Skip to main content
  • Home

Search This Site

EX-YU Aviation News

EX-YU Aviation News

  • About
  • Vintage
  • Trip Reports
  • Newsletter
  • Support

EX-YU VINTAGE


JAT sales office in downtown Split
1976

Labels

ACI Air Adria Airways Adria Airways Switzerland Adria Tehnika Air Croatia Air Montenegro Air Serbia Amelia International Archive files Banja Luka
Belgrade BH Airlines Bihać bosnia and herzegovina Bosnian Wand Airlines Brač Covid-19 croatia croatia airlines Dalmatian Dubrovnik ETF Airways European Coastal Airlines Feature Fleet Fly Air41 Airways FlyBosnia Focus GP Aviation Jat Airways Jat Tehnika jobs Kon Tiki Sky Kosovo Kraljevo Limitless Airways Livery Ljubljana Lošinj low cost airline macedonia Maribor Mat Airways MAT Macedonian Airlines montenegro montenegro airlines mostar MRO New route Newsflash Niš Ohrid Osijek Photo podgorica portorož Pragusa.One Priština Privatisation PROMO Pula Results 2008 Results 2009 Results 2010 Results 2011 Results 2012 Results 2013 Results 2014 Results 2015 Results 2016 Results 2017 Results 2018 Results 2019 Results 2020 Results 2021 Results 2022 Results 2023 Results 2024 Results 2025 Results 2026 Rijeka Ryanair safety sarajevo Sea Air serbia service Skopje Sky Srpska slovenia Smile Air Split Summer 2009 Summer 2010 Summer 2011 Summer 2012 Summer 2013 Summer 2014 Summer 2015 Summer 2016 Summer 2017 Summer 2018 Summer 2019 Summer 2020 Summer 2021 Summer 2022 Summer 2023 Summer 2024 Summer 2025 Summer 2026 tivat ToMontenegro Trade Air Trebinje Trip report Tuzla Užice VLM Airlines Winter 2008/09 Winter 2009/10 Winter 2010/11 Winter 2011/12 Winter 2012/13 Winter 2013/14 Winter 2014/15 Winter 2015/16 Winter 2016/17 Winter 2017/18 Winter 2018/19 Winter 2019/2020 Winter 2020/2021 Winter 2021/2022 Winter 2022/2023 Winter 2023/2024 Winter 2024/2025 Winter 2025/2026 Winter 2026/2027 Wizz Air Zadar zagreb
Show more Show less

Archive

  • February18
  • January85
  • December89
  • November77
  • October84
  • September81
  • August80
  • July85
  • June80
  • May83
  • April80
  • March80
  • February73
  • January84
  • December81
  • November83
  • October83
  • September79
  • August80
  • July83
  • June76
  • May84
  • April81
  • March77
  • February78
  • January81
  • December83
  • November83
  • October84
  • September84
  • August87
  • July84
  • June80
  • May84
  • April79
  • March84
  • February75
  • January81
  • December79
  • November79
  • October80
  • September81
  • August81
  • July79
  • June79
  • May80
  • April75
  • March84
  • February76
  • January79
  • December83
  • November78
  • October78
  • September79
  • August86
  • July98
  • June99
  • May93
  • April93
  • March92
  • February83
  • January93
  • December94
  • November77
  • October80
  • September79
  • August79
  • July86
  • June84
  • May86
  • April82
  • March95
  • February74
  • January79
  • December82
  • November77
  • October84
  • September80
  • August82
  • July84
  • June75
  • May79
  • April76
  • March75
  • February73
  • January80
  • December80
  • November79
  • October77
  • September73
  • August70
  • July80
  • June75
  • May76
  • April72
  • March75
  • February71
  • January78
  • December74
  • November72
  • October75
  • September69
  • August65
  • July73
  • June73
  • May74
  • April67
  • March72
  • February64
  • January72
  • December73
  • November70
  • October70
  • September70
  • August56
  • July68
  • June72
  • May73
  • April56
  • March31
  • February29
  • January34
  • December31
  • November30
  • October31
  • September31
  • August31
  • July31
  • June30
  • May31
  • April30
  • March31
  • February28
  • January31
  • December31
  • November30
  • October31
  • September30
  • August31
  • July31
  • June30
  • May31
  • April30
  • March31
  • February28
  • January31
  • December31
  • November30
  • October30
  • September30
  • August31
  • July31
  • June30
  • May31
  • April30
  • March31
  • February28
  • January31
  • December32
  • November30
  • October31
  • September30
  • August31
  • July31
  • June30
  • May31
  • April30
  • March31
  • February29
  • January31
  • December31
  • November30
  • October31
  • September30
  • August31
  • July31
  • June30
  • May31
  • April30
  • March31
  • February28
  • January31
  • December32
  • November31
  • October31
  • September30
  • August31
  • July31
  • June30
  • May32
  • April31
  • March31
  • February28
  • January31
  • December31
  • November30
  • October31
  • September31
  • August31
  • July31
  • June30
  • May31
  • April30
  • March32
  • February29
  • January31
  • December30
  • November30
  • October31
  • September30
  • August30
  • July31
  • June31
Show more Show less


State grants close to million euros for Croatia Airlines’ Mostar service

  • Get link
  • Facebook
  • X
  • Pinterest
  • Email
  • Whatsapp
  • Telegram
  • Reddit
  • Linkedin
  • Other Apps

The Croatian government has adopted a decision to allocate 950.000 euros for the upkeep of Croatia Airlines' flights between Zagreb and Mostar in 2026. The move comes just weeks after the state converted 78.3 million euros of the carrier’s debt into equity, as well as injected 35 million euros in financial support, with a further 35 million euros planned for next year. In addition, the government has granted authorities in Mostar a further 850,000 euros to “finance programmes aimed at improving aviation safety”. The Croatian Ministry of the Sea, Transport and Infrastructure will oversee the use of these funds.

Croatia Airlines handled 11.042 passengers on flights between Zagreb and Mostar in 2025, representing an increase of 1.6% compared to the previous year. The average cabin load factor on the route stood at 50.6% for the year. The carrier operated a total of 141 flights in each direction during 2025. Almost all services were performed by the 76-seat Dash 8 Q400 turboprop, with the exception of one rotation operated by the Airbus A220-100 and one by the A319. Croatia Airlines launched scheduled flights between Zagreb and Mostar on May 3, 2018, and resumed operations on May 3, 2023, following a suspension during the pandemic. All services on the route are subsidised. Croatia Airlines maintains three weekly services between the two cities. The carrier had previously considered launching nonstop operations from Mostar to several destinations in Europe.

In its decision to grant funds for 2026, the government noted, “Pursuant to the Decisions on the allocation of funds to enhance the air transport connectivity of the City of Mostar, adopted by the Government of the Republic of Croatia on 14 March 2024 and 24 April 2025, agreements were concluded in 2024 and 2025 between the Ministry of the Sea, Transport and Infrastructure and the City of Mostar on co-financing programmes aimed at improving the city’s air connectivity. Based on these agreements, the implementation and financing of Mostar Airport’s programme for the provision of scheduled international air services on the Mostar - Zagreb - Mostar route were secured for 2024 and 2025”. It added, “In addition to the aforementioned decisions of the Government of the Republic of Croatia, this proposal introduces the possibility of financing programmes aimed at enhancing the safety and security of civil aviation, in principle through investments in infrastructure or equipment”.


February 06, 2026
bosnia and herzegovina croatia croatia airlines Feature mostar
  • Get link
  • Facebook
  • X
  • Pinterest
  • Email
  • Whatsapp
  • Telegram
  • Reddit
  • Linkedin
  • Other Apps

Comments

  1. Anonymous09:01

    Fantastic load factor...

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous09:10

      11,042 passengers annually equals roughly 30 passengers per flight on average. On a 76-seat Q400, that’s modest but not catastrophic for a thin regional route. Many PSO routes in Europe perform similarly.

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    2. Anonymous09:25

      LF won't improve when they have to start sending A220 on this route regularly.

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    3. Anonymous10:19

      Happy to see a220 on a route, will perform even better. Passengars like ekspirince of preimum product on Ou 220_100. Rewly like Croatia Airlinees to travel

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    4. Anonymous13:08

      Won't operate with a220, it will be smaller plane. They mentioned this before

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    5. Reply
  2. Anonymous09:02

    86 euros per passenger, having an airline is a lucrative business in Croatia I see!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous09:16

      Well if it was up to non political decisions OU would never fly this route. It is a will by politicians elected and therefore of course they have to pay.

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    2. Anonymous09:21

      I don't understand why it is subsidised by the croatian government, BiH should subsidise it, it's in their best interest that this route is operated.

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    3. Anonymous09:22

      That is one way, so round trip is payed 172 euros per pax from cro government….great job!

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    4. Anonymous09:48

      And another 150 by the passenger, and they are still losing money?

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    5. Anonymous10:04

      It’s easy to criticise subsidies, but nearly every small European airport depends on them in some form.

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    6. Anonymous10:59

      What a way to subsidize terrible OU!

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    7. Anonymous11:30

      There are many ways to subsidize, they are really creative with that. It would be cool to know how much they charge tourist organizations for those regional snacks promo... I think one can't list all the state/public money they collect every year.

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    8. Anonymous12:12

      According to other information croatian government has allocated 1,75 million euro for flights Zagreb Mostar

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    9. Anonymous12:13

      I am stil waiting for Serbian government to allocate that amount of money for the flights Belgrade Banja Luka.

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    10. Anonymous12:14

      @12.12 why not read the article past the first sentence? It would avoid you writing such uninformed comments.

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    11. Anonymous12:46

      This has NOTHING to do with aviation. Bosnia has 0 interest from that and therefore should NOT subsidize the route. This is pure politics, in the interests of Croatian government and HDZ. At the end of the day, Croats from Mostar region vote on Croatian elections.

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    12. Anonymous12:47

      And these comments above are another proof how ignorant are people here and how much they enjoy saying their "opinion" without even thinking it through. If you know nothing, stay absent.

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    13. Reply
  3. Anonymous09:03

    Another year, another subsidy. With a 50% load factor and just over 11,000 passengers annually, this route clearly cannot stand on its own feet. At some point taxpayers deserve a serious explanation of the long term strategy.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous09:17

      The route could stand on its own feet with some basic scheduling and enabling the OMO flight to connect to OU's poor, but extant Western European network.

      The way it's scheduled now, it's P2P only and therefore of limited use.

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    2. Reply
  4. Anonymous09:03

    Mostar has very limited connectivity and this service is politically and economically important. 950,000 euros in the context of overall state aviation support is not a dramatic amount if it ensures stable links between Croatia and Herzegovina.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous09:08

      +1

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    2. Anonymous09:15

      I guess so.

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    3. Anonymous09:17

      But if the load factor is so poor against lack of other services or airlines (so no competition factor), I understand it may be important from a political perspective, but surely not from the economic one? I mean, so low number of passengers and poor load factor - I would imagine it would be in higher demand if no other options from OMO even exist?

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    4. Anonymous11:11

      There are other options with wider network like JU. What OU can offer - SPU and DBV is most frequent but not needed for Mostar; only LH hubs which then means 3 flights to reach the destination, not cool. There are some p2p options too, not much room for OU here beside direct pax (which shouldn't be this low).

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    5. Anonymous11:47

      Herceg Baznia is good only for used Daimler Benz dealership and cevapcici in Jablanica.

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    6. Anonymous12:49

      Air Serbia also flies BNX service with tickets of 30€ one way, empty planes and no connectivity through BEG, but it's in someone's interest to have Air Serbia aircraft seen in Banja Luka.

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    7. Anonymous12:54

      How do you know the planes are empty? Could you share the passenger data since you know it's empty. Thanks

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    8. Anonymous16:20

      How anout Bosnia subsidize flights and develop their own industry?

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    9. Reply
  5. Anonymous09:03

    Bravo OU!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous17:44

      Correct. Bravo for stealing money from your poor citizens

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    2. Reply
  6. Anonymous09:04

    The route operates three times per week with a Dash 8 and still only manages a 50% load factor. Maybe frequency is the issue? Either increase to daily to stimulate demand or reduce capacity.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous09:18

      All this does not count- it is political and can also be called PSO.

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    2. Reply
  7. Anonymous09:07

    Would be interesting to know JU Mostar load factor. Whenever I fly it's quite full.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous11:14

      They scheduled one flight less this (out of) season, but most probably due to launch of SPU winter flights.

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    2. Reply
  8. Anonymous09:07

    OU love a subsidy

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
      Reply
  9. Anonymous09:08

    And just a month ago they gave another 286,000 to Mostar Airport
    https://www.exyuaviation.com/2025/12/croatia-grants-funds-for-mostar-airport.html

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous09:20

      Ui yes! But have a look how much Denmark gives in subsidies to Greenland; the USA anf others to their outer dependencies- it is the same here - politically motivated on a much lesser scale.

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    2. Anonymous10:36

      you are comparing Denmark with BH and Mostar with Greenland? Dude, Greenland is overseas territory and Mostar is here. What a comedian..

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    3. Anonymous11:15

      Greenland is also (still) part of Denmark, small difference.

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    4. Reply
  10. Anonymous09:16

    Instead of endlessly subsidising Zagreb – Mostar, why doesn't OU try to fly from Mostar to another hub like Rome or Vienna? That might generate stronger inbound tourism and transfer traffic.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous09:17

      Because they want to keep the money in the family.

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    2. Anonymous10:26

      But they dont OU purely exists as LHG feeder

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    3. Anonymous12:12

      A rotation like ZAG-OMO-VIE-OMO-ZAG would make sense for OU.

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    4. Anonymous14:31

      Or MUC like all other routes seem to be

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    5. Reply
  11. Anonymous09:18

    Would be interesting to see what type of passengers are these. Point to point or transfers.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous09:20

      It does not connect onto anything

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    2. Anonymous09:49

      That's crazy

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    3. Anonymous10:11

      It misses several connections by minutes. Really wonder what's the logic behind that from their scheduling department.

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    4. Reply
  12. Anonymous09:21

    Ironically, this is a great LF for OU standards.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous10:15

      true lol

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    2. Reply
  13. Anonymous09:25

    The fact that all services are subsidised confirms that this route would not survive commercially. The real question is whether its strategic value justifies permanent public funding.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous11:01

      There is no single route from OMO that is not financially supported,

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    2. Reply
  14. Anonymous09:32

    When you combine the 950,000 euros for the route and 850,000 euros for “aviation safety”, that’s 1.8 million euros directed toward Mostar in one year. For 11,000 passengers, that’s a very expensive connection.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous11:41

      Poisonly expensive.
      Some may use some other word too.

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    2. Reply
  15. Anonymous09:33

    The route has symbolic value that goes beyond simple passenger numbers.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous14:18

      @09.33 always great to waste taxpayer money on "symbolic" stuff nobody needs

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    2. Reply
  16. Anonymous09:33

    If the Croatian government is willing to subsidise international connectivity to Mostar, should Bosnia and Herzegovina’s authorities contribute more as well?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous09:44

      BiH government should encourage a few FR flights from Mostar. Croatia spends a lot more than this on the ever dwindling Croatian populace of the BiH.

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    2. Anonymous10:08

      We cashed out last year from the Bosnian Federal government 1 million Bosnian Marks to Croatia Airlines for this nonsense of a route, so its only fair the Croatian government pays this year as well.

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    3. Anonymous12:10

      @09:44 FR or W6 from Mostar is not possible. Those airlines don't want to complete extra pilot training needed for flights to and from Mostar.

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    4. Anonymous13:47

      Only solution is Trebinje Airport.

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    5. Anonymous14:04

      @13:47 joke of the day 🤣

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    6. Reply
  17. Anonymous09:45

    The Dash 8 Q400 is probably the right aircraft for this route. Anything larger would push load factors even lower. I wonder what will happen after the Dashes are gone.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous09:48

      Same thing will happen like on many OU routes. LF will go down as there is no sales strategy in place to turn that around.

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    2. Anonymous10:17

      Perhaps the ATR42 would be better for these very weak PSO routes, Mostar, Brač, Osijek, Lošinj, Rijeka, Zadar?

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    3. Anonymous11:26

      Very weak routes are in TradeAir's contract. OU is trying to get some ATR and they're already late, not just for PSO routes.

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    4. Anonymous11:43

      Isn't it too early for OU?

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    5. Anonymous11:50

      @10:17 there are no PSO flights or even commercial flights to Lošinj

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    6. Anonymous11:59

      Yet they invest in Mostar. Weird...

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    7. Reply
  18. Anonymous09:46

    Given the 1.6% passenger growth year-on-year, the route appears stagnant rather than expanding.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
      Reply
  19. Anonymous09:48

    Some people forget that regional connectivity often requires public support everywhere in Europe. The difference is transparency. At least here the numbers are public.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous09:49

      +1

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    2. Anonymous10:31

      To be fair OU have never hidden the facr they are bottom feeders and have no will to be run properly or for profit

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    3. Reply
  20. Anonymous09:50

    At this point Zagreb-Mostar is effectively a permanent PSO route, just without being formally labelled as such.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
      Reply
  21. Anonymous09:51

    11,000 passengers per year is tiny. Some regional bus routes carry more people.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
      Reply
  22. Anonymous10:03

    Why not try a summer seasonal increase? Religious tourism to Međugorje alone should generate more demand.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous14:06

      You realise Mostar is not far from Sarajevo and Dubrovnik? Tourists can already get there very easily.

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    2. Reply
  23. Anonymous10:04

    Given Croatia Airlines’ financial position, it’s difficult to see how any non-core route can operate without state backing.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
      Reply
  24. Anonymous10:07

    how does this connection benefits Mostar?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous10:33

      It keeps the airport open and needs BH subsidies, so more subsidies in the never ending chain of subsidies

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    2. Anonymous11:21

      It adds some pax without spending a dollar for it, unlike for other flights. It' pure benefit.

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    3. Reply
  25. Anonymous10:07

    Trade Air with Saab would make much more sense on this route.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous10:10

      Agree!

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    2. Anonymous10:19

      Yes, with daily rotation.

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    3. Anonymous11:42

      You mean that flying van?

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    4. Anonymous13:52

      Z-expert would tell you Saabs are not profitable. But with PSO, who cares.

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    5. Reply
  26. Anonymous10:10

    What a waste

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
      Reply
  27. Anonymous10:11

    Everybody's commenting on the approx. 1 million OU is spending on the Mostar route, but the elephant in the room is actually the almost 150 million in total the Croatian Government had and will inject for this and next year (recent conversion of 78.3 million euros of the carrier’s debt into equity, as well as 35 million euros in financial support injected with a further 35 million euros planned for next year).

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous10:17

      In relation: OU had a revenue of 269 Million in 2024 and their Government is supporting them with 100 Million.

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    2. Anonymous11:42

      Hahahahahah so true!

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    3. Reply
  28. Anonymous10:14

    I wonder how many pax connect further in Zagreb

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous10:34

      Have you seen the timings?

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    2. Anonymous11:51

      They wait around in the Airport and connect on Ryanair like everyone else hahaha

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    3. Anonymous00:32

      True

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    4. Reply
  29. Anonymous10:30

    The worst part of this route are the exorbitant prices on top of all the subsidies. JU base price is considerably cheaper, and even more so for connections that are very competitively priced.
    OU pricing on the few connections they offer is highway robbery.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous10:32

      They do same with some domestic flights (mostly DBV and SPU-ZAG). Subsidized but crazy high fares.

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    2. Mario12:14

      Just checked a return flight from Zagreb for random chosen dates (29.04. and return on 06.05.). The price is 110€. I think that's fair. JU is charging from Belgrade about 10€ less...it's better to check before using words like exorbitant...

      Delete
      Replies
        Reply
    3. Reply
  30. Anonymous11:04

    The fact that they are sending A319s nowdays...

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
      Reply
  31. Anonymous17:29

    Bravo Hrvatska!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
      Reply
Add comment
Load more...

Post a Comment

EX-YU Aviation News does not tolerate insults, excessive swearing, racist, homophobic or any other chauvinist remarks or provocative posts with the intention of creating further arguments. A full list of comment guidelines can be found here. Thank you for your cooperation.

VINTAGE EX-YU


JAT sales office in downtown Split
1976

POPULAR THIS WEEK

Image

Wizz Air unveils additional new routes

Image

Eleven airlines to utilise wet-leases on EX-YU operations this summer

Image

Croatia's domestic routes in limbo amid PSO tender delay

Image

JAL expands reach into Serbia and Croatia

Image

Air Serbia begins construction of new HQ

Powered by Blogger
© EX-YU Aviation News 2008 - 2026