ENSIKLOPEDIA
Ryan Air
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| Founded | 28 November 1984; 41 years ago (1984-11-28)[5] | ||||||
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| Commenced operations | 8 July 1985; 40 years ago (1985-07-08) | ||||||
| Parent company | Ryanair Holdings PLC | ||||||
| Headquarters | Swords, County Dublin, Ireland | ||||||
| Key people | Eddie Wilson (Ryanair DAC CEO) | ||||||
| Founders | Christopher Ryan Tony Ryan Declan Ryan Liam Lonergan | ||||||
Ryanair is an Irish ultra-low-cost airline headquartered in Swords, County Dublin, Ireland.[6] It is the largest airline in Europe based on annual passengers, fleet size, number of flights, the largest airline worldwide based on number of international passengers carried,[7] and the third-largest airline worldwide based on market capitalization after Delta Air Lines and United Airlines.[8] It has the fifth highest net income of all airlines worldwide.[9] In 2025, the company sold 208 million airline tickets,[10] with average total revenue of €70 per ticket sold, compared to average total costs of €62 per ticket sold.[3] It is widely considered to be the cheapest or one of the cheapest airlines in Europe.[11]
Ryanair operates 3,500 short-haul flights per day serving approximately 230 airports in over 40 countries in Europe as well as Morocco, Jordan, and Turkey.[3][12] Its primary operational bases are at Dublin, London Stansted, and Milan Bergamo airports.[13]
Ryanair is known for its no frills policy; it generates ancillary revenue of approximately one-third of total revenue as it charges fees for seat selection, using airport check-in facilities, paying by credit card, for checked baggage, has high penalties for oversized baggage not paid for in advance,[14] and has a buy on board programme in which airline meals must be purchased separately.[15] Ryanair is also known for its low cost model; to allow for faster cleaning and quick turnaround times, Ryanair aircraft have non-reclining seats, no seat-back pockets, safety cards stuck on the back of the seats, life jackets stowed overhead rather than under the seat, and requires passengers to use boarding stairs or built-in airstairs rather than more expensive jet bridges.[16][17] To keep costs low, the company significantly adjusts its route network after governments increase airport fees, taxes, or environmental levies.[18]
Ryanair CEO Michael O'Leary, who owns approximately 4% of the company,[19] has been known to intentionally generate controversy to gain publicity for the airline.[20]
Ryanair Holdings plc, the parent company, owns subsidiaries Ryanair DACTooltip Designated activity company,[21] Malta Air, Buzz, Lauda Europe and Ryanair UK. The airline was founded in 1985 by Christopher Ryan and Tony Ryan; Ryanair was named after its founders.
Including subsidiaries, Ryanair has a fleet of 647 planes, including 210 owned Boeing 737 MAX 8-200s (which was designed specifically by Boeing for Ryanair to carry more people at a lower cost per passenger),[22] 411 owned Boeing 737 Next Generations, and 26 leased Airbus A320s for Lauda Europe.[23][3]
Ryanair is ranked 790th on the Forbes Global 2000[24] and 280th on the Fortune 500 Europe.[25]
The company has consistently ranked poorly in customer satisfaction in annual surveys by Which?; the company has responded that the surveys have a low sample size and that ticket sales continue to increase.[26][27][28][29][30][10]
History


1984-1989


The company was incorporated on 28 November 1984 as Danren Enterprises.[5] It was founded by Christopher Ryan (1936-2007), Tony Ryan (1936-2007) (founder of Guinness Peat Aviation), his son Declan Ryan, and Liam Lonergan (owner of Irish travel agent Club Travel).[31][32][33]
The airline was renamed Ryanair and launched its first flight on 8 July 1985, between Waterford and Gatwick Airport, with a 15-seat Embraer EMB 110 Bandeirante turboprop aircraft.[5][34] Cabin crew were required to be at most 5 ft 2 in (1.57 m) tall "in order to be able to operate in the tiny cabin of the aircraft".[32] As of September 1985, Ryanair was operating 9 weekly flights on the route.[35] In its first year, the airline carried 5,000 passengers.[36]
The first chief executive was Eugene O'Neill (1956–2018), who had formerly worked as managing director of Tony Ryan's Sunday Tribune newspaper and as Ryan's personal assistant. O'Neill was talented at marketing but did not focus on costs, and the airline lost money in its early years.[32] Ryan vetoed O'Neill's proposal to accuse Aer Lingus for breach of competition rules at the European Commission because at the time Aer Lingus was state-owned and Ryanair depended on the Irish government for its route licences.[37][38] Ryan fired O'Neill in September 1987,[32] who sued for wrongful dismissal.[37]
Beginning in 1986, under partial European Economic Community (EEC) deregulation, airlines could begin new international intra-EEC services as long as one of the two governments approved. The Irish government at the time refused to allow Ryanair to add a route between Dublin and Luton to protect Aer Lingus, but Britain, under Margaret Thatcher's deregulating Conservative government, approved the service. The company was then able to add its second route, with two Hawker Siddeley HS 748s, directly competing with the Aer Lingus/British Airways duopoly for the first time.[39] Ryanair's price of £99 return was half of that of the legacy carriers; Aer Lingus then cut its price to £95 return and Ryanair cut its price to £94.99 return.[32] In their first year of operation, Ryanair's two routes had 82,000 passengers.[32][40][38][41]
In 1986, Ryanair acquired an 85% stake in London European Airways (LEA) in a £630,000 rescue package.[32] It was re-launched in April 1987 using a leased BAC One-Eleven.[32] In May 1987, the service launched routes between Luton and Amsterdam and Brussels.[32] In January 1988, it was rebranded as Ryanair Europe.[32][42] LEA was dissolved in May 1991.[32]
In 1987, the company lost £3 million.[32] That year, the company began wet leasing BAC One-Elevens from TAROM and increased its network to 15 scheduled routes.[32]
In 1988, Michael O'Leary, formerly an accountant at KPMG who had handled tax preparation for Tony Ryan and his companies and a classmate of Declan Ryan,[32] joined Ryanair first as a financial assistant to Tony Ryan and then as chief financial officer of the company.[32][43] That year, the company began leasing ATR 42-300s from Guinness Peat Aviation and launched a business class service and frequent-flyer program; they were ended the following year.[32]
In 1989, a Short Sandringham flying boat was painted with Ryanair livery as part of a proposed sponsorship deal with Foynes Flying Boat Museum but never flew revenue-generating services for the airline.[44]
1990–2009
By 1990, the company had accumulated £20 million in losses.[32] That year, O'Leary was dispatched to Dallas to meet with Herb Kelleher, a co-founder of Southwest Airlines and an acquaintance of Tony Ryan.[32] He came back with a plan to transform Ryanair to a low-cost carrier modeled after Southwest.[32][43][45][46] O'Leary's strategy was to adopt a simple all Boeing 737 fleet, pursuing expansion over yield, create a culture of cost-cutting, and re-educate the customer to prefer lower prices to frills. Ryanair implemented a 30-minute turnaround goal to allow aircraft to make more flights per day. The company then restructured with an additional £20 million investment by Tony Ryan.[32] Also that year, the company moved its base at Luton Airport to London Stansted Airport.[35] The company switched to a buy on board programme, the route network was reduced from 19 destinations to 6, and the cheapest ticket prices were reduced from £99 to £59 return.[32] By the end of 1990, the airline was on pace for 745,000 passengers per year.[32]
In 1991, due to a decline in demand during the Gulf War, the airline lowered fares and increased operations at London Stansted Airport, generating a total profit of £293,000 for the year.[32] In 1992, the airline carried 945,000 passengers.[32]
In January 1994, Ryanair took delivery of its first Boeing 737.[32] That month, Michael O'Leary became the sixth chief executive officer of the company.[47] At that time, Ryanair was owned by the 3 sons of Tony Ryan.[48]
In 1995, Ryanair carried over 2 million passengers.[32]
Ryan clashed with O'Leary, with Ryan wanting the airline's public relations stunts to be less aggressive, and O'Leary suggesting that Ryan should leave the board.[49]
Ryanair Holdings was established in 1996 as a holding company for Ryanair.[3]
The EU Single Aviation Market established in 1992 as well as the airline deregulation in April 1997 and the removal of cabotage gave low-cost carriers, including Ryanair, the opportunity to expand.[35]
The airline became a public company via an initial public offering in May 1997, raising funds on the Dublin and the NASDAQ stock exchanges to expand the company across Europe.[50] All employees received free shares in the IPO; many pilots' shares were worth over £100,000 by 2000.[51] In 1997, Ryanair carried 3.7 million passengers.[32]
In 1998, Ryanair launched services to Stockholm, Sandefjord Airport, Torp, Beauvais–Tillé, and Charleroi.[35]
In May 1999, the Ryan family sold 10.5% of the company, reducing their stake to 17.1% and netting approximately £117 million and Michael O'Leary sold 1.5% of the company, reducing his stake to 10.8% of the company and netting about £17 million.[52]
In 1999, flush with new capital, Ryanair placed a US$2 billion order for 45 new Boeing 737-800 aircraft.[53]
By March 2000, Ryanair operated a total of 33 routes.[35]
The airline launched its website in 2000 built by a 17-year old entrepreneur for IR£20,000. Management thought that the online booking engine would only be a small part of its business.[54] By the end of 2001, 75% of bookings were made online.[32]
In December 2001 and again in 2009, Go Fly withdrew its service from Dublin due to competition from Ryanair.[55][56]
In January 2002, the airline ordered 155 new Boeing 737-800 at what was believed to be a substantial discount due a decline in demand after the September 11 attacks, to be delivered over eight years from 2002 to 2010.[32][57] Approximately 100 of these aircraft had been delivered by the end of 2005, despite production delays in late 2005 caused by a Boeing machinists' strike.[58]
In April 2003, Ryanair acquired its ailing competitor Buzz from KLM for approximately €20 million.[32][59] It was shut down in October 2004.[32]
In June 2003, spats between O'Leary and the founding Ryan family led to the resignation of Declan Ryan, who had been on the board of directors of the company since 1985. The Ryan family sold additional shares in the company, reducing their stake to 55 million shares.[60] Tony Ryan offered to resign, but he remained on the board until his death in 2007.[61]
In August 2003, MyTravelLite started to compete with Ryanair on Birmingham to Dublin route. Ryanair set up competing flights on some of MyTravelLite's routes until it withdrew from the market.[62]
A loss of €3.3 million in the second quarter of 2004 was the airline's first recorded loss for 15 years but the airline soon became profitable again. The enlargement of the European Union in May 2004 allowed for more new routes for Ryanair.[63]
In September 2004, EasyJet announced routes to Ireland for the first time, beginning with the Cork to London Gatwick route. In 2006, EasyJet withdrew its Gatwick-Cork, Gatwick-Shannon, Gatwick-Knock and Luton-Shannon routes due to competition from Ryanair.[64]
In February 2006, Britain's Channel 4 broadcast a documentary as part of its Dispatches series, "Ryanair caught napping". The documentary criticised Ryanair's training policies, security procedures and aircraft hygiene, and highlighted poor staff morale. Ryanair denied the allegations and claimed that promotional materials, in particular a photograph of a stewardess sleeping, had been faked.[65][66][67]
In May 2006, the company was criticized by The Guardian for its £3.15 "aviation insurance levy" added to the cost of all tickets; the publication noted that most of this was profit to the airline.[68]
In October 2006, Ryanair launched a €1.48 billion bid to buy Aer Lingus; Ryanair already owned 19% of Aer Lingus.[69] Aer Lingus immediately rejected Ryanair's takeover bid, saying it undervalued the airline.[70]
In October 2006, DFDS Seaways ended its Newcastle–Gothenburg ferry service, the only dedicated passenger ferry service between Sweden and the United Kingdom, citing competition from low-cost air services, especially Ryanair.[71]
In April 2007, Ryanair CEO Michael O'Leary stated that it had the goal of launching a transatlantic low-cost airline; the launch was delayed and never came to fruition.[72][73][74][75] In 2023, Ryanair said that it had no plans for transatlantic routes.[76]
In August 2007, the company started charging passengers to check in at the airport to encourage people to check-in online, thereby reducing costs.[77][78][79]
In October 2007, upon the death of Tony Ryan, the Ryan family stake in the airline was 5.9%.[80]
In October 2008, Ryanair withdrew operations from a base in Europe for the first time when it closed its base in Valencia, Spain.[81] Ryanair estimated the closure led to 750 job losses.[82]
In December 2008, Ryanair launched a second takeover bid of Aer Lingus, offering an all-cash offer of €748 million, a 28% premium on the average value of Aer Lingus stock during the preceding 30 days.[83][84][85] The Aer Lingus board rejected the offer.[85] In January 2009, Ryanair ended the takeover bid after it was rejected by the Irish government on the grounds it undervalued the airline and would harm competition.[86] However, Ryanair retained a 30% stake in Aer Lingus; in October 2010, competition regulators in the UK opened an inquiry, due to concerns that Ryanair's stake may lead to a reduction in competition.[87] In 2015, after multiple appeals, the Competition Commission required Ryanair to sell down its stake in Aer Lingus to 5% by selling shares to International Airlines Group, which acquired Aer Lingus that year.[88][89][90]
In September 2008, Ryanair asked the Irish High Court to investigate why it had been refused permission to fly from Ireland West Airport to Dublin. This route was won by CityJet, which could not operate the service; the route was then given to Aer Arann without an additional tender process.[91] However, Ryanair lost its challenge in the courts.[92]
In February 2009, Ryanair announced that later that year it would close all airport check-in desks and that passengers would be able to leave their luggage at a bag drop, but everything else would be done online.[93]
In May 2009, Ryanair abolished airport check-in and replaced it with a fast bag drop for those passengers checking in bags, adding fees for passengers that do not check-in online.[94][95]
In June 2009, due to the Great Recession, Ryanair reported an annual loss of €169 million, its first annual loss since the IPO.[96]
2010s




In May 2010, Ryanair was fined €3 million by Italy's civil aviation authority for refusing to pay for lodging and food for passengers stranded due to air travel disruption after the 2010 Eyjafjallajökull eruption.[97] The refusal resulted in a lawsuit; Ryanair lost the case in January 2013.[98]
In 2010, Ryanair carried 66.5 million passengers.[32]
In February 2011, Ryanair opened a maintenance hangar at Glasgow Prestwick Airport, its biggest fleet maintenance base.[99]
In June 2011, Ryanair and COMAC signed an agreement to cooperate on the development of the C-919, to compete with the Boeing 737.[100][101]
In April 2011, Ryanair began adding a surcharge of €2 to its flights to cover the costs arising from compliance with EC Regulation 261/2004, which requires it to pay for meals and accommodation for passengers on delayed and cancelled flights.[102]
Ryanair cut capacity by grounding 80 aircraft between November 2011 and April 2012 due to the high cost of fuel and weak economic conditions during the Euro area crisis.[103]
After failing to reach an agreement from negotiations in 2009,[104] in March 2013, Ryanair signed an order for 175 new Boeing 737-800 aircraft with a list price value of $15.6 billion before discounts, increasing its fleet by 30%, to 400 planes.[105][106][107] At that time, Ryanair had 305 planes.[107]
In August 2013, as part of its Dispatches series, Channel 4 aired a documentary, "Ryanair: Secrets from the Cockpit", that made allegations about Ryanair's safety standards. Ryanair sued Channel 4 and The Independent for defamation and fired a pilot that appeared in the documentary.[108] The case with The Independent was settled in November 2013.[109][110] The case with Channel 4 was settled in 2025 on undisclosed terms.[111]
In October 2013, Ryanair announced what it described as a series of "customer service improvements", including lower fees for reprinting boarding passes, free changes of minor errors on bookings within 24 hours, and a free second small carry-on bag. Ryanair said it was making the changes as a result of customer feedback.[112][113] The airline also redesigned its website, reducing the number of clicks required to book a flight from 17 to 5. The changes came about after a profit warning implored management to improve customer satisfaction.[114]
In January 2014, Ryanair moved into a new €20 million, 100,000 sq ft (9,300 m2) Dublin head office in Airside Business Park, having outgrown its previous office within Dublin Airport.[115][116][117]
In April 2014, Ryanair ordered five more aircraft, four of them to be delivered in 2015 and the last one to be delivered in February 2016, to bring the number of aircraft on order to 180.[118]
In June 2014, Ryanair announced a campaign to re-invent itself as a more family-friendly airline. At the company's 2014 annual general meeting, CEO Michael O'Leary said that the airline needed to "stop unnecessarily pissing people off". Ryanair said up to 20% of its 81 million customers were travelling as families, and it wanted to raise that figure.[119] Service improvements included not charging customers for minor infractions of its bag policy and eliminating some "irksome charges and restrictions". This change in approach had an almost immediate positive effect on the company's finances.[120][121]
In the summer of 2014, Ryanair contracted AirExplore to operate some summer flights between London Stansted and Dublin airports.[122]
In September 2014, Ryanair agreed to purchase up to 200 Boeing 737 MAX 200 aircraft (100 confirmed and 100 options) with a list price of over $22 billion before discounts.[123][124]
In March 2016, Ryanair launched a corporate jet charter service, offering a Boeing 737-700 for corporate or group hire.[125][126]
In November 2016, Ryanair launched Ryanair Holidays, a package holiday service, in partnership with Spain-based tour operator Logitravel and accommodation provider World2Meet. The service was first launched in Ireland, the United Kingdom and Germany.[127][128] The service was discontinued in January 2019.[129]
In April 2017, Ryanair started issuing tickets for connecting flights, starting with a transfer hub in Rome Fiumicino Airport (FCO), meaning if a connection is missed, the customer will be rebooked at no extra cost and compensated according to the EU Flight Compensation Regulation.[130]
In September and October 2017, Ryanair cancelled between 40 and 50 flights per day, about 2% of total daily flights.[131] Flights were cancelled with very little notice, sometimes only hours before departure.[132] Ryanair said that the cancellations aimed "to improve its system-wide punctuality" which had dropped significantly in the first two weeks of September which the airline attributed to "ATC capacity delays and strikes, weather disruptions and the impact of increased holiday allocations to pilots and cabin crew." In subsequent statements, Ryanair acknowledged that it had "messed up" holiday schedules for pilots, including a change to the calendar year for how vacations were calculated.[133][134][135][136]
2017-2018: Abandonment of the single-airline strategy, union recognition
Ryanair had only operated with its Irish Air Operator's Certificate and solely under the Ryanair brand.[137] However, in April 2017, Ryanair announced that it would launch an independent Polish subsidiary in 2018, operating charter flights from Poland to Mediterranean destinations.[138] The subsidiary was branded Ryanair Sun and received its Polish Air Operator's Certificate in April 2018.[139] Initially, it had only one former Ryanair Boeing 737-800 and complemented its operation with wet-leased aircraft from its mother company. In late 2018, all Polish-based Ryanair aircraft were transferred to Ryanair Sun.[140] Ryanair Sun mainly operated scheduled flights on behalf of its parent company using Ryanair's FR flight numbers. Ryanair Sun was rebranded Buzz in 2019.[141][142]
In December 2017, to prevent strike actions before Christmas, Ryanair agreed to recognise pilots' unions for the first time.[143][144][145]
Ryanair UK was established in December 2017 "to protect itself from a hard Brexit".[146] Its first aircraft, re-registered as G-RUKA, was transferred from Ryanair DAC in 2018, with a second aircraft following in 2019. As of April 2023, Ryanair UK had 13 aircraft.
In March 2018, Ryanair acquired 25% of Austrian-based Laudamotion, founded by Niki Lauda, and later renamed "Lauda". Laudamotion was the successor of Niki, which had folded as a consequence of the Air Berlin demise. Ryanair later increased its stake in Laudamotion to 75% and then 100% in December 2018.[147][148][149]
In August 2018, to reduce plane turnaround time, Ryanair announced a baggage policy under which passengers must purchase "Priority Boarding" to carry on both a large and a small bag, capped by the capacity on the aircraft; previously there was no charge to carry on bags. The move came about after flights were delayed due to too much luggage at the boarding gate.[150] The move was mirrored by Wizz Air.[151]
In August 2018, pilots of Ryanair in Germany, Sweden, Ireland, Belgium and the Netherlands walked out for 24 hours, leading to the cancellation of 400 flights.[152]
On 26 September 2018, Ryanair was forced to cancel 150 flights scheduled for that day, accounting for roughly 6% of its total flights, due to strikes in Spain, Belgium, the Netherlands, Portugal, Italy, and Germany. The British Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) urged the company to compensate the 2,400 affected passengers under EU Regulation 261, but Ryanair stated that it would refuse to accept any claims for compensation.[153] In December 2018, the Civil Aviation Authority took legal action against Ryanair over its refusal to compensate thousands of UK-based customers.[154] In April 2021, the High Court rejected Ryanair's claim that it was exempt from awarding compensation because the disruption was due to "extraordinary circumstances". The ruling was upheld by the Court of Appeal in February 2022.[155] In December 2022, Ryanair dropped its appeal to the Supreme Court, agreeing to pay claims for flights cancelled due to union-led industrial action.[156][157]
In June 2018, Ryanair signed a recognition agreement with Unite the Union to enable collective bargaining for 650 directly employed cabin crew operating out of Ryanair's UK bases.[158]
In August 2018, Ryanair reached a collective labour agreement with the Italian pilots' union.[159][160] It signed a deal with Italian cabin crew unions in September 2018.[161]
In September 2018, pilots, cabin crew and other staff called for a strike action due to the transition from workers being employed on Irish contracts and subject to Irish legislation to their own countries' labour laws, along with an issue in their pay. Due to the lobbying of the crew and walk-outs of pilots, the airline cancelled 250 flights, affecting around 40,000 passengers.[162][163]
In February 2019, the transition began from the airline Ryanair and its subsidiaries into separate airlines under the holding company.[164]
In May 2019, following the Boeing 737 MAX groundings, Ryanair initially reaffirmed its confidence in the aircraft and indicated that it would be ready to place an order once it had returned to service; it would seek a reduced price instead of cash compensation.[165][166][167]
In June 2019, Ryanair established an airline called Malta Air (not to be confused with Air Malta), to consist of an initial fleet of 10 aircraft and assume the 61 flights currently operated by Ryanair to/from Malta. The fleet was registered in Malta and a new repair and maintenance hangar was set up.[168][169] Ryanair transferred all its existing Maltese operations to the new airline.[170] Ryanair also transferred additional bases in Europe to the Maltese subsidiary due to a legal requirement for certain staff to pay tax in Ireland even though they did not live in Ireland.[171]
In August 2019, due to the transition inside the holdings company, each airline (Ryanair, LaudaMotion, Ryanair Sun and Ryanair UK) got its own CEO and management team.[164] Edward Wilson became the CEO of the airline Ryanair and Michael O'Leary became the Group CEO.[172][173][174]
2020: COVID-19 pandemic
During the COVID-19 pandemic, Ryanair laid off pilots and cabin crew and reduced its flight schedule.[175][176]
In September 2020, the airline threatened to end operations in Ireland unless the government lifted COVID-19 lockdowns including quarantine requirements.[177]
In April and May 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic, customers claimed that they allegedly refused refunds for the flight cancellations, leading to a surge in complaints to the Commission for Aviation Regulation (CAR).[178][179]
In April 2020, the Italian Civil Aviation Authority threatened a ban of Ryanair due to alleged violation of COVID-19 regulations including the requirement for social distancing by leaving middle seats empty.[180][181][182]
In December 2020, Ryanair increased its order for Boeing 737 MAX 200 aircraft by 75, to a total of 210 aircraft, for delivery from early 2021 to December 2024.[183]
Ryanair sued governments that provided aid to state-owned airlines during the pandemic; it lost these lawsuits.[184]
2021-present
After delays due to the Boeing 737 MAX groundings, the first Boeing 737 MAX 200 was delivered to Ryanair in June 2021.[185] In July 2021, Ryanair handed back all of its leased Boeing 737 aircraft and announced plans to hand back its leased Airbus aircraft.[186]
In June 2022, after backlash, Ryanair cancelled a policy to make South Africans take a general knowledge test in the Afrikaans language before allowing them to board UK-bound flights as a means to verify that their passports were genuine. South Africa has 11 official languages of which Afrikaans is the 3rd most spoken with a prevalence of 12%. A majority of the population cannot understand Afrikaans and some refuse to speak it on principle, regarding it as the language of oppression during the apartheid era.[187][188][189]
In January 2023, the first Ryanair 737-800 to be retrofitted with split scimitar winglets entered service. The winglets reduce fuel burn by 1.5% and are to be fitted to all existing −800 aircraft in the Ryanair fleet.[190][191]
In July 2022, Ryanair extended its Airbus A320 leases (for Lauda Europe) to 2028.[192][193][194]
In May 2023, Ryanair ordered 300 Boeing 737 MAX 10 aircraft, with a total list price of €36.3 billion before discounts. The deal included 150 firm orders and options for 150 more with deliveries between 2027 and 2033, with plans to replace its 737-800 aircraft.[195][196] The order followed an 18-month public argument with Boeing over pricing, and Ryanair ultimately achieved a lower discount off list price than previous orders.[197]
Ryanair initiated a regular dividend in November 2023.[198]
In June 2024, pursuant to a call option, Ryanair purchased the golden share in Malta Air owned by the Government of Malta for €25,000.[199]
In June 2025, Ryanair signed a $500 million engine deal with CFM International[200] and in February 2026, Ryanair signed a multibillion-dollar services agreement with CFM to bring engine maintenance in-house to maintain its 2,000 CFM International engines.[201][202]
In August 2025, Ryanair reached a deal with Booking Holdings to allow the sale of Ryanair tickets by brands owned by Booking Holdings, resolving a 3-year legal dispute.[203]
In November 2025, Ryanair shut its "prime" discount service, launched in February 2025, because customers exploited its benefits too much. The service offered free seat selections, travel insurance, and fare sales for €79 per year.[204] Also that month, Ryanair began solely using digital boarding passes.[205][206]
Business trends and financials
The key trends for the Ryanair Group are (as of the financial year ending 31 March):[207][208]
| Turnover (€m) | Profit after tax (€m) | Number of employees[a] | Number of passengers (m) |
Passenger load factor (%) |
Number of served airports | Number of served countries | Number of aircraft[b] | Sources | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2010 | 2,988 | 305 | 7,032 | 67 | 82 | 153 | 27 | 232 | [209] |
| 2011 | 3,629 | 375 | 8,063 | 72 | 83 | 158 | 27 | 272 | [210] |
| 2012 | 4,390 | 560 | 8,438 | 76 | 82 | 159 | 28 | 294 | [211] |
| 2013 | 4,884 | 569 | 9,059 | 79 | 82 | 167 | 28 | 305 | [212] |
| 2014 | 5,037 | 523 | 9,501 | 82 | 83 | 186 | 30 | 297 | [213] |
| 2015 | 5,654 | 867 | 9,586 | 91 | 88 | 190 | 30 | 308 | [214] |
| 2016 | 6,536 | 1,559 | 10,926 | 106 | 93 | 200 | 33 | 341 | [215] |
| 2017 | 6,648 | 1,316 | 12,438 | 120 | 94 | 207 | 34 | 383 | [216] |
| 2018 | 7,151 | 1,450 | 13,803 | 130 | 95 | 216 | 37 | 431 | [216] |
| 2019 | 7,697 | 885 | 15,938 | 142 | 96 | 219 | 37 | 471 | [216][217] |
| 2020 | 8,495 | 649 | 17,268 | 148 | 95 | 242 | 40 | 466 | [218][219] |
| 2021 | 1,636 | −1,015 | 15,016 | 28 | 71 | 225 | 37 | 451 | [220] |
| 2022 | 4,801 | −241 | 19,116 | 97 | 82 | 223 | 36 | 500 | [221][222] |
| 2023 | 10,780 | 1,314 | 22,261 | 169 | 93 | 222 | 36 | 537 | [223][224] |
| 2024 | 13,444 | 1,917 | 27,076 | 184 | 94 | 235 | 37 | 584 | [225] |
| 2025 | 13,949 | 1,612 | 25,952 | 200 | 94 | 228 | 37 | 613 | [226] |
Legal and regulatory issues
Employment issues
In 2011, a former Ryanair captain was awarded £40,000 by an employment tribunal in London after being fired for handing out a union form to a cabin crew member while on duty.[227]
In May 2014, Ryanair's office in Marseille was raided by French police investigating complaints that the company was failing to follow French employment law. Ryanair lodged a complaint.[228]
In May 2015, the Mayor of Copenhagen supported boycotting Ryanair and banned city employees from using the airline during working hours after Danish unions protested salary and working conditions.[229] After a court trial confirmed the unions' right to a strike action, Ryanair closed its operations in Denmark.[230]
In summer 2019, Ryanair attempted to block strike action by UK pilots through the courts, but the High Court allowed the strike over pay and working conditions to go ahead.[231]
In November 2025, Ryanair was denied permission to appeal against a judgement which ruled that a pilot who flew exclusively for the airline was a temporary worker and not a self-employed contractor. Ryanair used independent contractors as pilots to save costs.[232]
Passenger fees
Airport check-in
In May 2010, a Spanish customer brought a claim against Ryanair for unfair surcharges, claiming that the €40 surcharge on passengers who failed to print out a boarding card before arrival at the airport was unfair. In January 2011, judge ruled that Ryanair can neither demand passengers turn up at the airport with their boarding pass, nor charge them if they do not, and that the fines were abusive because aviation law obliges airlines to issue boarding passes.[233] Ryanair appealed the decision and the Appeals Court in Spain overturned the ruling in November 2011, holding that the surcharge complies with international law.[234]
Credit card surcharges
Ryanair has legally fought against regulations to ban credit card surcharges.[235] Ryanair uses a legal loophole to continue to charge credit card surcharges by allowing for payment with a very low frequency payment mechanism without a surcharge.[236]
Reneged on promotion to customer
In 2002, the High Court of Ireland in Dublin awarded Jane O'Keefe €67,500 damages and her costs after Ryanair reneged on a prize of free flights for life that she was awarded for being the airline's 1 millionth passenger in 1998.[237][238]
Treatment of disabled passengers
In 2002, Ryanair refused to provide wheelchairs for disabled passengers at London Stansted Airport, leading to lawsuits.[239] The airline argued that this provision was the responsibility of the airport authority, stating that wheelchairs were provided by 80 of the 84 Ryanair destination airports.[240] A court ruling in 2004 judged that the responsibility should be shared by the airline and the airport owners;[241] Ryanair responded by adding a surcharge of £0.50 to all its flight prices.[242]
In July 2012, a 69-year-old woman, Frances Duff, who has a colostomy, was refused permission to bring her medical kit on board, despite having a letter from her doctor explaining the need for her to carry this with her, and was asked by Ryanair boarding staff to lift her shirt in front of fellow passengers, to prove that she had a colostomy bag. Duff had previously attempted to contact Ryanair on three occasions to inquire about its policy regarding travellers' colostomy bags, but each time no one answered the phone after half an hour.[243]
Difficulty to contact customer service
An early day motion in the British Parliament put forward in July 2006 criticised Ryanair for its complex, predominantly online-only complaints process; it was signed by 57 members but tabled on 24 July 2006.[244]
Refusal to issue invoices for the VAT-exempt services
In 2017, the government of Portugal requested the intervention of the Tax and Customs Authority to force the company to issue invoices to passengers for the VAT-exempt services to allow them to claim tax refunds after passengers complained of difficulties in getting such invoices.[245]
Anti-trust issues
In December 2025, Italy's competition authority fined Ryanair €255 million for allegedly making it more difficult for travel agencies to offer flights by Ryanair in combination with flights from other airlines.[246]
Sales tactics
In February 2026, the Brussels Commercial Court ordered Ryanair to suspend "pressure selling" tactics on its website, including messages about seat scarcity and the urgency of purchasing tickets, promoting non-existent discounts, and hiding baggage charges.[247]
Publicity strategy
"Short of committing murder, negative publicity sells more seats than positive publicity. Charging for toilets continues to be the number one story that resurfaces in the press and it’s the gift that keeps on giving. We’ve never done it, but it keeps coming up on social networks every three or four months, the media picks up on it and then someone writes a story on it. Negative publicity generates so much more free publicity that it sells more tickets."

Ryanair CEO Michael O'Leary has deliberately courted controversy using misleading advertising and outlandish comments to generate free publicity for the airline.[249]
In 2000, a Ryanair launched a provocative ad campaign headlined "Expensive BAstards!", which compared Ryanair prices with those of British Airways. British Airways disagreed with the price comparisons and brought legal action against Ryanair. The High Court sided with Ryanair, ordering BA to make a payment towards Ryanair's court costs. The judge ruled "The complaint amounts to this: that Ryanair exaggerated in suggesting BA is five times more expensive because BA is only three times more expensive."[250]
In the spring of 2001, a Ryanair advertisement used a picture of Manneken Pis, a famous Belgian statue of a urinating child, with the words: "Pissed off with Sabena's high fares? Low fares have arrived in Belgium." Sabena sued and the court ruled that the advertisements were misleading and offensive. Ryanair was ordered to discontinue the advertisements immediately or face fines. Ryanair was also obliged to publish an apology and publish the court decision on its website. Ryanair used the published apologies for further advertising, primarily for further price comparisons.[251][252]
In February 2004, a Ryanair advert depicted fireworks with the headline "Fawking great offers", leading to condemnation by the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) for using offensive language in an advert.[253]
In August 2007, to promote its new flight routes to/from Belfast, an advertisement by Ryanair noted that "the company's fares are so low even the British army flew home". The advert showed Sinn Féin politicians Martin McGuinness and Gerry Adams next to a speech bubble which said "Ryanair fares are so low even the British Army flew home". Michael Copeland stated that the advertisement was "insensitive, crass and made a clear political statement".[254][255][256] Ulster Unionists reacted angrily to the advertisement, while the Advertising Standards Authority said it did not believe the ad would cause widespread offence.[257]
In August 2007, Ryanair was ordered by the ASA to stop claiming that its flights from London to Brussels were faster than Eurostar, because the claim was misleading, due to the required travel times to the airports Ryanair served. Ryanair stood by its claims, noting that the flight time is shorter than the train trip and that travel time is also required to reach Eurostar stations.[258][259]
In the fall of 2007, an advertisement published in UK newspapers depicted a model dressed as a schoolgirl accompanied by the words "Hottest back to school fares". The ASA instructed the airline to withdraw the advertisement in the United Kingdom, saying that it "appeared to link teenage girls with sexually provocative behaviour and was irresponsible and likely to cause serious or widespread offence". Ryanair said that it would "not be withdrawing this ad" and would "not provide the ASA with any of the undertakings they seek", on the basis that it found it absurd that "a picture of a fully clothed model is now claimed to cause 'serious or widespread offence' when many of the UK's leading daily newspapers regularly run pictures of topless or partially dressed females without causing any serious or widespread offence".[260]
In February 2008, a French court ordered Ryanair to pay damages of €1 to Nicolas Sarkozy and €60,000 to Carla Bruni for using their picture in an advertisement with a cartoon bubble above Bruni reading: "With Ryanair, my whole family can come to my wedding." The funds were donated to Restaurants du Cœur.[261]
In April 2008, Ryanair was found by the UK Office of Fair Trading to have breached advertising rules seven times in two years.[262]
From 2008 to 2014, Ryanair published and sold on its flights a charity calendar using female cabin crew as models,[263] raising money for homeless charity Dublin Simon Community in 2009,[264] KIDS (a charity for disabled children and their families) in 2010,[265][266] and the Teenage Cancer Trust in 2014. It was strongly criticised by the National Women's Council of Ireland (NWCI).[267] In December 2013, an advertising campaign for it was prohibited by Spain following complaints.[268][269] The airline stopped publishing the calendar after the 2014 edition.[270]
In February 2009, Ryanair CEO Michael O'Leary commented that the company was considering charging passengers £1 to use the toilet on its flights. O'Leary admitted that it was a publicity stunt saying "It is not likely to happen, but it makes for interesting and very cheap PR."[271][272]
Also that year, to generate publicity, Ryanair proposed eliminating two toilets to add six more seats,[273] redesigning the aircraft to allow standing passengers travelling in "vertical seats",[274] charging extra for overweight passengers,[275] and asking passengers to carry their checked-in luggage to the aircraft.[276]
In July 2009, Ryanair took several steps to "increase the clarity and transparency of its website and other advertising" after reaching an agreement with the OFT. A statement that "fares don't include optional fees/charges" was added to the website along with a table of fees to make fare comparisons easier.[277]
In July 2010, Ryanair circulated advertisements in two newspapers offering £10 one-way fares to European destinations. However, the offer was available only on a few dates and excluded fees and charges. Following a complaint from EasyJet, the ASA ruled the offer was "likely to mislead".[278][279]
In April 2011, Ryanair advertised tickets to "a place in the sun destinations" for £8 each, but the advert was banned when it was found that some of the destinations to where the discounted fares applied experienced sunshine for as little as three hours per day and temperatures between 0 and 14 °C (32 and 57 °F).[280]
In 2016, Ryanair stated that websites such as Opodo and CheapOair and their partners engaged in screen scraping and false advertising, and attempted to prevent them from showing Ryanair data.[281]
In February 2020, the ASA told Ryanair to provide adequate evidence to support environmental claims after the ASA banned adverts that claimed Ryanair was "Europe's… Lowest Emissions Airline" for being misleading. Ryanair had claimed in the adverts that the company had "the lowest carbon emissions of any major airline" and it was a "low CO2 emissions airline" based on Europe's top 27 airlines. Ryanair cited data from Eurocontrol and airline efficiency rankings from Brighter Plant from 2011; the ASA said that an efficiency ranking from 2011 was "of little value as substantiation for a comparison made in 2019". The ASA said that customers would interpret the adverts as saying that flying with Ryanair would mean they contributed fewer CO2 emissions to the earth atmosphere, which could not be proven and that the "ads must not appear again in their current forms".[282][283]
In late 2020, the airline faced criticism over its "jab and go" advert, implying that people can fly without a mask after receiving a COVID-19 vaccine. The ASA ordered the company to remove the adverts, which it called "irresponsible", after receiving 2,370 complaints, the third highest ever received for an advert.[284][285][286]
Just after the 2020 United States presidential election, Ryanair engaged in trolling against Donald Trump, posting that "Trump declaring victory this early is like disembarking before the plane has landed." The company also noted that Eric Trump had "the look of a man who might not have access to Air Force One in the future and will have to fly commercial", advertising its discounts within Europe.[287]
In January 2026, the company spat with Elon Musk over the costs, including fuel drag, of installing antennas by Starlink, which is majority-owned by Musk. Musk mused about buying the airline, while Ryanair launched a fare sale dedicated to Musk called the "idiot" sale, and O'Leary claimed that the spat increased bookings and resulted in a "wonderful boost in publicity"; he offered Musk a free ticket on Ryanair as a gesture of thanks.[288][289][290]
Environmental record
In 2018, Ryanair became the first airline and the only company excluding fossil fuel power stations to be among the 10 companies with the most greenhouse gas emissions in the European Union. That year, Ryanair had an emission equivalent of 9.9 megatonnes of CO2. Emissions had risen by 49% over five years. Environmentalists said that the aviation was undertaxed.[291]
In 2025, Ryanair was ranked the second most-efficient airline worldwide by Passenger CO2 per available seat kilometer.[292][293]
Destinations

Ryanair operates 3,500 short-haul flights per day serving approximately 230 airports in over 40 countries in Europe as well as Morocco, Jordan, and Turkey.[3][12] Ryanair has a significant presence in France, Germany, Italy, Poland, Spain, and the United Kingdom. It operates to more destinations in Italy than anywhere else, with fourteen bases and nine non-base airports. Ryanair also serves vacation destinations such as Sicily, the Canary Islands, Cyprus, the Greek Islands, and Malta.
Ryanair's largest base is at London-Stansted, followed by its home base at Dublin Airport.[294]
To save money on landing fees and turnaround time, Ryanair uses many smaller or secondary airports.[295] Examples include Paris Beauvais,[296] Hahn Airport,[297] and Rome Ciampino.
Major airports served by Ryanair include Amsterdam-Schiphol, Athens, Barcelona-El Prat, Berlin-Brandenburg, Brussels Airport, Bucharest-Otopeni, Budapest, Copenhagen, Dublin, Lisbon, London-Stansted, Madrid, Manchester, Marseille, Oslo-Gardermoen, Rome-Fiumicino, and Stockholm-Arlanda.
When Ryanair negotiates with airport operators, it demands very low landing and handling fees, as well as financial assistance with marketing and promotional campaigns.[298] Ryanair also initiates flights between airports that have cheap operating costs, not necessarily based on market research, and will try to generate demand that did not previously exist.
Ryanair flies in a point-to-point transit model rather than a spoke-hub distribution paradigm model, where the passengers have to change aircraft in transit at a major airport.[299] In April 2017, Ryanair began selling connecting flights, starting with a new transfer hub in Rome Fiumicino Airport (FCO).[300]
Routes history
Ryanair launched a base of operation at Brussels South Charleroi Airport in February 2001.[301]
In April 2006, Ryanair withdrew its Dublin–Cardiff route, claiming high airport charges.[302]
In April 2006, Ryanair was forced to give up flights from Rome Ciampino by the Italian Civil Aviation Authority (ENAC).[303] Its route to/from Alghero was allocated to Air One, as a public service obligation (PSO) route.[304] Other routes were taken, with ENAC citing complaints from residents of congestion and noise. Ryanair successfully appealed the decision in Italian courts in November 2007.[305]
In February 2009, Ryanair increased routes to/from Hahn Airport after the airport ended plans to introduce a €3 per passenger departure fee.[306]
In October 2009, Ryanair cut the number of its flights out of Shannon Airport by 75% beginning April 2010, with the loss of 150 jobs.[307]
In June 2010, Ryanair cut its Dublin flights by 15% for the following winter, blaming a tourist tax by the Irish government for a decline in demand.[308]
In August 2010, Ryanair announced its first-ever Bulgarian destination, connecting Plovdiv with London Stansted.[309]
In late 2010, Ryanair began withdrawing all routes from its smallest base, Belfast City, and made further cuts to its routes to/from Shannon due to increased airport fees.[310]
In the summer of 2014, the airline opened bases in Athens, Lisbon, Brussels, and Rome.[213]
Ryanair began service to/from Milan Malpensa Airport in December 2015, initially with one aircraft.[311]
In November 2015, Ryanair launched flights to Israel.[312] In September 2025, Ryanair ended service after it could not get confirmation of summer 2026 slots access to the low-cost terminal at Ben Gurion Airport.[313]
In December 2014, Ryanair announced plans to open a base in 2015 in the Azores.[314]
In February 2016, Ryanair closed its operations in Alghero and Pescara due to a 40% increase in passenger taxes.[315]
In June 2016, Ryanair withdrew over half of its flights from Rygge Airport in Norway. The airport, which was privately owned, shut down shortly thereafter due to the lack of remaining volume.[316]
In February 2018, Ryanair cut flights and eliminated its base at Glasgow Airport due to the Scottish Government not abolishing or reducing passenger taxes.[317]
In December 2020, Ryanair announced a base at Venice Treviso.[318]
In March 2021, Ryanair reopened its base in Zadar and announced a base in Zagreb.[319]
In April 2021, Ryanair increased flights to/from Manchester.[320]
In November 2021, Ryanair opened a base in Riga.[321]
In October 2021, Ryanair announced a base in Venice Marco Polo Airport.[322]
In autumn 2021, Ryanair began flights to/from Stockholm Arlanda.[323]
In January 2022, Ryanair announced that it would close its base at Frankfurt Airport in a row over fees, with the loss of 17 routes.[324]
In December 2023, Ryanair announced a $1.4 billion investment in Morocco for its summer 2024 schedule including over 1,100 weekly flights on 175 routes, including 35 new routes.[325]
In September 2024, Ryanair announced 10 additional routes to/from in Sweden after Sweden's right-wing government ended an aviation tax implemented in 2018 by the then-ruling centre-left government to raise the cost of carbon emissions.[326]
In January 2025, Ryanair announced five new routes to/from Abruzzo Airport: Wrocław, Cagliari, Valencia and Kaunas beginning June 2025.[327]
In March 2025, in response to a new aviation tax by the Danish government, Ryanair closed the base in Billund and terminated operations at Aalborg.[328]
In June 2025, Ryanair launched additional routes to/from Bournemouth.[329]
In September 2025, Ryanair announced new routes to/from Trapani.[330]
In October 2025, Ryanair restarted flights to Jordan.[331]
In November 2025, Ryanair lost two landing slots at Eindhoven airport due to repeatedly late flights.[332]
In January 2026, after the German government reduced airport fees, the company reinstated many routes in Germany.[333] Also in January 2026, Ryanair announced a 10% reduction in flights to/from Charleroi due to the implementation of a €3 per ticket passenger tax.[334]
In January 2026, Ryanair added new routes to/from Tirana.[335]
In February 2026, Ryanair added routes to/from Malta, bringing its total number of destinations served from Malta to 70 and its projected total number of annual passengers transported to Malta to 6 million.[336]
In April 2026, Ryanair cut flights to/from Spain and Portugal, primarily at smaller airports, citing airport charges set by ANA Aeroportos de Portugal as well as environmental taxes linked to the European Union Emissions Trading System and a €2 travel tax.[337]
Fleet
Current fleet
As of February 2026[update], Ryanair and its subsidiaries operates the following aircraft:[338][339]
| Aircraft | In service | Orders | Passengers | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Airbus A320-200 | 26 | — | 180 | Leased until 2028.[192] Operated by Lauda Europe. |
| Boeing 737-700 | 1 | — | 148[340] | Operated by Buzz. |
| Boeing 737-800 | 410 | — | 189[23] | Largest operator. |
| Boeing 737 MAX 8-200 | 210[341] | — | 197[342] | Launch customer and largest operator.[343] [344] |
| Boeing 737 MAX 10 | — | 150 | 228 | Order with 150 options. Deliveries from 2027 to 2034.[345] |
| Bombardier Challenger 3500 | 4[346] | — | VIP | For corporate use to quickly move engineers, parts and crew around the network when an aircraft needs repairs.[347] |
| Total | 651 | 150 | ||
Historic fleet
Ryanair has operated the following types of aircraft in the past:
| Aircraft | Number | Introduced | Retired | Notes | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Airbus A320-200 | 2 | 2015 | 2015 | One aircraft was transferred to SmartLynx Airlines after a short lease period with Ryanair, continuing operations under its new operator.[citation needed] | [348] |
| ATR 42-300 | 4 | 1989 | 1991 | One operated by Inter-Canadien. | [349] |
| BAC One-Eleven 500 | 16 | 1986 | 1994 | Including one aircraft on short-term lease from TAROM. | [350] |
| Convair 580 | 1 | 1988 | 1988 | Operated by Partnair. | [citation needed] |
| Boeing 737-200 | 21 | 1994 | 2005 | Replaced by Boeing 737-800. Ryanair sold its fleet of twenty 737-200 aircraft to Autodirect Aviation LLC for $8.1 million in October 2004; six aircraft had already been retired, and the remaining fourteen were transferred between 2004 and 2005. |
[351][349] |
| Boeing 737-300 | 7 | 2002 | 2004 | Replaced by Boeing 737-800. | [349] |
| Boeing 737-400 | 1 | 2004 | 2005 | Seasonal lease from Air Atlanta Icelandic and AirExplore. | [352][349] |
| Embraer EMB 110 Bandeirante | 1 | 1985 | 1989 | [350] | |
| Hawker Siddeley HS 748 | 2 | 1986 | 1990 | [350] | |
| Short S-25 Sunderland 5 | —N/a | 1989 | 1989 | Sunderland G-BJHS was painted for a proposed Ryanair sponsorship of the Foynes Flying Boat Museum, but this did not happen, and the aircraft was returned to a white and blue livery. | [350] |
Safety incidents
- On 21 March 2008, Ryanair Flight 1216 skidded off the runway while landing in Limoges. The weather at the time was poor. Emergency slides were deployed and an emergency evacuation announced.[353][354]
- On 10 November 2008, bird strikes damaged both engines on the approach of Ryanair Flight 4102 from Frankfurt–Hahn Airport, forcing an emergency landing at Rome–Ciampino Airport.[353] Two crew members and eight passengers were taken to hospital with minor injuries.[355] The port undercarriage of the Boeing 737 Next Generation collapsed,[356] leaving the aircraft stranded on the runway and closing the airport for over 35 hours.[355] The rear fuselage, engines, and undercarriage were damaged rendering the aircraft unusable; it was scrapped.[357] The National Agency for the Safety of Flight released an investigation report on the incident in 2018.[358][359]
- On 26 July 2012, three Ryanair aircraft inbound to Madrid–Barajas Airport were asked to circle above Valencia due to thunderstorms. After circling for approximately one hour, the pilots asked to land in Valencia because they were running out of fuel. An investigation found that while the aircraft did fly with the legal minimum of fuel, they did not have enough fuel for a contingency, such as being required to circle in the air for an extra hour.[360][361][362][363] In an interview broadcast by Katholieke Radio Omroep (KRO), four anonymous Ryanair pilots claimed they were being pressured to carry as little fuel as possible on board to cut costs. Ryanair and its CEO Michael O'Leary denied the allegations and sued KRO.[364] In April 2014, the Dutch Court found that KRO had provided sufficient evidence in two television episodes of Mayday, Mayday broadcast in 2012 and 2013 to back the claims in respect of Ryanair's fuel policy and "fear culture". It also found that Ryanair was given a right to reply to the claims and that the broadcasting of the programmes was in the public interest. Ryanair was ordered to pay the legal costs of the case.[365] Ryanair appealed the case[366] and sued a pilot for defamation.[367] The incident was the subject of a documentary on Apple TV.[368]
- On 23 May 2021, Ryanair Flight 4978 from Athens to Vilnius was forced to land at Minsk National Airport by the Belarusian government while it was in Belarusian airspace, using the pretense of a false bomb threat. Belarusian opposition activist Roman Protasevich and his girlfriend, who were wanted by the Belarusian government, were onboard; they were arrested upon landing. The landing was personally ordered by president Alexander Lukashenko and was forced by a Belarusian Air Force MiG-29 fighter aircraft.[369][370][371][372] Belarusian opposition leader Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya called for an ICAO investigation.[373] Airlines then began avoiding Belarusian airspace.[374]
- On 3 October 2024, Ryanair Flight 8826 operating from Brindisi to Turin caught fire before take-off; the passengers were evacuated and Brindisi Airport was closed for three hours. Italian MEPs Flavio Tosi, Salvatore De Meo, Giusi Princi, Massimiliano Salini, Caterina Chinnici, Letizia Moratti, and Marco Falcone demanded investigations into the company's safety practices by the Italian Civil Aviation Authority (ENAC) and the European Union Aviation Safety Agency.[375][376][377]
Gallery
- Ryanair operated BAC 1-11 series 500 aircraft between 1988 and 1993.
- Ryanair Boeing 737-200 in 2001
- Ryanair Boeing 737-800 in 2005
- Boeing 737 MAX 8
- Ryanair 737-800 boarding at Sofia Airport
- A former Ryanair 737-300 with a Continental Airlines hybrid livery in 2003
- The sole Ryanair Boeing 737-700
- Ryanair Boeing 737-800
- Ryanair Boeing 737 MAX 200
- Ryanair 737 boarding using built-in forward airstairs and rear boarding stairs
- Boeing 737-800 with Ryanair livery
- Boeing 737 MAX 200 with Buzz livery
See also
Notes
References
- ↑ "RYANAIR TO CLOSE 7 AIRCRAFT BERLIN BASE FROM OCT 2026". 24 April 2026.
- ↑ "RYANAIR CLOSES 3 AIRCRAFT THESSALONIKI BASE FOR WINTER '26". 8 May 2026.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Ryanair Holdings plc FY 2025 Annual Report (Form 20-F)". United States Securities and Exchange Commission. 19 May 2025.
- 1 2 "Route Map". Flight Connections.
- 1 2 3 Aldous, Richard (2013). Tony Ryan: Ireland's Aviator. Gill & Macmillan Ltd. p. 80. ISBN 978-0-7171-5781-5.
- ↑ "Ryanair Holdings Public Limited Company". lei-ireland.ie.
- ↑ O'Halloran, Barry (25 August 2016). "Ryanair carries more international passengers than any other airline". Irish Times.
- ↑ "Largest airlines by market cap". Companies Market Cap.
- ↑ "Top publicly traded airlines by earnings". Companies Market Cap.
- 1 2 Pope, Conor (27 February 2026). "'Fake results': Ryanair responds after finishing last in passenger satisfaction survey". The Irish Times.
- ↑ Mohamad, Alaa (15 December 2024). "Ryanair: How Europe's Cheapest Airline Became Its Most Profitable". Driven.
- 1 2 Syme, Pete (4 March 2026). "Ryanair's CEO says flight bookings in Europe have surged since Middle East travel chaos began". Business Insider – via AOL.
- ↑ Efthymiou, Marina; Christidis, Panayotis (1 July 2023). "Low-Cost Carriers route network development". Annals of Tourism Research. 101 103608. doi:10.1016/j.annals.2023.103608. ISSN 0160-7383.
- ↑ "'You can't take that on the plane for free!' How Ryanair turned its staff into bounty hunters". The Guardian. 8 April 2026.
- ↑ Asquith, James (4 March 2020). "The King Of Ancillary Revenue—How Chaos, Confusion And Low Prices Created One Of The Most Profitable Airlines In The World". Forbes.
- ↑ Pescovitz, David (26 January 2022). "Low-cost airlines save real money by making you climb stairs to board instead of using a jet bridge". Boing Boing.
- ↑ "Ryanair 'to cut frills further'". BBC News. 15 February 2004.
- ↑ "Ryanair Cuts 800000 Seats to Germany in Dispute Over Taxes". Bloomberg News. 15 October 2025.
- ↑ Smyth, Ronan (20 January 2026). "ieExplains: Why Elon Musk can't buy Ryanair despite his online jibes". Irish Examiner.
- ↑ Davies, Rob (24 September 2017). "Michael O'Leary: a gift for controversy and an eye on the bottom line". The Observer.
- ↑ "Registered address and VAT number". Ryanair.
- ↑ Tully, Shawn (23 March 2024). "As critics trash Boeing, the outspoken CEO of Ryanair emerges as an unlikely defender". Fortune.
- 1 2 "About Us – Our Fleet". Ryanair.
- ↑ "Ryanair Holdings". Forbes.
- ↑ "Ryanair Holdings". Fortune.
- ↑ "Latest: Ryanair brand Which? customer satisfaction survey 'worthless'". Irish Examiner. 16 December 2017.
- ↑ "Ryanair named 'worst short-haul airline'". BBC News. 5 January 2019.
- ↑ Topham, Gwyn (5 January 2019). "Ryanair ranked 'worst airline' for sixth year in a row". The Guardian.
- ↑ "Ryanair named 'worst short-haul airline'". BBC News. 5 January 2019.
- ↑ "Ryanair rated 'greedy and arrogant' by customers". BBC News. 23 August 2019.
- ↑ Peters, Luke (17 February 2024). "From small-scale startup to low-cost leviathan – marking 40 years of Ryanair". AeroTime.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 Veitch, Robert (11 November 2024). "The method and madness, how Ryanair learnt to fly". Key.Aero.
- ↑ Hancock, Ciaran (12 October 2009). "Flying too close to the sun – how poor management and greed downed GPA". The Irish Times.
- ↑ Endacott, Steve (10 July 2025). "Ryanair will be planning some bold moves after turning 40". Travel Weekly.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Liu, Jim (10 April 2015). "Routes Europe Flashback: Ryanair From the Beginning". Aviation Week & Space Technology.
- ↑ Slater, Sarah (14 July 2025). "Ryanair marks 40 years since first flight took off from Waterford Airport". Waterford News & Star.
- 1 2 "First chief executive of Ryanair who fell foul of Tony Ryan". The Irish Times. 21 April 2018.
- 1 2 "O'Leary's Ryanair ticket to the top". The Times. 29 August 2023.
- ↑ "Ryanair Ltd". Ebsco.
- ↑ Edwards, Elaine (31 December 2016). "Fledgling Ryanair clashed with minister over approval for jets". The Irish Times.
- ↑ "Tony Ryan". The Daily Telegraph. 5 October 2007.
- ↑ "RyanAir: The ' Southwest' of European Airlines". IBS Case Development Centre.
- 1 2 Espiner, Tom (4 February 2019). "Michael O'Leary: Ryanair's outspoken boss". BBC News.
- ↑ Haynes, Thomas (23 July 2020). "35 Years of Ryanair – the Airline You Love to Hate". Key.Aero.
- ↑ "Meet the legend who inspired Ryanair to fly so high". Irish Independent. 16 August 2012.
- ↑ "O'Leary's Ryanair Close to Catching Southwest in Market Value". Bloomberg News. 9 September 2015.
- ↑ "Tony Ryan". The Daily Telegraph. 5 October 2007.
- ↑ Lyons, Tom (23 February 2025). "First there was Ryanair: How the Ryan family came back from the brink and brought low-fare airlines to the world". Irish Times.
- ↑ Coyle, Colin (29 August 2023). "Ryanair founder's war with O'Leary". The Times.
- ↑ Jolly, David (28 July 2008). "Ryanair profit falls, hammering shares". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331.
- ↑ "Ryanair pilots and crew enjoy shares windfall". Irish Independent. 18 September 2000.
- ↑ "Ryan family to realise £117m from share sales". Irish Times. 29 May 1999.
- ↑ "SUBMISSION TO THE COMMISSION FOR AVIATION REGULATION ON THE DETERMINATION OF AIRPORT CHARGES" (PDF). Irish Aviation Authority. 27 March 2001.
- ↑ Kennedy, John (11 April 2015). "John Beckett, entrepreneur who built the first Ryanair website (video)". Silicon Republic.
- ↑ "Go! scraps Dublin plans after price war with Ryanair". Irish Examiner. 13 December 2001.
- ↑ "Going, going, gone - Go leaves Dublin". RTÉ. 30 January 2009.
- ↑ "Ryanair in Boeing spending spree". BBC News. 24 January 2002.
- ↑ McCaffrey, Una (9 September 2005). "Ryanair's new routes could face delays due to strike". The Irish Times. Archived from the original on 22 October 2012.
- ↑ Coyle, Dominic (29 April 2003). "Buzz gets go-ahead to resume flights". The Irish Times. Archived from the original on 22 October 2012.
- ↑ Guider, Ian (25 June 2003). "Son of Ryanair founder hands in resignation". Irish Examiner.
- ↑ Webb, Nick (8 September 2013). "Tony Ryan offered to quit the board of Ryanair in dispute over O'Leary's rants". Irish Independent.
- ↑ McCaughren, Samantha (12 August 2003). "MyTravelLite route to challenge Ryanair". Irish Independent.
- ↑ O'Sullivan, Jane (22 June 2005). "Ryanair sticks to 10% growth forecast". The Irish Times. Archived from the original on 22 October 2012.
- ↑ O'Connell, Dominic (18 June 2006). "Easyjet scraps Irish routes". The Times.
- ↑ "Ryanair accused in TV 'expose'". The Guardian. 13 February 2006.
- ↑ "Ryanair goes on the offensive over UK TV safety allegations". FlightGlobal. 10 February 2006.
- ↑ "Programme showed no policy breaches, says O'Leary". The Irish Examiner. 13 February 2006.
- ↑ Clark, Andrew (8 May 2006). "Ryanair ... the low-fare airline with the sky-high insurance levy". The Guardian. London.
- ↑ "Ryanair makes $1.9 billion bid for Aer Lingus". NBC News. Reuters. 5 October 2006.
- ↑ "Aer Lingus says no as Ryanair ups stake". RTÉ. 5 October 2006.
- ↑ Savage, James (6 September 2006). "DFDS scraps Newcastle-Gothenburg line". The Local. Archived from the original on 28 August 2007.
- ↑ Morrison, Murdo; Learmount, David (11 April 2007). "Ryanair boss Michael O'Leary plans launch of transatlantic no-frills airline with fleet of 50 Airbus A350s or Boeing 787s". FlightGlobal.
- ↑ Black, Fergus (13 April 2007). "O'Leary plans new all-frills airline for flights to US". Irish Independent.
- ↑ Riegel, Ralph (3 February 2010). "Ryanair wages price war on Aer Lingus in holiday market". Irish Independent.
- ↑ Moores, Victoria (2 July 2012). "Long-haul, low-cost FlyA slated for 2013 launch". Aviation Week & Space Technology.
- ↑ Ó Conghaile, Pól (10 June 2023). "Ryanair says 'no' to transatlantic travel – 'nobody has ever really cracked that'". Irish Independent.
- ↑ Milmo, Dan (25 August 2007). "Ryanair introduces £4 check-in fee as latest surcharge to slash costs". The Guardian.
- ↑ "Ryanair to introduce check-in charge". RTÉ. 24 August 2007.
- ↑ "Ryanair to charge for airport check-ins". Reuters. 24 August 2007.
- ↑ "Tony Ryan, Who Founded Discount Airline, Dies at 71". The New York Times. Bloomberg News. 4 October 2007.
- ↑ Done, Kevin (24 October 2008). "Ryanair closes Valencia base". Financial Times.
- ↑ "Ryanair to stop Valencia flights". The Independent. 24 October 2008.
- ↑ "Aer Lingus rejects Ryanair offer". BBC News. 1 December 2008.
- ↑ Michaels, Daniel; Fottrell, Quentin; Niththyananthan, Kaveri (1 December 2008). "Ryanair's Renewed Offer for Aer Lingus Is Rejected". The Wall Street Journal.
- 1 2 "Aer Lingus rejects Ryanair's offer". RTÉ. 1 December 2008.
- ↑ Gergely, Andras; Smith, Kevin (22 January 2009). Cowell, David (ed.). "Ryanair concedes defeat in Aer Lingus bid". Reuters.
- ↑ Kaminski-Morrow, David (29 October 2010). "UK regulator surprises Ryanair with Aer Lingus merger probe". FlightGlobal.
- ↑ "Ryanair / Aer Lingus merger inquiry". gov.uk.
- ↑ "Ryanair told to sell Aer Lingus stake". BBC News. 11 June 2015.
- ↑ Neilan, Catherine (11 June 2015). "The Competition and Markets Authority issues "final order" demanding Ryanair sell its Aer Lingus holding to British Airways parent IAG". City A.M.
- ↑ Mulligan, John (10 September 2008). "Ryanair wins judicial review of decision over Knock route".
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- ↑ Keane, Connor (5 October 2004). "Ryanair sells 20 jets for €8.1m". Irish Examiner.
- ↑ Nadalet, Ivan (6 February 2015). "Ryanair to lease B737-400s, −800s from Slovakia's Air Explore". ch-aviation.
- 1 2 "Accident description". Flight Safety Foundation.
- ↑ "RYANAIR flight FR1216 - Aviation Accident Database". 20 January 2016.
- 1 2 Hradecky, Simon (10 November 2008). "Accident: Ryanair B738 at Rome on Nov 10th 2008, engine and landing gear trouble, temporarily departed runway". The Aviation Herald.
- ↑ "Bird-hit jet in emergency landing". BBC News. 10 November 2008.
- ↑ Kaminski-Morrow, David (13 November 2008). "Pictures: Bird-struck Ryanair 737 extensively damaged". FlightGlobal.
- ↑ "Report EI-DYG" (PDF). National Agency for the Safety of Flight. 20 December 2018.
- ↑ "Official italian accident report issued by ANSV and its english translation". Aviation Accidents Database. 9 January 2019.
- ↑ "Ryanair emergency landings 'followed procedure'". BBC News. 15 August 2012.
- ↑ O'Connor, Fearghal (20 September 2012). "IAA report recommends Ryanair should review fuel policy". Business Post.
- ↑ Halpin, Padraic (20 September 2012). Holmes, David (ed.). "Ryanair planes had enough fuel: Irish watchdog". Reuters.
- ↑ Smith, Oliver (21 September 2012). "Despite claims, Ryanair planes were not skimping on fuel during Spain re-routings". Skift.
- ↑ "Hardtalk – Ryanair's Michael O'Leary: Fuel risk claims are lies". BBC News. 11 October 2012.
- ↑ ""Mayday Mayday" wins over Ryanair defamation allegations". European Cockpit Association. 17 April 2014.
- ↑ "Ryanair to Appeal Dutch Court Ruling Over TV Documentary". Aviation International News. 28 April 2014.
- ↑ O'Loughlin, Ann (10 October 2014). "Ryanair sues former pilot for defamation". Irish Examiner.
- ↑ "Mayday!". Apple TV.
- ↑ Reevell, Patrick (24 May 2021). "Ryanair flight forced to land in Belarus with top activist on board". ABC News.
- ↑ Troianovski, Anton; Nechepurenko, Ivan (23 May 2021). "Belarus Forces Down Plane to Seize Dissident; Europe Sees 'State Hijacking'". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331.
- ↑ "Ryanair plane: Western powers voice outrage at plane 'hijacking'". BBC News. 24 May 2021.
- ↑ "Belarus diverts Ryanair plane to arrest activist journalist". Deutsche Welle. 23 May 2021.
- ↑ "EU, NATO Demand Belarus Explain 'Forcible' Diversion Of Passenger Plane, Detention Of Journalist". Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. 23 May 2021.
- ↑ Chokshi, Niraj; Reed, Stanley (24 May 2021). "Airlines Start Skirting Belarus After It Forced Down a Plane". The New York Times.
- ↑ Humphries, Conor; Di Donfrancesco, Marta; Weir, Keith (3 October 2024). Heinrich, Mark (ed.). "Passengers evacuated from Ryanair plane in Italy after fumes seen". Reuters.
- ↑ Nadeau, Barbie Latza; Mortensen, Antonia (3 October 2024). "184 passengers and crew evacuated as Ryanair Boeing plane catches fire on runway in Italy". CNN.
- ↑ "Incidents on Ryanair planes – concerns for passenger safety". European Parliament. 7 October 2024 – via Europa.
Further reading
- Calder, Simon (2002). No Frills: The Truth Behind the Low-Cost Revolution in the Skies. London: Virgin Books. ISBN 1-85227-932-X.
- Creaton, Siobhán (2004). Ryanair: How a Small Irish Airline Conquered Europe. London: Aurum Press. ISBN 1-85410-992-8.
- Creaton, Siobhán (2007). Ryanair: The full story of the controversial low-cost airline. London: Aurum Press. ISBN 978-1-84513-293-4.
- Ruddock, Alan (2007). Michael O'Leary – A Life in Full Flight. Dublin: Penguin Books. ISBN 978-1-84488-055-3.
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