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JAT B707 preparing for departure
Belgrade Airport, 1981

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Air Serbia welcomes third Embraer, four more jets to join in H1 2026

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Air Serbia has taken delivery of its third Embraer E195 aircraft (pictured). The 118-seat jet arrived in Belgrade just before midday today, following a ferry flight from Costa Rica via New York, Goose Bay in Canada, and Reykjavik, where it touched down yesterday. Previously operated by Brazil’s Azul Airlines, the same former operator of the carrier’s two ATR72-600s introduced last year, the ten-year-old aircraft was registered as PR-AUJ and has now taken up its new Serbian registration, YU-ATA. The jet, sourced through leasing company Azzora, had been in storage since March 1.

Air Serbia will further expand its E-Jet fleet with the arrival of a fourth E195 in the first half of next year, also formerly operated by Azul. In addition, the airline is planning a narrow-body boost ahead of the 2026 summer peak, with three Airbus A320s scheduled to enter the fleet. The first of these, an eleven-year-old jet previously flown by Wizz Air and registered 9H-WZS, is currently undergoing maintenance ahead of its entry into service, expected in February. As EX-YU Aviation News learns, two additional units, both formerly operated by Aegean Airlines, are set to follow and join the fleet by June.


Commenting recently on the airline’s fleet, CEO Jiri Marek, said, “As part of our strategic vision, we continuously modernise the fleet to ensure the highest level of service for our passengers. Since early 2022, our fleet has been strengthened with eighteen aircraft - a significant step towards greater operational efficiency and capacity. These aircraft allow us to expand operations and further enhance Belgrade’s connectivity with destinations across Europe. In the coming period, Air Serbia’s fleet will be joined by two E195s and three additional A320s, bringing the total number of aircraft to 31. We will continue optimising our capacities to provide passengers with even greater comfort and convenience throughout their journeys”.

December 10, 2025
Air Serbia Feature Fleet serbia
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Comments

  1. Anonymous09:01

    I have seen them using Ejets more and more in Ljubljana. It's great that they are upgrading their fleet.

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  2. Anonymous09:02

    Great news! The E195s are perfect for many of JU’s European routes. Hope to see more frequency increases soon.

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    1. Anonymous09:05

      They are!
      Just need to make sure you retain current pilots and hire many more!

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  3. Anonymous09:03

    Let's see if they will have enough pilots to fully utilize these planes. So far they are not flying at full capacity (E95).

    YU-APB is leaving the fleet in late January so this should be a convenient replacement.

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    1. Anonymous09:16

      Leaving just for service, or ...

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    2. Anonymous09:20

      ^ It has already been announced that they are retiring A319s
      https://www.exyuaviation.com/2025/10/air-serbia-retires-first-a319-plans-wet.html

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    3. Anonymous09:42

      Leaving for good. YU-APD left in September and YU-APB is leaving at the end of next month.

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    4. Anonymous09:44

      So why is YU-APD flying to FCO today if it left the fleet in September?

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    5. Anonymous09:48

      ^ Why don't you open the link that was provided (is that hard?) It is YU-APK that left.

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    6. Anonymous11:01

      Kilavi has left, Delta is flying

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    7. Anonymous12:01

      Anon 09.44 yes it is that hard since I need to copy it. It's easier for you to give me an answer like you did.

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    8. Anonymous12:06

      That really requires a lot of work on your part...

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  4. Anonymous09:03

    How old are the A320s that are coming from Aegean?

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    1. Anonymous09:08

      They are old, between 20 and 25 years from what I heard. They will use them mostly for charters.

      Biggest problem is that the two Wizz Air A320s won't have ovens like YU-APS. This is a real problem because this plane flies to destinations with a lot of business class passengers (like London). Passengers in business class are served cold meals like sandwiches after paying €1.000 for an intra-European ticket.

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    2. Anonymous09:11

      Why even get planes that are around 20 years old that just sets them back in my opinion even if its just for charters

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    3. Anonymous09:11

      And how do you know they won't put in ovens? The plane has been at Jat Tehnika for a while.

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    4. Anonymous09:12

      @9.11 don't trust everything you read in the comments section.

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    5. Anonymous09:12

      There is only one Wizzair A320 coming, not two.

      If that's correct, it is very dumb unless they got it dirt cheap and will utilize it on charter flights

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    6. Anonymous09:14

      Anon 09.11 if they really wanted to put ovens then they would have done it for YU-APS. Since they didn't then they obviously don't care. Also YU-APS doesn't have a proper divider between economy and business class like A319s do.

      Anon 09.12 I agree, just like I don't trust your comment.

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    7. Anonymous09:25

      They are much cheaper to lease compared to newer birds.
      BUT Aegean didn't got any A320s that old.

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    8. Anonymous09:29

      @9.14 Yes, I agree especially since Aegean's oldest A320 is 18 years and not 20-25 like you made up.

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    9. Anonymous09:44

      My friend Anon 09.29, Aegean is currently not flying these planes. They were removed from the fleet after summer.

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    10. Anonymous09:54

      And I don't think Aegean's airplanes were owned by them . I think they belong to a lessor company.

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    11. Anonymous09:56

      Article says
      "both formerly operated by Aegean Airlines"
      not owned by Aegean. And it says formerly, meaning they are no longer.

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    12. Anonymous09:59

      Any idea which birds they are?

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    13. Anonymous12:07

      SX-DVK is parked at SEN so it's probably that one. It was manufactured in 2008.
      There are several others made in 2007-2008 which are parked at ATH and are undergoing maintenance. So the A3 birds are around 16 to 17 years old (my guess).

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    14. Anonymous12:23

      You can see the Aegean airlines age of airplanes and any other airline in the world at planespotters .

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    15. Anonymous13:20

      It's still not ideal at all if they are 15 plus years i thought they were trying to modernize the fleet not get older aircraft.

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    16. Anonymous15:05

      They already talked about it. Plan is to modernize using latest generation engines such as NEO once engines become more reliable. There is no fundamental difference between 5 and 15 year old A320 classic except for price. Besides, Airbus stopped A320CEO production in Dec 2021, so it' not possible to get 3 year old A320CEO even if you wanted to pay for it.

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    17. Anonymous18:23

      ^ They have gotten very good at talking about it. Actually getting new generation aircraft is what they haven't mastered yet...
      But then again NEOs are 10 years in airline service, it is probably too early to get some. Maybe in the middle of next decade.

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    18. Anonymous18:38

      Are you able to comprehend comment at 15:05? No one was talking about how long were NEO engines on the market, but maintenance issues still affecting them in large numbers. Don't you know how many aircraft Wizz had out of service due to engine work? Air Serbia was very clear they don't want to take NEOs until those issues are resolved.

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    19. Reply
  5. Anonymous09:03

    With 118 seats this is just the right size for secondary markets. Better economics than the A319 for sure.

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    1. Anonymous09:08

      Flew with Bulgaria Air Embraer yesterday from Athens. It had 3 or 4 empty seats, so the LF was 95%+. Very good fit for JUs network, essentially in slower months and for thinner routes

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  6. Anonymous09:07

    The 31 planes for next summer, is that with wet-leases?

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    1. Anonymous09:08

      Without, with wet leases it should be 39 (4 Bulgarians, 4 Baltic)

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    2. Anonymous09:08

      No

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    3. Anonymous10:05

      That's a lot.

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  7. Anonymous09:08

    Will be interesting to see how long it will take for the plane to enter service.

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    1. Anonymous11:56

      In JAT time it took one day, when AND arrived from the delivery flight it flew the next day it's first commercial flight to AMM.

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    2. Anonymous15:14

      At that time pilots were smoking cigarettes in the cockpit while making jokes during final approach. There are more checks and balances nowdays in all areas.

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    3. Anonymous16:47

      At that time flying was fun and now it has become a hassle with all the checks ...corporate legal epidemy!

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    4. Anonymous17:11

      It was also very expensive and limited for a lage number of the population. Especially in the Balkans with very low mobility during that era. Whilst it can be a bother nowadays its far more readily acessable for more people.

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    5. Anonymous17:58

      Not exactly. Many people in Yugoslavia flew by plane because state owned companies organised summer holidays and weekend. School children went to Dubrovnik through their parents' companies and we are talking about factories, javna preduzeca etc. That is why there were over 2 million domestic passengers per year

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    6. Anonymous18:54

      Indeed. But mobility was still proportioanlly low. Very low compared to western europe at the time but higher than the Eastern Blok. But my point is it wasnt that avaliable to a broad section of the populace globally then.

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  8. Anonymous09:11

    Great news!
    Regarding the ferry flight routing wouldn't a Costa Rica-Bermuda-Canaries-Belgrade be shorter?
    I really have no idea but I find it interesting.
    Is really a flight from Costa Rica via New York, Goose Bay in Canada, and Reykjavik to BEG the fastest route?

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    1. Anonymous09:12

      I'm sure they flew this routing for the fun of it. To waste time. Jeez some people on here.

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    2. Anonymous09:14

      Anon 09.12 what's the point of this bitchy comment?

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    3. Anonymous09:17

      ^ The original comment is so bizarre. Insinuating they were flying around for no reason.

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    4. Anonymous09:18

      Might be shorter, but Embraer don't have the required ETOPS range to just fly over water. The E2 were just given 120min ETOPS, old version probably has even smaller

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    5. Anonymous09:41

      Original route called for Gander but they had to divert all the way to Goose Bay due to snow.

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    6. Anonymous09:43

      Is it a JU crew flying this bird to BEG or the lessor's?

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    7. Anonymous10:19

      JU crew. They were ferried to Costa Rica few days ago.

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  9. Anonymous09:19

    A few days ago someone was talking about 'stained carpets' on 'dreadful Air Serbia' which are 'unheard of' in Lufthansa. When I said that this is certainly not the case, I was attacked. Well this morning I flew with the "Lovehansa" plane from Belgrade and guess what? * shock *

    https://ibb.co/XrLLShky
    https://ibb.co/d4fKJ4mv

    To top it off we waited 35 minutes to disembark as there was no one to bring the stairs or busses at the world class hub that is Frankfurt Airport where there seems to be quite a few rodents roaming the terminal in plain sight of passengers and employees.

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    1. Anonymous09:33

      LH planes are pretty clean compared to BA. I was impressed that you could be flying on a 30 year old A320 and the cabin was in tip-top shape.
      But the seats, Recaro slimline are junk. Y service is trash. C on short flights is rubbish but long ones with a hot meal is good. Plus, pre-order in C.
      Their lounges are tonnes better than what JU have in BEG, it’s really gone down since opening when it was really good. MUC is a very nice airport to connect, I literally never go to FRA if I can avoid it.
      Nice seat blocking for SEN in Y. Such a concept would be like speaking Chinese to a JU ground agent.
      JU is just a typical 2-3* airline, I’d put LH around 4 but no higher.

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    2. Anonymous09:38

      ^ what a load of bull.

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    3. Anonymous09:38

      Why are you ruining bots' microworld? How are they suppose to continue persuading us that only JU have broken seat headrests, stained carpets, stale sandwiches and ugly uniforms

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    4. Anonymous09:40

      @09:33 fully agree.
      What I find most convenient about LH intra European flights is the availability of inflight WiFi and charging ports!
      That is wayyyy more important to frequent flyers than chocolates or biscuits!

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    5. Anonymous09:47

      Well WiFi was not working on the "Lovehansa" plane this morning. In fact it was not even turned on and it wasn't even announced that it has wifi.

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    6. VIKTOR KUNOVSKI09:52

      LH used to be a good airline. My latest experiences with them were quite poor. I used them from SKP via FRA to LRH. FRA is a borring monster taking half an hour to connect.
      Service on LH economy is no different than WIZZ (by the way they have better choice).
      When compared with Turkis on European short haoul, LH is a second class airline.

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    7. Anonymous09:55

      I always imagine what the reaction here would be like if there were rats running around the terminal in BEG, ZAG, SJJ, SKP or anywhere in ex-Yu.

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    8. Anonymous12:09

      I am a regular on LH and their planes are almost always extremely well kept. I flew on an almost 30 year old A319 and it was nicer than YU-APO.

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    9. Anonymous12:10

      Photos show something different.

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    10. Anonymous12:40

      LH is definitely not better shape then JU. Germany might never experienced huge sanctions like Serbia and Serbian aviation however LH went down hill super fast in the last 7 years . Their Aircrafts and in-flight services should be rated by 2* in my opinion. We should never ever compare JU and LH as everyone well know what the damage has been done to this airline for a long time while LH has 0 reason for any bad services. It is just nice to watch JU growing and improving as much as possible.

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    11. Anonymous13:07

      "We should never ever compare JU and LH" indeed. The two companies share nothing in common. One is vast, the other is a minnow in comparison. JU isn't perfect but it does offer a fairly solid product during times when many airlines/airports in Europe are not the nicest.

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  10. Anonymous09:25

    Idemo dalje...

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  11. Anonymous09:25

    On its way to BEG now :)

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  12. Anonymous09:28

    I wonder what condition they’re in. The ex-Azul EMB that LOT got have been a real headache with many problems. And I would say LOT are pretty good at taking care of EMB, being the launch customer.

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    1. Anonymous09:35

      Hopefully JAT tehnika has enough certified mechanics to look after them. Otherwise we might experience flight disruptions during the summer season like in 2024.

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    2. Anonymous09:37

      The plane has not even arrived and you have already declared it a disaster and envisaged flight disruptions in the summer. Crazy,

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    3. Anonymous10:04

      Embraer arriving today and 4 more jets on the horizon. Another great news for Air Serbia and its fans in the recent days.

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    4. Anonymous10:17

      The former Azul ATRs were in good shape and have had no issues since joining Air Serbia's fleet.

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    5. Anonymous14:45

      JU services their EJets in NAP not in BEG.

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    6. Anonymous18:27

      The Naples MRO facility takes way too long.
      JU needs to get some inhouse engineers to do the basic staff at least.

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    7. Anonymous19:05

      To get more in-house engineers you need to pay decent wages, which JU refuses to do. Jat Tehnika was worse (much slower) and ended up losing their license for some time which is why maintenance is done abroad. NAP and SOF will remain as the main maintenance providers until there is a realisation that in-house maintenance for an airline of that size is necessary.

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    8. Anonymous20:24

      Air Serbia is considering own MRO:

      https://www.exyuaviation.com/2025/05/air-serbia-plans-32-member-fleet-in.html

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    9. Anonymous21:42

      That was ages ago, are they still considering?

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    10. Anonymous22:28

      I am sure that you already took care about MRO in your Airline Tycoon Manager. But in reality, it take some time to catch up with your success

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  13. Anonymous09:47

    The Embraer utilization as well as the ATR one are low by industry standards to be frank.

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    1. Anonymous09:55

      It's the slowest part of the year and also best time to do maintenance, to be frank. But you know that already

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    2. Anonymous12:11

      Nonsense Anon 09.55. Exactly because it's the slowest part of the year those E95s should be flying to the maximum just like Bulgarian E90s are. But you know that already.

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    3. Anonymous14:49

      Awww so cute, you want to have E95s busy to the max as Santa's helpers this time of year so they can chill and sit on the tarmac all summer? Some kids might believe you!

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    4. Anonymous18:28

      The E95s are never busy to the max. Not even in August!

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    5. Anonymous18:46

      They only got the second one in April. No sane person would push for max utiliziation right away, when you have a tiny subfleet of only 2 aircraft. With 4 E95s for next summer they will have enough to keep them busy.

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  14. Anonymous10:24

    Instead of more used jets, Air Serbia should negotiate new orders. Wet-leases and second-hand aircraft shouldn’t be the long-term solution.

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    1. Anonymous10:29

      +1

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    2. Anonymous11:12

      And who’s gonna pay for that? Setbian taxpayers?

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    3. Anonymous14:47

      If the company is so proftable as annonced the new aircrafts repay themselves.
      How do you think operators manage to get brand new aircrafts?
      OK sure someone will throw the OU (bad) example…😉

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    4. Anonymous14:47

      I'd be happy to pay for that as a taxpayer

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    5. Anonymous14:51

      @14.47 most airlines pay for aircraft by making loan arrangements with banks. Few do so from operating profit. Over half of Air Serbia's profit is repaid into the budget of the Republic of Serbia, which does not leave much money to buy brand new aircraft.

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    6. Anonymous15:18

      I mean, we are paying for everything, why it wouldn't be one nice thing for a change, like new plane? And not now but as part of some mid to long term strategy where company can actually use its own previous earnings instead of my money or, maybe, take a loan or a leasing as all other companies in the world do or go public and issue shares? Why is that a heresy?

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    7. Anonymous17:58

      I'm not sure why second-hand aircraft "shouldn't be the long-term solution". It is very common for people to spend their entire lives happily driving passenger vehicles (cars) that they buy gently used, 3 or 6 years old. This hugely reduces the depreciation hit. Of course, owning a used car is not as convenient as a brand new car that likely requires 0 maintenance and is of course very pleasant to ride. But the new car financial penalty / depreciation hit is very real. It comes down to what you can afford. If the economics are at all comparable in the aircraft market, then it makes every sense that the carriers that have access to premium markets (some of the legacies in US and Western Europe) as well as carriers that need their aircraft to run nonstop without a peep (such as Ryanair) will want to pay extra to use the aircraft when they are at their best, and that the carriers that have a more price-sensitive customer base and can afford to occasionally have a plane out for maintenance (or have the winter season so slow that they can maintain their aircraft all they want) - such as JU - will want to economize by using second-hand aircraft. It's all about the right strategy for the market you're serving

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  15. Anonymous10:33

    https://www.flightradar24.com/ASL4023/3d71d783

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  16. Anonymous10:46

    Some new destinations incoming

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  17. Anonymous11:31

    The older A319s must be on their way out soon. This will be a welcome refresh.

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  18. Anonymous11:31

    Congrats JU.

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  19. Anonymous11:31

    Interesting mix: E195 + ATR72 + A320 + A330. Fleet commonality isn’t ideal but it gives them lots of flexibility until they decide on long-term narrowbody strategy.

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    1. Anonymous12:11

      Three type of planes are necessity for hun and spoke airline business model

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  20. Anonymous12:03

    Landed :)

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    1. Anonymous12:09

      Congrats JU! 🍺

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  21. Anonymous12:28

    When are YU-ARD/YU-ARE returning to service. Are any one of them returning to service within the next week? According the seat maps for a few JFK flights for December 20th and 21st its the YU-ARD/YU-ARE set up.

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  22. Anonymous15:02

    Is YU-APK still in BEG?
    Will it go back to the lessor or what will happen?

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    1. Anonymous15:05

      It is stored by the lessor in Belgrade. When they decide what to do with it, it will leave.

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  23. Anonymous17:21

    They will have to get another a330-200 soon right?

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    1. Anonymous17:30

      I hope so, they will need it to expand to Toronto and Miami and add frequencied to China. If Air Serbia also extends Toronto into winter as they are considering, hope they are aware what winter flying means at YYZ, right now long lines to get into largest deice pad in the world:

      https://www.flightradar24.com/airport/yyz

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    2. Anonymous18:05

      They should really look into retrofitting their long haul aircraft. With the current long haul product they have JU cannot compete with other big European carriers, and if they are going to be expanding the way they are right now then retrofitting should be a no brainer. From what I hear on this site Pupin will be returned to its lessor so realistically JU will have to add at least 2 new a330s. Let’s hope they add something nicer and more modern.

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    3. Anonymous18:57

      I agree. However JU are not actually competing with western european carriers. Rather offering an alterative. But making sure their cabins are as up to date and clean as they can afford is never a bad thing for a niche airline.

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  24. Anonymous19:48

    Welcome to the fleet! Next one should be former PR-AUP, currently 10 years old. Expecting in next 2-3 months at BEG

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JAT B707 preparing for departure
Belgrade Airport, 1981

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