Ryanair issues Spain warning as flights could be cut
- Ryanair considers additional flight reductions from Spanish airports next winter and in 2026.
- Aena's airport charges are too high, and Ryanair needs viable incentives for growth.
- Ryanair had already announced plans to reduce flights at seven regional airports this summer.
- Ryanair CEO Eddie Wilson said Aena's charges harm Spain’s regional airports.
- Ryanair may move traffic to other European destinations with lower access costs, impacting Spanish tourism.
11 Articles
11 Articles
Ryanair warns it may cut even more flights to Spain's smaller airports
Ryanair's CEO has warned that the low-cost carrier could cut even more flights to Spain's smaller regional airports after already axing 800,000 seats this year, with the ongoing fees dispute with Spanish airport operator Aena given as the reason.
Ryanair's brutal warning to Spain as more flights could be cut in drastic move - The Mirror
Ryanair has slammed Spain over its aviation fees, which it argues are 'excessive' and 'limits growth'. It comes after the airline has already slashed its summer 2025 traffic to the country


Ryanair could cut even more flights to Spain next year, CEO warns
Ryanair has hit out as Aena increasing charges every year
Ryanair may cut more flights from small Spanish airports
Ryanair is considering cutting more flights from medium and small Spanish airports next winter and in 2026 if operator Aena does not lower its fees, newspaper El Economista reported today citing the airline's CEO Eddie Wilson.
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