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Oct 29, 2025

Lufthansa to Cut 50 Weekly Domestic Flights From March 2026 as Taxes Bite

Lufthansa to Cut 50 Weekly Domestic Flights From March 2026 as Taxes Bite
Germany’s flag-carrier is trimming its short-haul network yet again. Lufthansa confirmed on 29 October that it will cancel around 50 weekly domestic connections in the summer 2026 schedule, citing soaring security fees and a higher air-traffic tax. Routes between Frankfurt and Leipzig/Nuremberg and between Munich and Cologne, Düsseldorf and Berlin will see fewer frequencies, while services to Toulouse, Tallinn and Oviedo will be axed entirely. A new route from Frankfurt to Trondheim, Norway, is the lone addition.

For business travellers the cuts mean reduced same-day return options and greater reliance on Deutsche Bahn’s high-speed rail. Lufthansa said domestic feeder flights have become “structurally loss-making” as government levies have almost doubled since 2019.

The decision follows similar capacity reductions by Ryanair and comes just days before Lufthansa presents Q3 earnings. CEO Carsten Spohr has warned that, without fee relief, further retrenchment is inevitable—an implicit challenge to Berlin’s climate-oriented aviation taxes.

Corporate travel managers should re-map 2026 itineraries now; popular morning departures are likely to sell out faster, pushing passengers into higher fare buckets or onto rail segments that lengthen total journey time. Regional airports fear knock-on economic effects as connectivity shrinks.

The announcement also highlights the pressure airlines face to decarbonise; cutting short flights that can be served by rail helps Lufthansa meet CO₂ targets, but shifts the burden onto travellers and regions without high-speed train links.
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