
Gdańsk Lech Wałęsa Airport added a new international destination to its timetable on 29 March 2026 with Ryanair’s inaugural flight to Bratislava. The low-cost carrier will operate the service three times a week—Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays—using 189-seat Boeing 737-800 aircraft, cutting journey time between Poland’s Tricity region and the Slovak capital to 95 minutes. Airport CEO Tomasz Kloskowski hailed the connection as a "missing puzzle piece" that plugs northern Poland directly into a burgeoning Central-European business corridor encompassing Bratislava, Vienna (60 km away) and Budapest. Slovak Ambassador Andrea Elscheková-Matisová attended the launch and announced plans to open an Honorary Consulate in Gdańsk to deepen trade and tourism ties. For corporate mobility managers, the route offers a same-day alternative to rail or multi-stop air itineraries previously required for meetings at Bratislava’s near-shore shared-services cluster or at regional automotive plants.
In that context, passengers planning onward travel beyond Slovakia can streamline paperwork through VisaHQ. The company’s Poland portal (https://www.visahq.com/poland/) lets users instantly check entry requirements for over 200 countries and secure visas, e-visas or even passport renewals online—an efficient add-on for business travelers keen to convert the new 95-minute hop into a multi-city Central-European itinerary.
Travel-management companies estimate door-to-door time savings of up to six hours per round trip compared with routings via Warsaw or Prague, translating into lower per-diem costs and reduced employee fatigue. Gdańsk now offers 105 scheduled destinations for summer 2026, reflecting a post-pandemic rebound that has seen passenger volumes surpass 6.5 million annually. Ryanair’s expansion also intensifies competition with Wizz Air, which last month announced additional flights from nearby Katowice to Vienna and Kosice. Companies should monitor fare buckets early: introductory prices start at PLN 79 one-way, but Ryanair’s dynamic pricing model is expected to push business-friendly mid-day departures higher once initial quotas sell out.
In that context, passengers planning onward travel beyond Slovakia can streamline paperwork through VisaHQ. The company’s Poland portal (https://www.visahq.com/poland/) lets users instantly check entry requirements for over 200 countries and secure visas, e-visas or even passport renewals online—an efficient add-on for business travelers keen to convert the new 95-minute hop into a multi-city Central-European itinerary.
Travel-management companies estimate door-to-door time savings of up to six hours per round trip compared with routings via Warsaw or Prague, translating into lower per-diem costs and reduced employee fatigue. Gdańsk now offers 105 scheduled destinations for summer 2026, reflecting a post-pandemic rebound that has seen passenger volumes surpass 6.5 million annually. Ryanair’s expansion also intensifies competition with Wizz Air, which last month announced additional flights from nearby Katowice to Vienna and Kosice. Companies should monitor fare buckets early: introductory prices start at PLN 79 one-way, but Ryanair’s dynamic pricing model is expected to push business-friendly mid-day departures higher once initial quotas sell out.