Connect with us

For inquiry and send press release please email us to : info@ksajournal.com

travel

FLYADEAL ADDS FIVE ROUTES FROM NEW MADINAH BASE

New Year Begins With Addition Of Istanbul And Four Domestic Services

40 Per Cent Rise In Weekly Flights Provides More Travel Options

Madinah, KINGDOM OF SAUDI ARABIA – flyadeal, Saudi Arabia’s fast-growing low-cost airline, has rung in the New Year in emphatic style launching five routes from Madinah, its newest operational base in the Kingdom.

The introduction of scheduled flights to Sabiha Gökçen in Istanbul and four domestic cities of Abha, Al Hofuf, Jazan and Tabuk, takes the number of flyadeal destinations from Madinah’s Prince Mohammad bin Abdulaziz International Airport up from three to eight. Until now, flyadeal had served Dammam, Riyadh and the Egyptian capital Cairo from the Holy city.

The capacity hike represents a 40 per cent increase in the number of flyadeal operated flights out of Madinah to 88 a week, giving customers greater travel options. Two aircraft are now permanently positioned at the airport, which joins flyadeal’s three other operational bases of Riyadh, Jeddah and Dammam.

To mark the expansion, airport officials joined flyadeal management led by Chief Commercial and Customer Officer Rogier van Enk, for a fanfare of engaging activities celebrating with passengers.

Steven Greenway, flyadeal Chief Executive Officer, said: “We’ve steadily built capacity from Madinah, but this expansion of five new routes at the beginning of the year is a statement of intent from flyadeal to develop Madinah into one of our key operational bases.

“Having aircraft positioned in Madinah gives us the flexibility to quickly upgrade with more frequencies or add routes to a schedule which will continue to be built up giving our customers more choices and convenience of direct flights to travel within the Kingdom and beyond. Madinah was a natural addition as a base given its prominence as the second holiest city in the Islamic world and key gateway for pilgrims.”

The expanded schedule supplements flyadeal’s dedicated year-round Umrah flights from several countries direct to Madinah, north of the Saudi port city of Jeddah.

Rogier van Enk, flyadeal Chief Commercial and Customer Officer, said: “The additional routes aim to cater to both outbound travel for holidaymakers and business travellers living and working in and around Madinah, while also attracting inbound pilgrimages. My commercial team and I look forward to continue working with the authorities at Prince Mohammad bin Abdulaziz International Airport to explore more opportunities building air travel connectivity in line with Saudi Vision 2030.”

flyadeal’s additional routes support an already high demand operation from Madinah. Daily Cairo flights are now being served 11 times a week; frequency on the Dammam route is up from 19 to 26 flights each week; and Riyadh maintains a five-times daily schedule.

The new domestic routes serve different parts of the Kingdom – southwest coastal city of Jazan; Tabuk in the northwest; Al Hofuf in the country’s Eastern Province; and Abha in the southwestern mountainous region of Aseer province.

Almost 60 per cent of flyadeal’s 44-strong narrowbody fleet of Airbus A320s is based at King Khalid International Airport in the Saudi capital Riyadh; 11 aircraft are positioned at King Abdulaziz International Airport in Jeddah; five at Dammam’s King Fahd International Airport; and now two in Madinah.

flyadeal’s growth strategy includes its fleet topping 100 aircraft by 2030 and network more than tripling to over 100 destinations within five years.

Tickets for the new Madinah routes are on sale, bookable via flyadeal’s Mobile App, website www.flyadeal.com and through travel agents.

About flyadeal

On 23 September 2017, National Day of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, flyadeal began operations with its historic maiden flight from Jeddah to Riyadh. A pioneer and innovator, flyadeal was the first regional low-cost airline to be launched only across digital distribution channels. Being the sister airline of full-service national carrier Saudia — both under the umbrella ownership of Saudi Arabian Airlines Corporation (Saudia Group) — flyadeal was created for the price-conscious and tech-savvy consumer in mind in a market where 80 per cent of the Saudi population is aged less than 40 years and has at least two mobile phones.

flyadeal aims to stimulate travel, tourism and trade with its affordable, value for money everyday fares catering to leisure, religious, family and business travellers. Simplicity is key with an all-Economy Class cabin across flyadeal’s narrowbody fleet. With the Kingdom undergoing dramatic transformation through its Vision 2030 economic diversification drive, aviation and tourism are among the many sectors earmarked for dynamic growth. flyadeal is the fastest growing airline in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and Middle East, recognised for excellence in on-time performance that is consistently above the global industry average.

flyadeal operates a young fleet of Airbus A320s flying from bases in Riyadh, Jeddah, Dammam and Madinah to destinations across Saudi Arabia with a growing international footprint in Europe, Middle East, North Africa and South Asia. The airline has flown over 40 million passengers since its inaugural flight. In May 2024, flyadeal placed its biggest ever order for 51 aircraft – 12 A320neos and 39 larger A321neos – with a delivery schedule beginning in 2027. In addition, flyadeal will operate long-haul scheduled services from 2027 with the phased induction of 10 Airbus A330neo widebody aircraft ordered by Saudia Group in April 2025.

By 2030, flyadeal plans to operate hundreds of routes that will see its fleet more than double and network increase three-fold to over 100 aircraft and destinations, respectively. flyadeal’s aggressive expansion drive makes the rapidly growing airline one of the country’s most desirable companies to work for.

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

travel

World Cup travel boost yet to reach U.S. businesses

The 2026 World Cup is expected to bring a wave of global soccer fans to North America. But the travel boom is shaping up to look less like one uniform surge and more like a city-by-city, match-by-match test of pricing power.

“Demand is real and positive, but it’s not evenly distributed across host cities,” said Jay Wardle, president of travel data intelligence company Sojern.

New flight-booking data from Sojern shows most U.S. and Canadian host cities are seeing year-over-year gains for the tournament window, led by Houston and Dallas. But Seattle and all three Mexican host cities are trailing last year’s pace.

The tournament kicks off Thursday in Mexico City and runs through mid-July, ending with the final at New York New Jersey Stadium — better known as MetLife Stadium — in East Rutherford, New Jersey. It is the biggest World Cup ever, with 48 teams, 104 matches and games across the United States, Canada and Mexico.

For hotels, restaurants, airlines, ride-sharing companies and host cities, the pitch has been straightforward: more teams, more games, more fans and more spending.

FIFA has projected the event could contribute up to $17.2 billion to U.S. GDP.

But Deutsche Bank said even if it brings 1.2 million international fans to North America, the overall economic impact will likely be limited in a U.S. economy of this size — amounting to a short-term GDP lift of roughly 0.05% if FIFA’s estimate is reached.

The financial bonanza is likely to be split unevenly among cities, hotels, restaurants and other tourism-dependent businesses.

Airbnb said it is expecting its best event ever, surpassing the  2024 Paris Olympics. The company expects to benefit from families and groups looking for larger accommodations or lower per-person costs.

It could also benefit from how long travelers are staying. Sojern’s data shows more than three-quarters of World Cup travelers plan to spend six to 12 nights at their destination.

“We’re pretty enthusiastic about the impact of FIFA as we look at booking patterns coming into the summer,” Marriott CEO Tony Capuano told CNBC. “We’re seeing really strong demand patterns in both FIFA and non-FIFA cities in the U.S.”

Capuano said Marriott expects the World Cup to lift U.S. revenue per available room by about 40 basis points.

Marriott, the world’s largest hotel chain, said it’s particularly well-positioned because of its brand recognition and rewards ecosystem.

“Because of the breadth of our global footprint, we have deep experience, whether it’s FIFA, whether it’s the Olympics, Super Bowl,” Capuano said. “The booking patterns we’re seeing are tracking pretty closely with our expectations.”

Capuano said some release of FIFA room blocks had been anticipated and that current bookings are “right on track” with Marriott’s forecast. The bigger variable, he said, will be the later rounds, when travel demand could shift depending on which national teams advance.

Jim Allen, chairman of Hard Rock International and CEO of Seminole Gaming, said South Florida is already seeing World Cup-related momentum. Allen said more than half of tickets for games in the Miami area are being purchased by locals, while the rest are coming from tourists.

He said Miami’s deep ties to Central and South America are helping drive demand, along with the region’s existing tourism infrastructure and soccer culture.

For Hard Rock, Allen said the World Cup is already producing high-end international traffic. He said the company is seeing guests from multiple continents, including some staying at Hard Rock properties for the first time.

He also said casino play tied to the event is exceeding normal levels and rivaling the kind of activity Hard Rock sees around major events such as the Super Bowl and Formula One.

‘Still finalizing plans’

Sojern’s flight booking data shows nearly an 8% increase in Miami, with New York showing nearly the same boost. Dallas-Fort Worth is seeing a roughly 10% jump and nearly 13% increase in Houston.

But not all cities are seeing the same lift. For instance, Seattle’s flight bookings are nearly 21% lower than this time last year.

The expanded World Cup format means more inventory and more tickets to sell across more matches. Marquee games, host-nation matches and the final are still expected to command premium demand. But lower-profile group-stage matches in large NFL stadiums have been harder to fill, especially with ticket prices remaining high, on par with Super Bowl-level scarcity.

That creates a pricing challenge. Host cities and hotel owners prepared for a once-in-a-generation event. But fans are making practical decisions: which match is worth the trip, how far they are willing to travel, whether to stay in a hotel or short-term rental, and whether prices still make sense.

Rosanna Maietta, president and CEO of the American Hotel & Lodging Association, said hotel demand in host cities has “evolved differently than many initially anticipated,” driven in part by lower-than-expected international visitation.

A survey by the industry group in April showed 80% of respondents reported reservations weren’t meeting expectations. Some were furious that FIFA had canceled large room blocks it had previously booked.

But she said AHLA members are now seeing demand pick up, consistent with shorter booking windows for major events.

“Unlike typical leisure travel, many visitors are still finalizing plans and securing tickets,” Maietta said. “The industry expects some acceleration of late bookings in the lead-up to individual games and we believe stadium attendance will be strong.”

Sojern said 35% of hotel bookings in World Cup host cities historically occur in the final seven days before travel.

FIFA President Gianni Infantino downplayed any concerns about disappointing results in travel. He told CNBC’s Sara Eisen on Tuesday, “We should make the analysis after the end of the World Cup. We have never seen so many ticket requests. ”

Deutsche Bank said hotel real estate investment trusts with greater exposure to full-service hotels could benefit from World Cup demand as team delegations, sponsors and business groups use not just rooms, but meeting spaces and food-and-beverage outlets. The firm has generally baked a 50- to 75-basis-point revenue per available room lift into its hotel REIT models tied to the tournament. It also expects luxury hotels to benefit more than economy properties.

Restaurants may be better positioned to benefit broadly. Deutsche Bank said foodservice companies should get a lift from both tourism and watch parties, especially restaurants near stadiums and host cities, delivery-heavy concepts such as pizza and wings, and sports bars showing games during North American time zones.

Derek Evans, CEO of the Marcus Samuelsson Group, told CNBC that in the restaurant business, it’s too early to count his chickens.

“You haven’t seen fandom really kick in yet,” he said. “When your country’s team starts winning that’s when travel budgets go out the window.”

Rideshare companies such as Uber and Lyft could also see increased demand around matches.

The key question for host cities is whether even the biggest sporting event in the world has a price ceiling.

CNBC

Continue Reading

Business

France fines Shein $26 million

(Reuters) – France has ​fined fast-fashion firm Shein about €22 million ($26 million) over issues ‌with returns, product information and order confirmations, a penalty the company described as disproportionate and vowed to challenge.

The Directorate General for Competition, ​Consumer Affairs, and Fraud Control said on Wednesday it ​had fined Shein €16.7 million for the order confirmation issues ⁠and €5.8 million for issues with returns and environmental quality ​information.

“Technical issues, with no impact on consumers and already addressed ​where necessary, have been used as the basis for an exceptional penalty,” a Shein spokesperson said in a statement. “We therefore intend to strongly contest ​both sanctions in their entirety.”

France fined Shein €40 million for misleading ​discounts in July. Authorities also sought to suspend its marketplace, but Paris’ ‌Court ⁠of Appeals rejected that move in March.

Shein, which has won over millions of cash-strapped shoppers around the world with rock-bottom prices on clothes, gadgets and accessories, has faced heightened scrutiny in ​France since November, ​when the ⁠consumer watchdog found sex dolls resembling children and banned weapons for sale on its site.

Since the ​discovery, “we have decided not to leave these ​platforms alone, ⁠and we will continue to take action until they completely change their practices – or leave our market,” Serge Papin, minister ⁠for small ​and medium-sized businesses, said in a ​post on X.

($1 = 0.8615 euros)

CNBC

Continue Reading

travel

 Many airlines continue to suspend routes

Passengers flying to and from Dubai are facing schedule changes after several international airlines suspended, cancelled or delayed the resumption of services because of the ongoing situation in the Middle East.

The disruption, which began at the start of the conflict on February 28, affects carriers across Europe, North America and Asia, with some Dubai routes paused until August, September or the end of the summer season. Travellers with confirmed bookings are being advised to check airline websites and apps before heading to the airport, as schedules remain subject to further changes.

Aegean Airlines has cancelled flights to and from Dubai until August 31, while Air Canada has cancelled flights to Dubai and Tel Aviv until September 7. Cathay Pacific has suspended Dubai and Riyadh flights until August 31, and Singapore Airlines has extended the suspension of its Singapore-Dubai service until August 2.

British Airways has pushed back several Middle East routes, with flights to Dubai, Tel Aviv, Bahrain and Amman paused until the end of the summer season and scheduled to resume on October 25. The airline is also expected to return with a reduced schedule on some routes, including Dubai.

European carriers pull back

The biggest disruption is coming from European carriers, as airlines are still adjusting capacity across the Middle East due to airspace risk remaining a concern.

Air France has suspended flights to Dubai and Beirut until June 17, while KLM has suspended flights to Dubai until August 2. KLM flights to Riyadh and Dammam are suspended until July 12.

Lufthansa Group carriers are also maintaining a wide range of suspensions in the Middle East. Lufthansa, SWISS and ITA Airways will continue to suspend flights to Dubai until September 13, while Lufthansa, SWISS, Austrian Airlines and Brussels Airlines have suspended flights to Abu Dhabi, Amman, Beirut, Dammam, Riyadh, Erbil, Muscat and Tehran until October 24.

Eurowings, the Lufthansa Group’s low-cost carrier, has suspended flights to Dubai, Abu Dhabi and Amman until October 24.

Wizz Air has suspended flights from mainland Europe to Dubai, Abu Dhabi and Amman until mid-September, while flights to Medina have been cancelled indefinitely.

Some routes are returning

The disruption is not uniform across the market, with some airlines gradually restoring flights while others remain cautious.

Air Astana is set to resume regular flights from Almaty to Dubai from June 20, with Astana-Dubai services beginning on July 10. The airline has adjusted flight paths to operate via Pakistan because of the closure of Iranian airspace, saying the change is aimed at maintaining safety and reliability.

The Almaty-Dubai route is expected to increase from limited weekly services to daily flights by July 6, while Astana-Dubai will start with three weekly flights from July 10 before expanding to daily services by August 3.

Passengers holding rebooked tickets for departures up to July 31 can change bookings free of charge to earlier flights from June 20 for Almaty departures and from July 10 for Astana departures.

Aegean said it is continuing to monitor developments in line with instructions from aviation authorities and will keep adjusting its schedule on affected routes. Passengers whose flights are cancelled can request a refund or credit voucher, or change their tickets through the airline’s call centre without a reissue charge or fare difference.

What passengers should do

Passengers booked on affected Dubai flights should check their airline’s website or app before leaving for the airport, because schedules are changing by carrier and by route.

Those travelling during the summer should also check whether their airline is offering a refund, credit voucher, free date change or rerouting through another hub. Airlines including Aegean, Cathay Pacific and Air Astana have set out options for affected customers, although policies differ depending on ticket type, travel date and point of purchase.

Cathay Pacific said customers booked to travel during the affected period may rebook, reroute or refund tickets under its waiver policy. “We are monitoring the situation closely and will remain agile in our response. The safety of our customers and people guides every decision we make,” the airline said in a statement.

Virgin Atlantic has also brought forward the end of its seasonal London-Dubai operation, saying, “The recent escalation in the Middle East has brought forward the end of our operation for this season.”

GN  With inputs from Reuters.

Continue Reading

Trending