
Local flag-carrier TUS Airways delivered a rare piece of upbeat aviation news on 7 May when it unveiled the arrival of an additional Airbus A320 at Larnaca International Airport. The 180-seat narrow-body joins the airline’s existing fleet of two A320s and three Embraer-190s, lifting total capacity by just over 20 per cent at the start of the crucial summer peak.
For travelers keen to capitalize on the new routes and frequencies, VisaHQ can help take the hassle out of trip preparation by arranging any visas required for destinations such as Israel, Greece, France, Spain, or the Czech Republic. Through its dedicated Cyprus portal (https://www.visahq.com/cyprus/), the service offers clear checklists, online applications, and expedited processing so passengers can focus on booking those freshly added flights rather than worrying about paperwork.
Acting CEO Panos Vogiatzis said the expansion is designed to shore up Cyprus’ air-connectivity resilience at a time when many foreign carriers are trimming frequencies. Extra aircraft hours will be used to thicken service on high-yield routes to Tel Aviv, Athens and Paris, while also launching new twice-weekly links to Barcelona and Prague. The move is expected to create 35 cockpit, cabin and engineering jobs locally and generate knock-on demand for ground-handling and catering firms. For the Cypriot government—preparing to assume the rotating EU Council presidency in January—TUS Airways’ growth offers welcome proof that the island can still influence its own connectivity destiny rather than rely solely on overseas airlines. Tourism businesses have hailed the decision, noting that more frequencies support shorter, higher-spend city-break traffic as well as the MICE segment. Yet analysts caution that the carrier’s expansion will mitigate, not neutralise, the broader seat shortfall. “One extra A320 offsets barely 10 per cent of the 600,000-seat reduction announced by foreign airlines,” said aviation consultant Alex Margetis. Nonetheless, for corporate mobility planners the added frequencies mean improved day-trip options to key regional hubs and an alternative should other carriers pull back further. The aircraft has already entered the reservation system, with inaugural flights scheduled from 15 May. Introductory one-way fares start at €79, signalling an aggressive pricing stance aimed at stimulating demand in shoulder months.
For travelers keen to capitalize on the new routes and frequencies, VisaHQ can help take the hassle out of trip preparation by arranging any visas required for destinations such as Israel, Greece, France, Spain, or the Czech Republic. Through its dedicated Cyprus portal (https://www.visahq.com/cyprus/), the service offers clear checklists, online applications, and expedited processing so passengers can focus on booking those freshly added flights rather than worrying about paperwork.
Acting CEO Panos Vogiatzis said the expansion is designed to shore up Cyprus’ air-connectivity resilience at a time when many foreign carriers are trimming frequencies. Extra aircraft hours will be used to thicken service on high-yield routes to Tel Aviv, Athens and Paris, while also launching new twice-weekly links to Barcelona and Prague. The move is expected to create 35 cockpit, cabin and engineering jobs locally and generate knock-on demand for ground-handling and catering firms. For the Cypriot government—preparing to assume the rotating EU Council presidency in January—TUS Airways’ growth offers welcome proof that the island can still influence its own connectivity destiny rather than rely solely on overseas airlines. Tourism businesses have hailed the decision, noting that more frequencies support shorter, higher-spend city-break traffic as well as the MICE segment. Yet analysts caution that the carrier’s expansion will mitigate, not neutralise, the broader seat shortfall. “One extra A320 offsets barely 10 per cent of the 600,000-seat reduction announced by foreign airlines,” said aviation consultant Alex Margetis. Nonetheless, for corporate mobility planners the added frequencies mean improved day-trip options to key regional hubs and an alternative should other carriers pull back further. The aircraft has already entered the reservation system, with inaugural flights scheduled from 15 May. Introductory one-way fares start at €79, signalling an aggressive pricing stance aimed at stimulating demand in shoulder months.