Ryanair Cuts 800,000 Seats and 24 Routes from Germany Operations

Ryanair has reduced its German Winter 2025 capacity by over 800,000 seats and cancelled 24 routes across nine “high-cost” German airports – including Berlin, Hamburg, and Memmingen, while Dortmund, Dresden, and Leipzig will remain closed.

As a result, Ryanair’s overall capacity in Germany will fall below Winter ‘24 levels.

Ryanair said the decision is a direct result of the Federal Government’s “repeated failure to address Germany’s high access costs and the disappointing roll-back on their commitment to reverse the latest +24% aviation tax increase introduced in May ’24.”

The airline said: “This punitive aviation tax, coupled with Germany’s soaring ATC charges, excessive Security Fees, and rising airport costs have made Germany grossly uncompetitive compared to other EU countries. Germany’s sky-high access costs are in stark contrast with countries such as Ireland, Spain and Poland which have no aviation taxes, or Sweden, Hungary, and regional Italy, where aviation taxes are being scrapped alongside reduced access costs to boost traffic, tourism, jobs, and economic recovery. As a result, Germany remains among the worst recovered air traffic markets in Europe, operating at just 88% of pre-Covid levels.

The airline added that it is now calling on the German Government and Transport Minister Patrick Schnieder to take urgent action and reduce Germany’s excessive access costs.

Ryanair added: “Without an immediate intervention, Germany will continue to fall further behind more competitive European countries into Summer 2026. However, should the Government reverse the latest aviation tax increase – then fully abolish the tax – and reduce its spiralling access costs, Ryanair could deliver transformative growth in Germany including 30 additional aircraft (+US$3bn investment), doubling traffic to 34 million passengers per annum, and creating over 1,000 additional jobs across Germany.”

Ryanair’s CMO, Dara Brady, said: “It is very disappointing that the newly elected German Government has already failed to deliver on their commitment to reduce the regressive aviation tax and sky-high access costs which are crippling Germany’s aviation sector.

“As a result, Ryanair has been left with no choice but to reduce our Winter ’25 capacity by over 800,000 seats and cancel 24 routes across nine high-cost German airports – including Berlin, Hamburg, and Memmingen – in addition to maintaining our closures of Dortmund, Dresden, and Leipzig. This completely avoidable loss of connectivity will bring our capacity below Winter ’24 levels and will have a devastating impact on German connectivity, jobs, and tourism.

Mr Brady added: “Germany’s air travel market is broken and needs an urgent fix. Due to its excessive access costs, Germany has only recovered 88% of its pre-Covid traffic, which is by far the worst recovery of any major European market. Until the excessive (and rising) aviation tax, ATC charges, Security Fees and airport costs are addressed by the Government, German air traffic will simply continue to decline whilst other more competitive European countries – with no aviation taxes – benefit from turbocharged Ryanair traffic growth – at Germany’s expense.

Ryanair once again calls on Transport Minister Patrick Schnieder to take urgent action to fix Germany’s broken air transport system by reducing its high access costs which, combined with Lufthansa’s high-fare monopoly, have forced German citizens and visitors to pay the highest airfares in Europe. Ryanair stands ready and willing to bring transformative growth to Germany and, subject to the Government finally taking action to reduce access costs, could deliver an additional 30 aircraft, double traffic to 34 million passengers per annum, and support the creation of over 1,000 additional jobs across Germany.”