Aeroamerica Airways

Aeroamerica Airways is an American ultra low-cost carrier headquartered in. It previously operated charter flights as Air New Mexico and Sunbelt Airways, before transitioning to scheduled operations and rebranding as Aeroamerica Airways in 2019 after it was purchased by air travel entrepreneur James Gravier. The airline's first scheduled flight under the Aeroamerica name was on May 2, 2021, from to.

Aeroamerica Airways
James Gravier, the founder and CEO of private equity firm Gravier Partners, who founded several other airlines including National Air and Hungarian Airlines, acquired Sunbelt Airways in November 2018, with the intent of transforming the charter airline into a scheduled ultra low-cost airline. The acquisition was made through an entity separate from Gravier Partners and wholly-owned by Gravier himself. Gravier planned for the airline to now offer point-to-point flights from smaller, secondary airports such as, and , bypassing larger airline hubs for shorter travel times and lower costs. It would offer spacious seats, free Wi-Fi and TVs at every seat in a similar manner to JetBlue, but charge fees for snacks and advance seat assignments, like ultra low-cost carriers Allegiant Air or Spirit Airlines. The airline was also reportedly considering longer distance flights to South America and the Caribbean. Sunbelt had sold most of its fleet to GE Capital Aviation Services, but kept one Boeing 737-400 to retain its FAA Part 121 Regularly Scheduled Air Carrier certification.

In February 2019, it was announced that the airline had officially been re-branded as Aeroamerica Airways. Much like how National Air inherited the logo of the legacy carrier National Airlines, Aeroamerica Airways takes it's name from the defunct airline Aeroamerica, which operated from 1973 to 1982. By April 2019, the airline was considering ordering Comac C919s due to the Boeing 737 MAX groundings.