Ryanair is cutting several routes from Vienna and withdrawing three of its nineteen based aircraft, demanding that Austria scrap its aviation tax and reduce airport and air traffic control fees. The move follows Wizz Air’s recent decision to close its Vienna base, also citing high operating costs. Several routes to the former Yugoslavia will be affected by these developments. Since the onset of the pandemic in March 2020, Vienna Airport has raised its fees by 30%, while the Austrian government has increased the passenger tax on European flights to twelve euros. Despite this, the country’s aviation market has yet to fully recover to pre-pandemic levels, currently standing at 98% of 2019 passenger volumes.
Beginning with the 2026 summer season on March 29, Ryanair will discontinue its seasonal service between Vienna and Split, which had been operated three times per week. The low cost carrier will also reduce frequencies on several other routes from the Austrian capital. Flights between Vienna and Niš will be cut from five to three weekly, while operations to Banja Luka will be reduced from four to two weekly rotations. Services to Zadar will see minor adjustments, with May frequencies trimmed from eight to six per week, before returning to eight weekly for the remainder of the summer. Dubrovnik flights will remain unchanged at five per week. Further adjustments remain possible at this early stage of scheduling.
Ryanair’s CEO, Michael O'Leary, said, “The government's twelve euro air travel tax and excessive access costs have rendered Austria completely uncompetitive. The closure of Wizz Air's five aircraft base underscores that Austria is no longer competitive compared to lower cost EU markets such as Sweden, Hungary and regional Italy, countries that have already abolished their air travel taxes to promote traffic growth”. He added, “Ryanair reiterates its call on the Austrian government to follow the example of other EU countries such as Sweden, Hungary and Italy and abolish this harmful twelve euro air travel tax. If the government abolishes this tax, Ryanair will carry up to twelve million passengers per year in Austria over the next five years, significantly boosting tourism, jobs and economic growth. However, if the government fails to seize this significant opportunity to increase traffic and support economic recovery, ticket prices for Austrian passengers will inevitably rise. Ryanair will then be forced to further reduce its operations in Austria (as Lufthansa and Wizz recently did) and shift aircraft and capacity to lower-cost markets such as Sweden, Italy and Hungary".
So whats the point with less flights then current, what that will help them I dont get it , if you dont want operating Vienna leave the airport , what you will get will less flights ,even for that flights still need to pay the fee , Wizz air decide to leave and game over ,way better decision then this.....
ReplyDeleteIs this a serious question? Some routes are profitable enough to sustain an increase in airport fees. Why would Ryanair leave now that Wizz is completely gone??
DeleteAlso Ryanair has a whole airline in Vienna with headquarters, maintenance, catering etc all done there for all of Lauda bases in Spain and Croatia
DeleteA rare win for Croatia Airlines against Ryanair on the Vienna-Split route.
ReplyDeleteAlthough I don't know how they can compete against Austrian who does up to three daily flights.
It's more about too much capacity. FR just use tax as an excuse for everything
ReplyDeletekakvi besramnici:)
ReplyDeleteU ovom slučaju su - carevi. Besramno glupa je evropska politički korektna 'elita'.
DeleteNama su svi ili besramnici, ili carevi. Ništa između...
Deletesome Air for AU in VIE.
ReplyDeleteWhat is AU? If u use codes use them corretcly.
Delete"If the government abolishes this tax, Ryanair will carry up to twelve million passengers per year in Austria over the next five years, significantly boosting tourism, jobs, and economic growth"
ReplyDeleteEven though Austria has been in a recession, overtourism is a way out of it nobody wants. Furthermore, the country has been a tourist hotspot even without Ryanair. So, this is not an argument to convince them to abolish the passenger tax.
It's tourism also OUT of the country, allowing people to fly abroad.
DeleteO'Leary is so dramatic lol
ReplyDeleteAlways
DeleteMore dramatic than people commenting here? No way...
DeleteI've recently discovered that airlines don't pay VAT or fuel tax, unlike other transport types. All these "aviation taxes" is an attempt to make competition more fair. So no sympathies for Ryanair.
ReplyDeleteSure, you are on an aviation forum, but wishing to fly less. Makes sense...
Delete@10.14 where did he say that
DeleteThe reason why International air travel is exempt from paying taxes on kerosine and on International airline ticket sales is that it is the only means of transport that has to fully finance the infrastructure it needs on its own. Meaning paying for airport and ground handling services, for security at airports, for needed police, for ATC etc. You don't pay any fees and taxes extra when you purchase a train or bus ticket for building and using a bus stop or kolodvor, for train track usage , services in a train station, etc. This is all financed by state/other state dependant authorities or from other public/common budgets.
DeleteOdd that they cut just Split but leave Zadar and Dubrovnik.
ReplyDeleteThey have bases in Zadar and Dubrovnik as well as subsidies/incentives there. In Split no.
DeleteYippie! Finally again the crooked duopoly of OS/OU for VIESPU and vv which cooperate and adjust fares between each other. Finally again 450 EUR in summer return instead of now 200 EUR when also FR and W6 were flying. I'll take the car again for at least 8 hours one way in winter and 11 hours in summer. Unbelievable!
DeleteEh, the leechers..... they can start a base in Bratislava and call it Wienna East lol
ReplyDeletewell they have a base there already
Delete@10:57 like they call Memmingen, Munich west 😂.
DeleteWhat will happen with Rijeka and Pula?
ReplyDeleteDon't know about PUY but guess RJK will not have VIE any more, the same they don't have any more Tel Aviv, Oslo, Warsaw, Szceczin, Hannover, Heathrow, Gatwick, Bristol, Milano, Basel, Budapest, Kosice, Marseilles, Barcelona....
DeleteThe Ryanair website at the moment is showing 3 weekly flights VIE-PUY from June 2026. No flights VIE-RJK
DeleteThis is exactly what happens when governments keep piling on taxes without looking at the bigger picture.
ReplyDeleteRead yesterday Austrian government earns (only) 168 m EUR per year from the 12 EUR nation wide aviation tax. I am convinced they lose several times as much yearly on GDP/economic output.
DeleteSad to see routes to the Balkans being cut again.
ReplyDeleteI don’t like Ryanair’s constant threats
ReplyDelete+1
Deleteit was known that both airlines had overcapacity at VIE, the calm after the battle
ReplyDeleteAustrian government clearly wishes to reduce the number of flights, people travelling by air...we can only guess what is the big higher goal behind it.
ReplyDeleteEurowings should base three aircraft at VIE now and launch certain EX-YU routes, among other routes, such as PUY, RJK, OSI, OMO, TZL, BNX, INI and OHD, especially because they would work for feeding OS as well, not just for P2P traffic.
ReplyDeleteNot bad idea at all. Like it. But highly doubt EW will funnel pax to VIE. They all should be using MUC and FRA for transfers
Delete