Ryanair Cuts Flights to and from Berlin by Half

Newsworm
Newsworm
with
AFP
April 24, 2026
Irish budget airline Ryanair will slash its Berlin operations by 50% starting with the winter schedule in late October, citing unsustainable airport fees at BER that will rise another 10% by 2027. The carrier announced it will shut down its Berlin base entirely, redistributing seven stationed aircraft to European airports in countries that eliminated aviation taxes.
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Ryanair Cuts Flights to and from Berlin by Half
Irish low-cost carrier Ryanair is halving its flights to and from Berlin in its winter schedule starting at the end of October. Ryanair cited high fees at Berlin airport, which are set to increase again by ten percent from 2027, as the reason. - AFP

Budget airline Ryanair said Friday that it would reduce flights to and from Berlin starting in October and relocate aircraft based in the German capital, citing high fees which are set to increase again by ten percent from 2027. Ryanair will have 50 percent fewer flights to and from Berlin in the budget carrier's winter flight schedule, which starts from October 24, the Irish airline said in a statement.

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Impact on Employees

Specifically, Ryanair will close its Berlin base, the company announced. Seven aircraft that are currently based in Berlin will be moved to other European airports, it said. Berlin-based pilots and flight crew were told notified of the decision Friday and will have the chance "to secure alternative positions elsewhere in the Ryanair network across Europe".

Chief executive Eddie Wilson said the decision was in response to a looming increase in Berlin airport fees, and also took aim at Germany's "stupid aviation tax regime".
The Ryanair aircraft will be moved to other European Union countries "that have abolished aviation taxes like Sweden, Slovakia, Albania and Italy", the company said.

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Pattern of German Base Closures

Wilson said Ryanair had cut all service to three other German airports since 2019, Dresden, Leipzig and Dortmund, and had already relocated aircraft previously based in Frankfurt, Duesseldorf and Stuttgart. Ryanair and other airlines have lobbied Germany to slash taxes on the aviation industry.

Berlin's Ongoing Airport Struggles

Despite being Germany's largest city, Berlin lags well behind several other airports in the country for total passenger traffic, and the city has struggled to attract carriers. A brand-new Berlin Brandenburg Airport Willy Brandt (BER), which opened in 2020 after years of embarrassing delays and cost overruns, became a laughing stock during its 14-year construction and was seen by many as a symbol of the city's dysfunction.

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