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Ryanair announces withdrawal from six European airports amid rising costs

Ryanair announces withdrawal from six European airports amid rising costs
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Ryanair | Official Website

Ryanair will stop flying to six airports this year, citing various economic factors as reasons for the withdrawals. The ultra-low-cost carrier, which served 240 airports in 38 countries in 2025, said that these cuts are not seasonal and will take effect by March 29, the last day of the northern aviation winter.

The affected airports are Aalborg, Billund, Dortmund, Jerez, Leipzig, and Valladolid. Billund is particularly notable because it has been a base for Ryanair twice before between 2012 and 2015 and then from 2021 to now. This year''s pullout means Ryanair will withdraw its two aircraft stationed there.

Ryanair attributes its decision in Denmark to a new tax imposed by the country. In Spain and Germany, rising airport fees and decreasing incentives are blamed for the pullouts.

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"Despite Ryanair''s protestations and cuts," reports show that it plans more flights in Spain this year than ever before—a record up15% compared to last year. Similarly,"Copenhagen is very different," with records indicating an8% increase versus previous highs despite no new routes planned for this summer.

The airline is known for providing reasons beyond commercial performance when ending routes or pulling out of an airport."Ryanair usually apportions blame to other entities," aiming to be seen as a consumer champion while gaining free publicity through media protests about lost traffic revenue potential at affected locations.

However,"It probably chose to cut these six airports because they are underperforming relative"to other potential destinations within its pan- European network—a critical strategy given that"aircraft are easily movable assets. "

"But there is a key point... "Rising taxes provide good excuses for cuts; however,"Ryanair must keep costs down"to maintain low fares necessary for driving passenger volume—a fundamental aspect underpinning everything else."

Similar strategies have been observed among other budget operators like Allegiant Air which recently announced route closures due to increased charges at Los Angeles airport.

If future circumstances allow cost-effective operations back into any of these six locations—especially Billund—it would indicate significant concessions won by Ryanair; otherwise,"the airports at which it had good presence will find it hard"to recover lost passenger volumes—a classic catch-22 situation.

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