Skip to content
Photo: Swedavia.
Photo: Swedavia.

Press release -

Ryanair continues to expand in Sweden with a new base and some 20 new routes at Stockholm Arlanda Airport

Ryanair will start flying to Stockholm Arlanda Airport during the winter season 2021 when it will open a base. Initially, this will involve two aircraft and some twenty European destinations, which will mean nearly 90 new weekly departures from Arlanda. A number of destinations are new for the airport and complement Arlanda’s other destinations on offer. In conjunction with the set-up of operations, Ryanair will launch domestic service in Sweden for the first time, to Gothenburg and Malmö from Arlanda.

Ryanair will start flying to Stockholm Arlanda Airport during the winter season 2021 when it will open a base. Initially, this will involve two aircraft and some twenty European destinations, which will mean nearly 90 new weekly departures from Arlanda. A number of destinations are new for the airport and complement Arlanda’s other destinations on offer. In conjunction with the set-up of operations, Ryanair will launch domestic service in Sweden for the first time, to Gothenburg and Malmö from Arlanda.

“It is with great joy that we welcome Ryanair to Arlanda and Ryanair’s continued expansion in the Swedish market. Their large number of destinations is an important addition and complement to the existing range of destinations available at our airports. At the same time, access is improved both within Sweden and outside the country, and this is especially true for the important visiting relatives and friends travel segment. Access will be important in the restart after the pandemic, and more direct routes are important for regional growth and for the tourism industry all across Sweden. We have had a good partnership for many years with Ryanair that we now look forward to developing in the years to come,” says Charlotte Ljunggren, Director of Market & Commercial Development at Swedavia.

Ryanair also continues to expand at Göteborg Landvetter. In addition to the new domestic route to Stockholm, Ryanair is launching service in the autumn to Zagreb, Croatia; Riga, Latvia; and Billund, Denmark.

After a period of absence due to the Covid-19 pandemic, Ryanair is also returning to Malmö Airport. In early June, Ryanair will resume service to the Polish city of Krakow, followed by service to Arlanda in the autumn.

Ryanair was founded in 1985 by the Ireland-based Ryan family. The Irish low-cost carrier Ryanair Holdings plc is the largest airline group in Europe today and includes the subsidiaries Buzz, Lauda and Malta Air along with Ryanair. The company has some 80 bases with connections to about 250 destinations in 40 countries, with a fleet of 460 aircraft and another 210 Boeing 737 aircraft on order. Ryanair has high sustainability goals and plans to fuel 12.5 per cent of its flights with sustainable aviation fuel by 2030. For more information about the airline: www.ryanair.com

Swedavia has carried out ambitious sustainability work for many years. All ten of its airports achieved the goal of zero fossil carbon dioxide emissions from their own operations by year-end 2020. Swedavia also works actively to promote the switch to biofuel and has the goal that five per cent of all fuel used for refuelling at Swedish airports shall be fossil-free by 2025.

Planned routes and number of weekly departures, Winter 2021, from Stockholm Arlanda Airport (ARN)

From Stockholm Arlanda Airport

Weekly departures

Domestic

Göteborg Landvetter Airport (GOT)

14

Malmö Airport (MMX)

10

International

Aalborg Airport (AAL), Denmark

3

Alicante Airport (ALC), Spain

2

Karlsruhe Baden-Baden Airport (FKB), Germany

2

Banja Luka International Airport (BNX), Bosnia and Herzegovina

2

Bologna Airport (BLQ), Italy

2

Brussels South Charleroi Airport (CRL), Belgium

4

Gdansk Lech Walesa Airport (GDN), Poland

7

Kaunas International Airport (KUN), Lithuania

2

John Paul II International Krakow-Balice Airport (KRK), Poland

7

Liverpool John Lennon Airport (LPL), Great Britain

2

London Stansted Airport (STN), Great Britain

7

Malaga Airport (AGP), Spain

3

Milan Bergamo Airport (BGY), Italy

3

Nis Airport (INI), Serbia

2

Riga International Airport (RIX), Latvia

5

Tallinn Airport (TLL), Estonia

3

Thessaloniki Macedonia International Airport (SKG), Greece

2

Warsaw Modlin Airport (WMI), Poland

5

Vienna International Airport (VIE), Austria

2


Swedavia complies with the authorities’ advice and recommendations on Covid-19. In addition, we comply with international aviation industry regulations. For information about the measures Swedavia has introduced for safe travel, see for example: www.swedavia.com/arlanda/before-your-journey.

For further information, please contact Swedavia’s press office at tel. +46(0)10-109 01 00 or press@swedavia.se.

Related links

Topics

Categories


The Swedavia Group owns, operates and develops ten airports across Sweden. Our role is to create the access Sweden needs to facilitate travel, business and meetings. Safe, satisfied passengers are the foundation of Swedavia’s business. Swedavia is a world leader in developing airports with the least possible environmental impact. The Group had revenue of about 2.5 billion kronor in 2020 and has nearly 2,600 employees.

Contacts

Press Office

Press Office

Press contact +46(0)10-10 90 100

Related content

Stockholm Arlanda Airport. Photo: Victoria Ström.

Swedavia’s First Quarter 2021 interim report: Dramatic decline in traffic and continued heavy losses despite measures and aid

Swedavia’s first quarter results were strongly affected by the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on travel. During the period, travel at the company’s airports decreased 86 per cent, thus making it the fourth straight quarter that Swedavia has reported a loss. Operating profit was SEK -381 M. The company’s net revenue decreased 63 per cent to SEK 457 M (SEK 1,245 M).

Stockholm Arlanda Airport. Photo: Maria Moustakakis.

Swedavia’s traffic statistics for March 2021

In March, nearly 341,000 passengers flew via Swedavia’s airports, a 90 per cent decrease compared to corresponding pre-pandemic passenger levels in March 2019. Compared to March 2020, which was also greatly affected by the pandemic, the decrease was 74 per cent. Overall, air travel remains at historically low levels, and market prospects are still uncertain due to the course of the pandemic.

Photo: Svante Örnberg.

Swedavia reaches milestone in its climate work – Swedavia’s own airport operations now fossil-free

Just before the end of last year, Swedavia became one of the first airport operators in the world to have the operations it runs under its own management at its ten airports be fossil-free. The company notes this milestone in its Annual and Sustainability Report 2020. Swedavia is now extending that work to supporting other companies and organisations at its airports in transforming their operation

Göteborg Landvetter Airport. Photo: Kalle Sanner.

New test center for Covid-19 PCR and antibody tests at Landvetter

As the world now slowly opens up and we can soon travel again, there is strong demand from passengers and airlines for the possibility to get PCR and antibody tests and have travel certificates issued at the airport. Swedavia has signed an agreement with ExpressCare to set up a test center at Göteborg Landvetter Airport.

Photo: Felix Odell.

Swedavia’s traffic statistics for April 2021

In April, nearly 369,000 passengers flew via Swedavia’s airports, an 89 per cent decrease compared to the number of passengers in April 2019, before the pandemic. Compared to April 2020, air travel increased, though from extremely low levels. Overall, air travel is still strongly limited and dominated by the pandemic.