WIZZ MultiPass returns: travellers can lock in fixed fares with Wizz Air for a year

Wizz Air has relaunched WIZZ MultiPass, a subscription product aimed at passengers who want predictable flight costs and the ability to plan trips well in advance. Under the model, subscribers pay an upfront first-month fee, followed by a fixed monthly subscription fee for the remaining 11 months, giving them access to a set number of flight bookings each month under the plan they choose.

Unlike flash sales or dynamic pricing that can change quickly, WIZZ MultiPass is designed for travellers who fly regularly on a smaller set of routes — for example, commuters, frequent visitors to family abroad, or holidaymakers who like to schedule several trips across the year.

How WIZZ MultiPass works

According to Wizz Air’s MultiPass terms, the subscription runs for a fixed 12-month period. Each month, subscribers receive electronic “tokens” that can be used to book flights within that subscription cycle.

In practical terms, the package promoted for Hungarian travellers allows the booking of one one-way or one return flight per month at a fixed price, with optional inclusions such as WIZZ Priority and a 20kg checked bag, depending on the selected plan. The key condition is timing: MultiPass bookings must be made at least five days (120 hours) before departure.

The subscription can also be started during the month, with the first cycle potentially shorter than a full month depending on the chosen start option — but it still follows the same monthly structure across the 12-month period.

Who is it for?

WIZZ MultiPass is best suited to people who value certainty more than spontaneity. Because the booking window requires at least five days’ notice, it favours passengers who plan ahead and want to “fix” their travel costs over a longer period.

That makes it different from Wizz Air’s other subscription-style product, Wizz All You Can Fly, which is built around last-minute flexibility rather than long-range planning.

MultiPass vs All You Can Fly: the key difference is planning

According to Turizmus.com, Wizz Air’s All You Can Fly terms set a much tighter booking window: flights must be booked between 72 hours and 3 hours before departure, and availability is not guaranteed.

In short:

  • WIZZ MultiPass targets travellers who want to plan at least several days ahead and stabilise costs over a year.
  • All You Can Fly targets flexible travellers who can travel on short notice and accept availability constraints.

For many Hungary-based passengers — especially those coordinating work trips, family visits, or school-holiday travel — that difference may be decisive.

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What to watch before subscribing

As with any flight subscription, travellers should check the plan details carefully before signing up. Wizz Air’s MultiPass terms outline that the first month can be charged at a higher “first-month fee”, followed by the monthly subscription fee, and the subscription is structured around monthly cycles.

Passengers should also note that WIZZ MultiPass uses tokens to book flights and applies specific timing rules (the five-day advance booking requirement). If you mostly book weekend breaks at the last minute, the product may not match your habits; if you travel routinely and can plan ahead, it may offer a simpler way to budget.

What this means for travellers

WIZZ MultiPass adds another option for cost-conscious passengers at a time when many travellers are watching price volatility closely. The airline positions the subscription as a tool to make travel spending more predictable across an entire year — particularly for those who fly regularly rather than occasionally.

Also interesting: Wizz Air’s subsidiary receives approval to operate flights to the USA

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