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Newly opened Rijeka Airport
May 1970

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Air Serbia plans third year-round Croatia route

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Air Serbia ATRs parked next to an A330-200 at Belgrade Airport

Air Serbia is planning to add a third year-round destination in Croatia this coming winter. As EX-YU Aviation News has learned, the move follows the strong performance of the carrier's Belgrade- Split service during the previous winter season, when the route ranked among the airline's best performers in terms of load factor. As a result, frequencies on the route will increase from two to three weekly rotations during the 2026/27 winter season, which begins in late October. The airline is now considering upgrading another seasonal destination on the Croatian coast to year-round operations, which would bring its total number of winter services in the country to three, alongside its existing routes to Zagreb and Split.

Over the weekend, Air Serbia inaugurated flights to Brač, making the island destination its seventh in Croatia. The seasonal service will operate twice per week until late September and was scheduled only recently in response to shifting travel patterns resulting from the conflict in the Middle East. Upon arrival, the carrier's aircraft was welcomed with a traditional water cannon salute. “We believe that this new seasonal route will be of interest to passengers from Serbia and the region, but also those from our wider network who wish to continue their journey toward the Adriatic via Belgrade”, the carrier’s General Manager for Commercial and Strategy, Boško Rupić, said.



With the addition of Brač, Air Serbia will operate up to 39 weekly flights between Belgrade and Croatia this summer, representing a post-war record. The airline will offer more than 3.600 seats per week in each direction between the two countries. During the busiest summer season for Air Serbia's predecessor, JAT Yugoslav Airlines, in 1987, the carrier maintained 161 weekly flights between Belgrade and Croatia, including seventy weekly services to Zagreb, thirty to Dubrovnik, 26 to Split, fifteen to Pula, eleven to Rijeka, five to Zadar and four weekly flights to Osijek.


June 22, 2026
Air Serbia Belgrade Brač croatia Feature serbia Winter 2026/2027
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Comments

  1. Anonymous09:00

    My guess is Dubrovnik

    ReplyDelete
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    1. Anonymous09:01

      ZAD

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    2. Anonymous09:07

      How yes no...

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    3. Anonymous09:42

      Dubrovnik would do great with evening flights, complemeting with Tivat only daily in the winter

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  2. Anonymous09:01

    Probably smth like Zadar or Pula right?

    ReplyDelete
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    1. Anonymous09:02

      I think it's more likely to be Dubrovnik

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  3. Anonymous09:02

    DBV

    ReplyDelete
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    1. Anonymous09:52

      This winter Dubrovnik, next winter Pula

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  4. Anonymous09:03

    Dubrovnik, only thing that makes sense, especially to cover Herceg Novi and Trebinje region, especially with early closures at TIV

    ReplyDelete
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    1. Anonymous09:28

      +1

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  5. Anonymous09:03

    My guess is Dubrovnik will be the next route to operate year-round. There seems to be enough city break and transfer traffic through Belgrade to sustain it even in winter.

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  6. Anonymous09:03

    Everyone wants to visit beautiful Dalmatia!

    ReplyDelete
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    1. Anonymous09:29

      I enjoy visiting the coast more in spring and autumn than in summer.

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    2. Anonymous20:54

      Winter is even better.

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  7. VIKTOR KUNOVSKI09:05

    70 to Zagreb, that is 10 flights a day between BEG and ZAG. Wow

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    1. Anonymous09:11

      I guess it make sense to have high frequnecies between the two largest cities in a country of 20+ million people.

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    2. Anonymous09:43

      And there weren’t highways

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    3. Anonymous09:49

      Of course there was a highway between Belgrade and Zagreb - "Autocesta Bratstvo-Jedinstvo".

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    4. Anonymous09:50

      @9.43 it is exactly the same highway used today.

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    5. Anonymous09:55

      It was finished only during 80s

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    6. Anonymous10:00

      ^ no need to make things up. Belgrade-Zagreb hiwhway was completed in the mid 1960s.

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    7. Anonymous10:01

      Autoput at the time did not mean the exactly the same thing we consider autoput today. A final part of the Croatian section was finished in late 90s or early 20s when it became a complete "autoput"

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    8. Anonymous10:11

      10:00 Get informed, not play smart. Highway was built for 25-30 years in sections. Fully finished only before the war

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    9. Anonymous16:25

      I don't act smart, I act informed. Up until the war, the section between Zagreb and Slavonski Brod we're finished, while in Serbia everything was done between Šid and Niš

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    10. Anonymous19:08

      We did have Sava express train there as well

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    11. Anonymous22:58

      Calm down guys

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  8. Anonymous09:07

    My first guess is Dubrovnik because it can sustain most tourist traffic year-round. However Zadar would not be shocking but it's less likely because it's closer to split and less isolated, it has much softer demand. Probably 2 weekly to Dubrovnik on ATR. Hopefully this opens opportunities to more than just Serbian guests visiting.

    ReplyDelete
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    1. Anonymous10:13

      Zadar is only 3 weekly in summer, there is no chance to be operated in winter. In winter it will one of two routes that have 7 weekly flights in summer, either Dubrovnik or Pula.

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  9. Anonymous09:08

    Nice welcome in Brac :)

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    1. Anonymous11:08

      is it true that there were more than 65 passengers on the first flight to Brac,
      and that the most connections were from Amsterdam and Paris?

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    2. Anonymous11:53

      Yes

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    3. Anonymous11:55

      Wow

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  10. Anonymous09:08

    It's either Dubrovnik or Pula.

    ReplyDelete
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    1. Anonymous09:55

      +1

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  11. Anonymous09:08

    Would there be any point flying to Osijek nowafays? I notice it says there used to be 4 weekly flights BEG-OSI.

    ReplyDelete
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    1. Anonymous09:09

      Surely not.

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    2. Anonymous10:01

      Probably there were some positioning flights that were commercialised.
      It's like the BEG ZAG flights that existed due to the practice in the 70 & 80 worldwide to have flights with stopovers.

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    3. Anonymous10:14

      Sure it would, to collect transfers. It expensive and time consuming (border) to travel nowadays via highway

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    4. Anonymous22:59

      Of course there is no point

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  12. Anonymous09:09

    Why were there no flights to Brac during Yugo times?

    ReplyDelete
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    1. Anonymous09:10

      There was no airport at that time.

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    2. Anonymous09:10

      It opened in 1993.

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    3. Anonymous09:12

      Oh my bad. Did not realise that. Thank you. I mixed it up with Losinj. I remember Adria used to fly there during Yugoslav times.

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  13. Anonymous09:12

    I will be honest, I'm still kind of surprised Split worked out so well and it's going to three weekly next year.

    ReplyDelete
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    1. Anonymous09:16

      Agree, shocking that it's one of the airlines top performers

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    2. Anonymous09:19

      Average load was above 90% all through last winter. I thought who would go to Split in winter? But there seems to be a market for it.

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    3. Anonymous09:30

      They deserve credit for identifying niche markets and adjusting capacity accordingly.

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    4. Anonymous10:14

      JU was also shocked

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    5. Anonymous10:26

      I mean there are a lot of families between two cities. For example my cousins live in Belgrad and their mother in Split. They for sure used this line more around 10 times this winter. Prices are usually decent around 120-160€ for round trip. To compare witu driving it comes to the same price if you are travelling alone

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    6. Mario11:51

      Really nice that Split is performing so well. Both cities are worth to visit. People in Dalmatia have time in winter for traveling and we shouldn't forget that Belgrade offers lots of connections. Also, visiting the coast in off season is charming. At least I and many people that I 'm surrounded with like to visit the coast in off season.

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  14. Anonymous09:20

    That's good news, both for JU and coastal airport in Croatia, whichever it may be since reducing seasonality is importnat.

    ReplyDelete
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  15. Anonymous09:23

    Croatia and Serbia are becoming increasingly connected by air again. Almost 40 weekly flights is not bad at all.

    ReplyDelete
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    1. Anonymous09:24

      And Croatia Airlines nowhere to be seen or heard.

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    2. Anonymous09:30

      Honestly I think they've missed out. It's too late now

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    3. Anonymous10:28

      They were flying Split and Dubrovnik in the beginning. I recall that my first flight was with dash Belgrade -Split

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    4. PIR11:56

      09.30
      It's not too late. It's too early 🙂

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    5. Anonymous17:59

      Most traffic originates from Serbia, so would be harder to Croatia to set a sales team in BEG especially with the current mood and declaration from some serbian officials.

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    6. Anonymous18:00

      Thrre is really no need to make excuses. They have had the chance to launch flights for 20 years already.

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    7. RedENN21:50

      CA can easily connect INI and SPU in summer. INI is super cheap, and can cover a big area, with some deals with touristic organizations I don't see how they can fail.

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    8. Anonymous23:00

      You mean OU? To Nis? Are you mad. With all due respect..

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  16. Anonymous09:28

    It is fantastic that JU is bringing tourists to Croatia!
    Reducing seasonality is important.
    Thank you neighbors!

    ReplyDelete
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    1. Anonymous09:41

      +1

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    2. Anonymous12:50

      Brac is a seasonal destination from Belgrade.

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  17. Anonymous09:31

    Dubrovnik has strong inbound demand year-round, especially from overseas visitors connecting via Belgrade, so that would be the logical choice.

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  18. Anonymous09:31

    These developments show that there is significant untapped demand between Serbia and the Croatian coast despite strong competition from road travel.

    ReplyDelete
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    1. Anonymous09:48

      Road travel to both Split and Dubrovnik from Serbia is challenging unlike Rijeka and Istra. That's why SPU has so good winter LF and I guess Dubrovnik is next to get winter flights.

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    2. Anonymous13:12

      Not really challenging to drive to Split.

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    3. Anonymous15:11

      @anon 13:12
      Not as challenging as Dubrovnik yet JU has +90% load at winter. DBV could also serve Trebinje and surrounding Hercegovina area. Until Trebinje airport becomes operational :-).

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    4. Anonymous23:01

      Trebinje airport? What a joke. Tragic one.

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  19. Anonymous09:31

    More flights are always welcome

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  20. Anonymous09:38

    Turning seasonal routes into year-round services is a sign of network maturity.

    ReplyDelete
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  21. Anonymous09:38

    It would be interesting to know how many passengers on these routes are connecting versus travelling point-to-point.

    ReplyDelete
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  22. Anonymous09:38

    Air Serbia has done a good job of rebuilding links across the former Yugoslavia over the past decade.

    ReplyDelete
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    1. Anonymous09:41

      They serve seven destinations in Croatia, which would have been difficult to imagine just a few years ago.

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  23. PIR10:13

    Where is Bravo Hrvatska guy? I guess it's not Bravo when Air Serbia is involved 🤣🤣🤣

    ReplyDelete
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    1. Anonymous12:12

      😂😂😂

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    2. Anonymous12:51

      +100

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    3. Anonymous18:03

      And what about a "Bravo Hrvatska" for being so attractive.
      Tourists spend millions in Croatia, thanks JU for bringing all these tourists.

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    4. Anonymous23:05

      There is Bravo air Serbia guy to make up for it.

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  24. Anonymous10:16

    Idemo dalje...

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  25. Anonymous10:25

    This ATR type is perfect fit for JU for serving this airports.

    ReplyDelete
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  26. Anonymous10:43

    DBV or PUY

    ReplyDelete
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    1. Anonymous15:25

      Exactly, PUY is my first bet!

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  27. Anonymous11:37

    Bravo Air Serbia 🇷🇸🇷🇸🇷🇸

    ReplyDelete
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    1. Anonymous23:01

      Ever get dull?

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  28. Anonymous11:38

    Is there any chance for Croatia Airlines to jump in on any of these routes?

    ReplyDelete
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    1. Anonymous11:44

      What is there to jump in on? All Croatian airports (minus Osijek) now have flights to BEG. Also, a lot of those passengers to Croatia are transfers from JU network.

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    2. Anonymous11:50

      ANALitičar kaže da ima malo transfera i da nema smisla leteti preko BEG.

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    3. PIR11:58

      11.38
      They can't manage. They are too busy serving Minken and Vrankvurt

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    4. Anonymous23:04

      @11:50and Admin doesn't remove that comment?

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  29. Anonymous11:44

    Bravo mr Vucic, sending so many planes every week in this dangerous country for his dear citizens.

    ReplyDelete
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    1. Anonymous12:52

      This is provocation.

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    2. PIR16:44

      No. It is a joke, making fun on Serbia's decision to put Croatia on the list of dangerous countries. Hiuuge diferrence between evil provocation and harmless joke. Unless your mindset prohibits jokes and criticism of state institutions

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  30. Anonymous12:17

    Crazy scenario:
    Wizz is closing the base in BEG, setting it up in OSI instead to cover BEG catchment area and JU, being agile, jumping in by introducing BEG-OSI year-round.
    Crazy enough?

    ReplyDelete
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    1. Anonymous13:51

      Yes, very crazy.

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    2. Anonymous13:52

      Instead of Osijek they could simply expand their Timisoara base, way easier and same distance from BEG.

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    3. Anonymous13:53

      Actually not same distance, Timisoara is two times closer.

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    4. Anonymous13:53

      They are doing the direct opposite of that. They are cutting routes at their Timisoara base. So it's not going to happen.

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    5. Anonymous14:24

      You're a Timosoara fan?

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    6. Anonymous23:02

      Probably the same Cluj and Delhi fan

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  31. Anonymous14:25

    Admin - the new font when writing comments is simply too sharp,it gives me pain to eyes,could you return to the previous one? Thank you.

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  32. Anonymous22:50

    I think that information about 70 flights per week between Zagreb and Belgrade is questionable. There might have been that much aircraft movements but a fair share of it had been intenrational flights originating in Belgrade with stop in Zagreb (such as Belgrade - Zagreb - Paris or Belgrade - Zagreb - New York) and on such flights tickets were usually not sold for Zagreb - Belgrade segment unlike some other JAT services like for example Belgrade - Split - Rome where was possible to purchase tickets betwen Split and Belgrade as well.

    So the number of flights which were bookable for travel between Zagreb and Belgrade had been smaller than 70.

    ReplyDelete
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    1. Anonymous23:03

      Well the whole comparison is an apples and pears thing. London--Paris had more flights before the channel tunnel. Really means nothing nowadays. But makes good copy.

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    2. Anonymous23:23

      So many buthurt people upset because there were more flights when it was a single country.

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    3. Anonymous23:47

      Well it was a better country (in my view) which is a fair one to hold.

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    4. Reply
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Newly opened Rijeka Airport
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