Wizz Air, Air Serbia and Ryanair will add the most new seats in the former Yugoslav markets during the third quarter (July - September), compared to the same period in 2025. Among them, Wizz Air and Ryanair, together with Air Serbia, will rank as the largest carriers by available seat capacity. Wizz Air will lead the growth, adding a considerable 1.138.127 extra seats. This growth stems from the opening of its Podgorica base, as well expansion of its bases in Skopje, Belgrade and Tuzla. Overall, the airline’s capacity will rise by 61.3% year-on-year.
Fastest-growing airlines by added seat capacity in Q3, 2026
Air Serbia will add 109.746 seats in Q3, increasing its capacity by 6.3%. The growth comes from the introduction of a number of new services, with the airline operating seven additional routes during the three-month period compared to last year. Although the carrier has nine new destinations in its network, including Alicante, Baku, Toronto, Brač, Seville, Tenerife, Santorini, Nizhny Novgorod and Munich, it has dropped Ankara and Lyon from its network over the past twelve months. On routes which were in operation a year ago, Air Serbia has added the most capacity during Q3 2026 on its Vienna flights, followed by Tivat, Milan and Brussels.
Largest airlines by available seat capacity in Q3, 2026
Wizz Air’s growth will position it as the largest carrier in the former Yugoslavia by available seat capacity during the third quarter. It is followed by Ryanair, with a more modest 2.4% growth rate, then Air Serbia, easyJet, Croatia Airlines and Lufthansa. As reported recently, Croatia Airlines, which had been expected to record its highest-ever summer capacity this year, has instead seen its seat offering fall below last year's levels following a series of network revisions, including the discontinuation of six routes and frequency reductions on a number of services.




Over 1.1 million extra seats is crazy
ReplyDeleteWizz Air's expansion is on another level. Over a million extra seats in just one quarter is remarkable.
DeleteWhether people like them or not, they've transformed air travel in the Balkans.
DeleteThose who 'dislike' certain airlines are, in my opinion, fools. Aviation is a business and a competition which has inovated and facilitated. Great to see the region with more connectivity than ever before. Long may it be.
Delete+1
DeleteThey are growing at a pace around 15% compared to the same month last year.
DeleteLooks like Spirit Airlines effect on a PW jet engines is taking effect
DeleteI wonder how much of Wizz's growth is actually profitable. Growing by 61% is impressive but filling all those seats is another challenge.
ReplyDeleteHaha the negative guy again
DeleteAsking questions is not negative. Calm down dear
DeleteCroatia Airlines really missed an opportunity this summer. With tourism booming reducing capacity seems like the wrong move.
ReplyDeleteTourism is not booming in Croatia this year, their bookings in the coastal area are significantly lower than last year, and most of their guests are anyhow arriving with the car or through EU based tourist agencies using their companies to fly to Croatia ...
DeleteMaybe in your head. In the real world, tourist arrivals are up by 5% for the year so far, and tourism revenue is up 9,2% compared to last year (which was a record year) so actually tourism is indeed "booming"
DeleteThat is probably a reason why Split has 19.000 air passengers less in June 2026 than in the same month in 2025.
Delete*fewer
DeleteWow thats beyond impressive from W6
ReplyDelete+1
DeleteThe biggest surprise for me is easyJet still being fourth. They don't get much attention but they have built a solid presence across the Adriatic coast.
ReplyDeleteThey have expanded elsewhere too. LJU, PRN...
DeleteChair/AirPrishtina have increased ZRH-SKP to ten weekly and ZRH-OHD up to five weekly
ReplyDeleteIf ticket prices don't fall despite all this extra capacity then something is wrong.
ReplyDeleteInteresting that Lufthansa is still among the biggest carriers despiteall the issues this summer.
ReplyDeleteThat is because the "issues" were blown out of proportion here in the comments. 20,000 flights cancelled is less than 1% of Lufthansa's flights.
DeleteBut it did have a big impact in the region. Ljubljana-Munich cancelled from end of October. Frankfurt-Skopje cancelled as well.
DeleteTwo routes is not a big impact for the region.
DeleteIt's a big impact on both markets. They have also reduced frequnecies on most ex-Yu markets.
DeleteThe article is about the wider region and the comment said "big impact in the region". Two routes is absolutely nothing in the region.
DeleteI'm surprised Pegasus isn't higher considering how much it has expanded throughout the Balkans over the past few years.
ReplyDeleteThey are actually quite high and are even higher in Q4/Q1 when most of the LCCs have a lot less seats.
DeleteAir Serbia will eventually need more aircraft if it wants to keep pace with Wizz and Ryanair
ReplyDeleteGood one
DeleteWhy? Don't you think it will if it wants to remain competative within this region. Of course, I am not talking Europe wide.
DeleteTheir business models and cost bases are totally different. JU can never keep pace with airlines who can buy off the shelf factory fresh high density aircraft. They operate in two different sectors of the market so 'keeping pace' is both impossible and uneccesary. JU is aiming to be the best in its model and part of the market.
DeleteWhat airport is that on the phto?
ReplyDeleteNiš maybe? I have no idea tbh but someone will know
DeleteYes, it is Nis.
DeleteNis. Perfect pic for this artivle :D
DeleteThank you
DeleteThe three ex-YU hegemons. No one can come close.
ReplyDeleteHahaha oh the drama!
DeleteNot the drama, but the fact.
DeleteWizzair and Ryanair are Europe wide 'hegemons' by that metric
DeleteThe real question isn't who adds the most seats. It's who makes money doing it.
ReplyDeleteAnd who will be here in 10years time
DeleteRyanair.
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Delete@9.33
DeleteTen years from now, I think we'll see even greater consolidation, with just a handful of airlines carrying most passengers in the region.
And Ryanair will be the leader
DeleteI wouldn't be surprised if Ryanair overtakes Wizz eventually. They usually play the long game.
ReplyDeleteRyanair are well placed to beat wizzair air on every metric gling forward. But variety is key to keeping the aviaton market healthy in the region.
DeleteIs there any truth in O'Leary's claims that Wizz may go bankrupt? What is he exactly basing those claims on?
DeleteHe says that for dramatic effect. Wizzair has far weaker finances than Ryanair (which are the industy's most sable and profitable airline). But i dont think its bankrupty is anyway expected.
DeleteLol sure they will if they continue to ignore Macedonia and Serbia
DeleteThey fly to INI.
DeleteThe 4 routes of which 2 are seasonal?? For the whole of Serbia! That is equal to ignoring it, sorry
DeleteI don't think they will be coming to BEG. it's too expensive for them. That is, BEG won't lower that fees for them.
DeleteAnon 10:14 , the reason is not that BEG is expensive . It is because Belgrade and Serbia are not a tourist destination . We all know the arguments with ATH airport But Athens and Greece are a huge tourist destinations .....so I think there is no further explenation needed .
Delete@11:16 Well, I think Beg is more touristy destination than Sarajevo, and Riga and Vilnius are nit touristy destinations as well, yet they fly to all of them with a lot of destinations from each..Also Sofia, is it bigger tpuristy destination than Beg really?
DeleteBEG is not less tourist destination than ZAG, SJJ, TGD or SOF.
DeleteWell TGD is a gateway to the Montenegrin coast. As a destination in of itself its negligable. One day FR will enter the Belgrade market that is all but written in the stars...
DeleteIt feels like every airport now wants its own Wizz Air base.
ReplyDeleteLjubljana next :D
DeleteI still don't get why there is no LCC base in Pristina.
DeleteIt is too expensive and the concession agreement is so nuts that the government sets the fees, not the airport operator.
DeleteThe tour operators with free baggage and low fares are just too strong on that market
DeleteLjubljana will not get a base. It is cheaper to base additional aircraft in other bases and fly to Ljubljana
DeleteThis makes me wonder which airports will have the strongest winter schedule once the summer season ends.
ReplyDeleteStrongest in what way? Growth? Number of routes?
DeleteThe ones with a big diaspora
DeleteStrongest in growth
DeleteThe market clearly isn't saturated yet. Airlines wouldn't be adding this much capacity otherwise.
ReplyDeleteThere is no such thing as a "saturated" market
DeleteIt would be interesting to have an article on who has cut the most compared to last year too.
ReplyDeleteThey usually publish it a few days later
DeleteThat willbe interesting to see.
DeleteMaybe Croatia Airlines' slower growth will actually help yields while competitors fight for market share.
ReplyDeleteIf Croatia Airlines cannot grow during record tourism demand, when exactly will it grow?
DeleteWhen competitors retreat
DeleteDoesen't look like it will happen any time soon since the competition keeps on growing
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