Air Serbia has seen its charter operations exceed pre-pandemic levels this year, with the airline operating over 1.000 leisure flights as Serbian holidaymakers head to Egypt, Turkey, Greece and Tunisia. This year’s demand for charters has seen the airline run up to eight daily rotations to places such as Hurghada and Antalya. However, interest in far-away destinations has also been growing with tour operators significantly diversifying their travel packages over the past five years to offer holidays to Thailand, Bali, the Seychelles and India prior to the pandemic. Since Covid-19, demand has surged for places such as Zanzibar, the Maldives and Mexico where there are few travel restrictions in place.
In 2016 Air Serbia considered introducing long haul leisure flights in order to better utilise its sole Airbus A330-200 aircraft over the winter months when it maintains fewer frequencies on its scheduled New York service. This August, the carrier’s A330-200 has operated a total of 44 scheduled movements, while the figure will stand at just sixteen in November. The National Association of Travel Agencies of Serbia (YUTA) told EX-YU Aviation News that the Serbian carrier was exploring long haul charters, in partnership with YUTA, several years ago. “Keeping in mind that YUTA is one of Air Serbia's biggest partners in charter travel through our members, Air Serbia suggested a meeting with tour operators where we would discuss possible charters to far-off destinations. At the time, tour operators were interested in long haul charter flights to Thailand and Cuba during the winter months, as there is sufficient demand for those markets. The realisation of these charters was to be carried out during the winter season”, YUTA said. Ultimately, the idea never came to fruition.
Air Serbia said at the time that the figures didn’t add up. “There are very few destinations where you can fly the A330 that are going to be appealing to tour operators. Serbia is a price sensitive market and when we gauged interest for charters to Thailand - which is further to fly to than New York - the economics required to make it breakeven were too large. Another option we considered was the Caribbean, but that also can't be sustained from a market such as Serbia”, the national carrier previously told EX-YU Aviation News. Several years later, data indicates that there is a sufficient number of passengers originating from Belgrade to potential leisure hotspots. The Serbian government has inked a number of Air Service Agreements and Memorandums over the past few years with countries which could be of interest for potential long haul charter operations including the Dominican Republic and Sri Lanka. These agreements set the legal framework for air operations between the two sides.
Two-way indirect traffic between Belgrade and select destinations in 2019




Comments
This is really poor utilization in winter. Just 16 days in use.
Hopefully with the second daily FZ flight connections to Zanzibar will be better. Right now there is a long connection of some 5 hours in one direction.
Not sure if anyone noticed, FZ quietly moved its departure from BEG by two hours.
https://www.exyuaviation.com/2010/02/belgrade-havana.html
Average salary in Belgrade was 1000 DEM (500 EUR) in 1990 and in Slovenia the salaries were much higher.
DOC maybe, but add the cost of ownership and the larger pax capacity of the A332 vs 788 and it swings wildly in A332s favour.
The economy of some of the former YU states is only now catching up to the standard back in the 80s - which is why the possibility of such flights are now starting to materialize.
Airbus, ATR and now Boeing 737.....
Why JU limits itself to Serbian tour operators?
I was generous. It was 43€.
https://siol.net/posel-danes/novice/kaj-smo-za-povprecno-placo-dobili-leta-1991-in-kaj-dobimo-danes-554891
https://www.media.ba/bs/mediametar/jugoslavija-privid-i-statistika
U Jugoslaviji su se 1990. godine održali prvi višestranački izbori i tokom cele te godine vlast je kao jedan od izbornih aduta forsirala plate", kaže Mirosinka Dinkić, "pa je prosek plata za tu godinu iznosio 557 nemačkih maraka po tržišnom kursu. Najveće plate su zabeležene u decembru te godine – 754 nemačkih maraka
https://www.vreme.com/arhiva_html/507/02.html
Znaci ako je u Bosni bilo 483 DM a u Jugoslaviji 754 DM, u Sloveniji je bilo minimum 1000 DM.
And although Mexicans dont need visum for Serbia, Serbians do for Mexico .
Sometimes ago on this blog was an article about possible flights between Bahrain and Serbia .
Well Serbians need visum for Bahrain, Bahrainis not !
As long as visa requirements for Serbian citizens are not solved :
Forget it !
You may not be proud of it but in historic perspective Yugoslavia was a game changer for the whole region .
You never learn out on this blog.
If Yugoslavia was that bad, I wonder what are you doing on ex-yu blog? The salary you talk about was post YU, during war time in Slovenia and Croatia. So please don't twist the facts. Average salary during Ante Markovic era was over 2000 DEM. Plus, you forget one much more important fact : For that money you could have afford double more goods and services than today, even in richest ex-yu republic you come from. Comparing to Eastern Europe, which is today way ahead of most of the ex-yu, we were Eldorado. And last but by no means least, my post was about AIRLINE of ex-yu, which could have no way been such if coming from country with salary of 75 DEM. Cheers!
Average monthly salary in Yugoslavia was ~600 DEM during Ante Marković period (1990-91).
Slovenia has the highest standard of living in YU, so slovenian salaries were bigger than yu average. I don't know exact figure, but average slovenian salary was 20-25% higher than yu average.
https://www.iata.org/en/services/consulting/airlines/strategic-planning/