
A tongue-in-cheek social-media feud between Ryanair boss Michael O’Leary and tech billionaire Elon Musk escalated on 21 January when Musk tweeted that he might simply buy the Irish carrier after it rejected his Starlink in-flight-Wi-Fi proposal. Speaking at a Dublin press conference, O’Leary dismissed the idea as "good publicity but legally impossible," noting that EU regulations cap non-European Union ownership of an EU airline at 49 per cent.
Beyond the headlines, the spat shines a light on two issues of real significance to global mobility managers. First, Ryanair remains the largest carrier in and out of Ireland, accounting for more than 40 per cent of seats at Dublin Airport. Any uncertainty over its ownership structure or strategic direction reverberates through corporate travel programmes that rely on its high-frequency network for shuttle trips between European hubs. Second, the disagreement highlights the cost trade-offs airlines face when installing satellite Wi-Fi. O’Leary said Starlink’s drag-inducing antenna could add up to $250 million a year in fuel costs—an expense that would ultimately feed into fares.
While travel managers ponder the future of in-flight connectivity, they can immediately simplify another headache—cross-border travel documentation—by partnering with VisaHQ. The firm’s Ireland portal (https://www.visahq.com/ireland/) offers end-to-end visa and passport processing for more than 200 destinations, real-time status tracking, and compliance alerts, giving mobility teams the same peace of mind on paperwork that they expect from a reliable airline schedule.
For now, Ryanair is shopping for a cheaper connectivity provider willing to subsidise installation, but executives insist passenger data show fewer than 10 per cent would pay for on-board broadband. Mobility teams should temper expectations about seamless inflight productivity on European short-haul sectors well into 2026.
O’Leary also revealed that the Twitter storm has actually lifted bookings by 2-3 per cent in the past week—a reminder of how brand visibility can move the market. He encouraged Musk to become a passive shareholder: “It would be a better investment than X.” Whether serious or not, the episode underscores the resilience of EU airline-ownership rules designed to protect traffic rights—a critical consideration whenever cross-border M&A speculation surfaces.
Take-away for Irish corporates: Ryanair’s strategy, fleet plan and pricing power remain firmly under Irish and EU oversight. Expect no abrupt shifts, but monitor developments on onboard connectivity, which could alter the carrier’s value proposition for high-yield travellers.
Beyond the headlines, the spat shines a light on two issues of real significance to global mobility managers. First, Ryanair remains the largest carrier in and out of Ireland, accounting for more than 40 per cent of seats at Dublin Airport. Any uncertainty over its ownership structure or strategic direction reverberates through corporate travel programmes that rely on its high-frequency network for shuttle trips between European hubs. Second, the disagreement highlights the cost trade-offs airlines face when installing satellite Wi-Fi. O’Leary said Starlink’s drag-inducing antenna could add up to $250 million a year in fuel costs—an expense that would ultimately feed into fares.
While travel managers ponder the future of in-flight connectivity, they can immediately simplify another headache—cross-border travel documentation—by partnering with VisaHQ. The firm’s Ireland portal (https://www.visahq.com/ireland/) offers end-to-end visa and passport processing for more than 200 destinations, real-time status tracking, and compliance alerts, giving mobility teams the same peace of mind on paperwork that they expect from a reliable airline schedule.
For now, Ryanair is shopping for a cheaper connectivity provider willing to subsidise installation, but executives insist passenger data show fewer than 10 per cent would pay for on-board broadband. Mobility teams should temper expectations about seamless inflight productivity on European short-haul sectors well into 2026.
O’Leary also revealed that the Twitter storm has actually lifted bookings by 2-3 per cent in the past week—a reminder of how brand visibility can move the market. He encouraged Musk to become a passive shareholder: “It would be a better investment than X.” Whether serious or not, the episode underscores the resilience of EU airline-ownership rules designed to protect traffic rights—a critical consideration whenever cross-border M&A speculation surfaces.
Take-away for Irish corporates: Ryanair’s strategy, fleet plan and pricing power remain firmly under Irish and EU oversight. Expect no abrupt shifts, but monitor developments on onboard connectivity, which could alter the carrier’s value proposition for high-yield travellers.






