainment on the Atlantic fleet. Porter runs a 2-2 layout on the E195-E2, meaning no middle seat, ever, at a slightly roomier 17.7 inches — on a three-year-average-age fleet, the newest in North America. The trade-off is that Porter has no seatback screens; you stream to your own device. So it’s a genuine choice of comforts: Transat gives you a screen and a bigger cabin for the overnight crossing; Porter gives you a guaranteed aisle-or-window, a wider seat and that new-plane quiet. For a red-eye across the ocean, the seatback screen and widebody win; for a daytime hop, Porter’s cabin is nicer.
Connectivity: Porter's free wifi vs Transat's Atlantic dead zone
No contest — and it’s the most surprising gap. Every Porter E195-E2 carries free, fast wifi powered by Viasat (not Starlink, despite the hype), available gate to gate to every passenger regardless of fare or status. Air Transat, meanwhile, has no wifi installed on its A321LRs — the exact aircraft that flies its transatlantic routes. Reviews confirm the connectivity hardware simply isn’t fitted, and there’s no sign it’s coming soon. So the paradox is stark: Porter, the regional-jet operator, keeps you online on a 90-minute hop to Ottawa, while Transat leaves you offline for a seven-hour ocean crossing where you’d actually want to work or message home. If staying connected in the air is non-negotiable, Porter wins outright, and it’s not close. Transat’s answer is that seatback screen loaded with Canadian films — good, but not the same thing.
One flies the Atlantic on widebodies; the other is a regional-jet operator just dipping a wingtip across the ocean.
Food & the free bar: hot meal vs the glass of wine
Two different philosophies of “free.” Air Transat serves a genuine hot meal on transatlantic economy flights — its whole leisure-carrier pitch — though the rock-bottom Eco Budget fare strips that into a paid Bistro pre-order; Eco Standard bundles the meal (and 23kg) back in. Porter’s calling card is the opposite: no hot meal on most flights, but complimentary beer, wine and premium snacks served in real glassware in ordinary economy, part of its “flying refined” brand that has won it a cult following. On a Paris or Lisbon run that’s a civilised touch; on a Toronto–Halifax hop it feels genuinely generous. So if you want to eat properly on a long crossing, Transat; if you want a relaxed drink and a snack without paying, Porter. The Basic fare on Porter can drop to water only, so read your fare — the free bar isn’t universal.
Reliability, safety & fleet: two clean records, one older
Both are safe, and both fly young metal. Porter edges the on-time numbers at 80% versus Transat’s 75% (Cirium 2025), helped by short sectors and simple turns. Neither has a fatal jet-era passenger accident; Porter scores strongly on independent safety indices, and Air Transat’s most famous incident — the 2001 Azores glider landing, where a fuel-starved A330 dead-sticked to safety with no fatalities — is now a celebrated case study in airmanship, not a black mark. On fleet, Porter is the clear modernity winner: an all-E195-E2 fleet averaging three years versus Transat’s nine-year A321LR/A330 mix. That said, nine years is perfectly modern for a widebody operator, and Transat’s A321LRs are genuinely new. Bottom line: Porter is marginally more punctual and flies newer aircraft; Transat is equally safe and better suited to the distances its passengers actually travel.
Points, alliances & the loyalty gap
Neither joins a global alliance, so don’t expect Star or oneworld reciprocity. Porter has the more mature offering: VIPorter, a five-tier programme whose points — since 2025 — redeem not just on Porter but on Air Transat and Alaska Airlines, and Alaska Lounge members can use lounges at US gateways like SFO, LAX and IAD. Air Transat is mid-transition: it wound down its BonBon rewards in 2025 and won’t launch its new consumer loyalty programme (in partnership with Desjardins and Visa) until the second half of 2026, so right now there’s no in-house currency to earn. That makes Porter the pragmatic choice for anyone who wants points today — and, neatly, VIPorter points earned on a cheap Toronto hop can later be burned on a Transat Atlantic flight. Until Transat’s new scheme lands and proves itself, Porter owns the loyalty column.
So — which one?
Choose Air Transat if…
- You're actually crossing the Atlantic — Transat flies widebodies to France, the UK, Spain, Portugal, Greece and more; Porter reaches only Paris and Lisbon
- You want a seatback screen and a proper hot meal on a long overnight flight
- You're flying from a European city Porter simply doesn't serve — which is most of them
- Club Class is a genuine premium-economy step up at leisure-carrier prices
Choose Porter Airlines if…
- Free fast Viasat wifi and free beer/wine come with even the cheapest seat
- Newest fleet in North America (3-year average), 2-2 layout, no middle seat, wider 17.7-inch seats
- Zero change fees and VIPorter points that redeem on Air Transat and Alaska
- Better on-time performance (80%) for North American hops and the Paris/Lisbon E2 run
Frequently asked questions
Does Porter Airlines fly to Europe?
Yes, but barely. Porter flies its Embraer E195-E2 jets to Paris and Lisbon from eastern Canada, with more transatlantic routes planned. It's a genuine but tiny footprint — for most European cities you'll need Air Transat, which serves a full transatlantic network of 45 destinations on widebodies.
Does Air Transat have wifi on its transatlantic flights?
No. Air Transat's A321LR fleet — the aircraft it uses for transatlantic routes — is not wifi-equipped, and reviews confirm the hardware isn't fitted. You get a 13.3-inch seatback entertainment screen instead. Porter, by contrast, offers free fast Viasat wifi on every E195-E2.
Which airline shows up as a cheap Canada–Europe deal more often?
Air Transat, by a wide margin. As a dedicated transatlantic leisure carrier it has far more Canada–Europe pricing activity, so it surfaces as a deal on those corridors regularly. Porter's cheap fares are concentrated on North American routes; its European deals are limited to the Paris and Lisbon runs.
What does Porter's cheapest Basic fare include?
On North American routes, a personal item only (carry-on is included to Europe and Africa), no seat selection, and checked bags from around C$40. The upside: zero change fees, free Viasat wifi, and complimentary beer or wine even at the bottom fare on most flights.
Does Air Transat's cheapest fare include a checked bag?
No. Eco Budget includes zero checked bags on every route and treats the meal as a paid add-on. Eco Standard bundles a 23kg bag plus the meal. On Europe routes, though, Eco Budget still includes a free full-size carry-on — unlike Transat's sun and US flights.
Are Air Transat and Porter in an airline alliance, and can I earn points?
Neither belongs to a global alliance. Porter runs VIPorter, whose points redeem on Porter, Air Transat and Alaska (since 2025). Air Transat wound down its BonBon program in 2025 and launches a new Desjardins/Visa loyalty scheme in the second half of 2026, so it has no in-house currency to earn right now.
Fares, fleet and policy details verified June 2026 and reflect each airline’s cheapest bookable fare unless noted; programmes and rollouts change — always confirm at booking.