‘New airline’ carries passengers from Budapest to this exotic Mediterranean metropolis
The Turkish Airlines’ low-cost subsidiary, AnadoluJet ended its operation on 31 March. Good news is that it will continue operation under the name AJet and will carry passengers from Budapest to the biggest metropolis in the Mediterranean area.
According to turizmus.com, a Hungarian travel news media outlet, Turkish Airlines’ budget subsidiary, the AnadoluJet changed its name and will continue serving passengers travelling from Budapest to Istanbul as AJet.
The Turkish Airlines decided before to create a completely separate airline with a new name and design. That means AJet seceded from the Turkish Airlines. Furthermore, its Hungarian representative is Aviareps Magyarország Ltd. from 2 May.
New flight from Budapest to Ankara
The base of the ‘new Turkish airline’ is in Istanbuls’s Sabiha Gökçen (SAW) international airport, which is in the Asian sector of the Mediterranean metropolis. You can change here to multiple inland and international flights to America, Asia, Africa or Australia.
AJet commutes between Istanbul and Budapest thrice a week (Thursday, Friday, and Sunday). The planes land in Budapest in the early afternoon hours and return to the Turkish metropolis to arrive in the late afternoon hours.
Moreover, the new Turkish airline plans to launch a new flight next year between Budapest and Ankara, the country’s capital.
Read also:
- Budapest-Belgrade railway: Construction reaches new milestone – Read more HERE
- Hungarian boutique hotel among the best in Europe for the third time – Details in THIS article
Featured image: depositphotos.com
please make a donation here
Hot news
Hungary calls for stronger Visegrád cooperation and economic integration at V4 Business Conference
Airbnb pens open letter to Hungarian economy minister
OLAF and Hungary’s Integrity Authority pedge stronger EU-wide anti-corruption efforts
Free Christmas for all? Hungary approves referendum proposal for 24 December holiday
Hungary’s push for Erasmus, Horizon access: Minister accuses Brussels of blocking youth and researchers
Will Marco Rubio clash with Hungary’s Orbán? Trump’s bold Secretary of State choice