Ryanair and Eurowings Slash German Flight Routes Amid High Costs
The airlines cite rising taxes and fees, leading to significant reductions in services across major German cities.
- Ryanair plans to cease operations at Dortmund, Dresden, and Leipzig airports by summer 2025, cutting 22 routes and 1.8 million seats.
- Eurowings will remove over 1,000 flights from Hamburg, citing increased airport fees and operational costs.
- Both airlines blame Germany's elevated air traffic taxes and fees, which they claim are the highest in Europe, for making operations unsustainable.
- Ryanair criticizes the German government's failure to reduce costs, contrasting it with growth in other EU countries like Sweden and Italy.
- Industry groups warn that these cuts highlight Germany's declining competitiveness in the European aviation market.










































