Ryanair will now offer flights from major Paris airport

Two new UK routes also announced by easyJet and WizzAir

The flights will begin from April 1
Published Modified

Ryanair will begin flights from Paris Orly airport from April 2025 onwards, with two routes already confirmed. 

The low-cost carrier will open routes to Bratislava in Slovakia and Bergamo in Italy from the city’s second-largest airport, according to documents seen by French media Les Echos

These new flight routes will not affect Ryanair routes out of Paris Beauvais, where the carrier has a major hub.

Further flights from Paris Orly, including routes to the UK and Ireland, may be announced in due course by Ryanair, with the airport offering over 8,000 new flight slots to airline companies.

New flight slots were also given to low-cost Spanish carrier Volotea, as well as Lot and WizzAir, with the latter offering flights to London Gatwick four times per week from the airport.

Operator easyJet will also offer a flight to Southampton from Paris Orly.

Only one new long-haul flight – to Montréal by low-cost carrier Frenchbee – was announced. 

Read more: New direct Paris-Montréal air route to launch in 2025

Airlines that are new to Paris Orly such as Volotea and Ryanair must use their flight slots for the routes requested, but those already using the airport can modify the routes they operate on these new slots.

Contrasting Ryanair positions 

Ryanair’s acquisition of flight slots at Paris Orly comes less than two weeks after they threatened to pull out of ten regional airports in France. 

The airline said that a hike on taxes for airline tickets (paid by airlines but usually passed onto customers) made routes to these destinations unsustainable.

Read more: Ryanair threatens to end flights to ten regional French airports over tax plan

The Senate voted in favour of the taxes at the end of last week, however in a heavily modified format.

Its version saw the tax per seat roughly halved from what the government initially planned (down to €5.30 from €9.50 for a European flight), as well as exempting flights to certain smaller regional airports in France from being subject to the tax. 

Budget minister Laurent Saint-Martin said that it was against European law to withhold the taxes from certain routes. 

Read more: Plane tickets, gas boilers, bottled water: French Senate votes for tax increases

Whether the taxes will be implemented is dependent on whether the Senate’s version is placed in the final bill, and if the budget can be passed before the government succumbs to a vote of no confidence. 

Read more: Why and when is the French prime minister at risk of losing his job?