Newest list of flights from Budapest Airport!
Not only are some of the flights suspended due to the coronavirus pandemic restarting, but Budapest Airport can also welcome new routes; the operator celebrated one of the first new flights of this year with a water cannon salute and cake.
LOT is launching new flights to two exciting destinations this week; from Saturday, the Croatian port of Dubrovnik, a paradise for holidaymakers and the beautiful city of Varna are accessible with direct flights from Budapest. Wizz Air also brought good news recently, announcing the launch of three holiday destinations: Santorini, Menorca and Mykonos. On 1 July the first Wizz Air Budapest-Abu Dzabi flight already departed from BUD.
Ready to fly? – Here’s the list of restarted flights:
AIRLINE |
DESTINATION |
STARTING DATE |
---|
Tarom |
Bucharest |
From 1 July, 3 flights a week |
Finnair |
Helsinki |
From 1 July, 4 flights a week |
Norwegian |
Oslo |
From 2 July, 2 flights a week |
Egypt Air |
Cairo |
From 3 July, 1 flight a week |
LOT Polish Airlines |
Warsaw |
From 1 July, 1 flight a week |
|
Dubrovnik |
From 4 July, 1 flight a week |
|
Varna |
From 4 July, 1 flight a week |
Lufthansa |
Frankfurt |
From 1 June, daily flight |
|
Munich |
From 16 June, 3 flights a week |
Swiss Airlines |
Zurich |
From 8 June, 3 flights a week |
Brussels Airlines |
Brussels |
From 15 June, 4 flights a week |
Eurowings |
Stuttgart |
From 11 June, 3 flights a week |
|
Düsseldorf |
Already operational, 3 flights a week |
Czech Airlines |
Prague |
From 18 June, 3 flights a week |
Ryanair |
London Stansted, Milan, Dublin, Berlin, Rome, Brussels, Barcelona, Copenhagen, Edinburgh, Madrid, Manchester, Athens, Tel Aviv Yafo, Bari, Bristol, Paris, East Midlands, Lisbon, Napoli, Paphos, Pisa, Malaga, Cagliari, Corfu, Catania, Gothenburg, Kharkov, Lviv, Malta, Marseille, Odessa, Porto, Cork, Palma de Mallorca, Thessaloniki, Sevilla, Manises |
Gradual return from July |
Air France |
Paris |
From July, 5 flights a week |
KLM |
Amsterdam |
Already operational, daily flight |
Qatar Airways |
Doha |
From 15 June, 3 flights a week |
Wizz Air |
Abu-Dzabi, Malaga, Alicante, Burgas, Glasgow, Baku, Hannover, Kharkiv, Lisbon, Lviv, Malta, Nice, Odessa, Zaporizhia, Palma de Mallorca, Pristina, Sarajevo, Skopje, Tenerife, Podgorica, Tirana, Bari, Birmingham, Edinburgh, Liverpool, Malmö, Targu Mures, Stockholm, Barcelona, Berlin, Rome, Madrid, Milan, Oslo, Tel-Aviv, Athens, Basel, Brussels, London Gatwick, Eindhoven, London Luton, Abu Dhabi |
In June and July |
Different regulations are in force in connection with the coronavirus pandemic from country to country, whereby airline schedules can change dynamically. Up-to-date information on flights is available on the airlines’ websites.
Passengers’ favorite shops reopen
Ferenc Liszt International Airport has fully reopened; the terminal sections previously closed to traffic have been reopened. The only exception is the Terminal 2A departure hall, where the replacement of the floor tiles is currently still ongoing. Check-in and security screening therefore takes place at Terminal 2B. The refurbished 2A check-in hall will welcome passengers from the end of July.
Bathroom capacity increased by an average of 70% at the airport
Not only have the sanitary blocks at Budapest Airport been refurbished, their capacity has also more than doubled. On the mezzanine level of the SkyCourt, near the food and beverage outlets, there is now twice as much bathroom capacity available than previously, and, following the capacity expansions implemented up to 2016 in Terminal 2A, the sanitary blocks in the arrivals hall of Terminal 2B are also being refurbished – here, capacity will be tripled, once the works are completed. Budapest Airport ensures a pleasant environment and the cleanliness of the bathrooms with continuous disinfectant cleaning.
Taxiway Uniform refurbished
Taxiway U, one of the busiest at the airport, is being refurbished in several phases, now in the first round on nearly 2600 square meters. As part of the works, the concrete pavement is replaced, the substructure and the subsoil are strengthened. The great load-bearing capacity is very much needed, as taxiway Uniform takes much of the traffic by code E, i.e. wide body aircraft, which could increase further over the coming years.
In the interest of sustainable operation, Budapest Airport is using “recycled concrete” for the works: the approximately 35 cm thick concrete pavement demolished from the surface of Uniform is ground and spread in the load spreading layer of the taxiway, as broken concrete. This means that approximately 910 cubic meters of demolished concrete rubble is reused, instead of being dumped!
Source: Budapest Airport Press Release