
After months of speculation, Austrian Airlines (AUA) CEO Annette Mann confirmed on 9 May that the flag-carrier will retain its twice-daily Klagenfurt–Vienna service, a 30-minute hop that connects Carinthia to the airline’s long-haul network. The route had been on the chopping block following the collapse of a wet-lease deal with Sweden’s Braathens, higher fuel bills linked to the Gulf shipping crisis and EU scrutiny of short-haul emissions.
Whether you’re a corporate travel manager moving staff across continents or a Eurovision fan plotting a multi-stop itinerary, making sure travel documents are in order is just as crucial as securing a seat on that 30-minute hop. VisaHQ’s Austria portal (https://www.visahq.com/austria/) lets passengers instantly check entry requirements and submit visa applications online, streamlining connections through Vienna to North America, Asia and beyond.
AUA is now flying 120-seat Embraer 195 jets under its own AOC, arguing that the link underpins regional economic competitiveness. Business associations welcomed the decision, noting that alternative rail connections take four hours and cannot guarantee same-day onward flights to North America or Asia. However, Mann warned that fares will remain elevated for at least a year while global fuel markets stabilise, urging companies to book early and explore corporate-bulk deals. The announcement comes as Austria debates the future of domestic aviation. Green Party legislators have called for a minimum airfare and rail alternatives under four hours, but the federal government has so far resisted, citing peripheral regions’ need for rapid links to Vienna Schwechat hub. For mobility managers, the message is mixed: the route survives, preserving one-stop global access for Carinthian staff and exports, but budget lines will tighten as higher ticket prices coincide with peak-season demand driven by the Eurovision influx.
Whether you’re a corporate travel manager moving staff across continents or a Eurovision fan plotting a multi-stop itinerary, making sure travel documents are in order is just as crucial as securing a seat on that 30-minute hop. VisaHQ’s Austria portal (https://www.visahq.com/austria/) lets passengers instantly check entry requirements and submit visa applications online, streamlining connections through Vienna to North America, Asia and beyond.
AUA is now flying 120-seat Embraer 195 jets under its own AOC, arguing that the link underpins regional economic competitiveness. Business associations welcomed the decision, noting that alternative rail connections take four hours and cannot guarantee same-day onward flights to North America or Asia. However, Mann warned that fares will remain elevated for at least a year while global fuel markets stabilise, urging companies to book early and explore corporate-bulk deals. The announcement comes as Austria debates the future of domestic aviation. Green Party legislators have called for a minimum airfare and rail alternatives under four hours, but the federal government has so far resisted, citing peripheral regions’ need for rapid links to Vienna Schwechat hub. For mobility managers, the message is mixed: the route survives, preserving one-stop global access for Carinthian staff and exports, but budget lines will tighten as higher ticket prices coincide with peak-season demand driven by the Eurovision influx.