Ryanair profit more than doubles as fares jump
Profit after tax rose 128 per cent to €820m (£710m) over the three months ended June, alongside a 21 per cent increase in ticket prices.
Revenue rose by a fifth to €4.34bn as the low-cost carrier reported a four per cent increase in passenger numbers to 57.9m, at a load factor of 94 per cent.
Chief executive Michael O'Leary said quarterly air fares had 'substantially benefitted' from having a full Easter holiday in April, alongside a weaker prior year comparison.
Ryanair forecast a summer fare hike in May after a year in which lower fares caused a 16 per cent drop in profit.
O'Leary said it was too early to provide meaningful annual profit guidance amid highly variable external factors, including conflict in the Middle East and Ukraine, the risk of tariff wars and European air traffic control 'mismanagement.'
The airline earlier this month called on the president of the European Commission, Ursula Von Der Leyen, to step down after industrial action by French air traffic controllers caused hundreds of flight cancellations.
Ryanair hits out at Boeing delivery delays
Ryanair on Monday pinned full-year passenger growth of just three per cent on 'heavily delayed' Boeing deliveries. It took in five new Boeing 737 Gamechangers over the quarter, bringing its total fleet to 618.
'This summer we will operate over 2,600 routes, including 160 new routes, and we're seeing strong summer travel demand across our network,' O'Leary said.
'Our group airlines capacity constrained growth is being allocated to those regions and airports who are cutting aviation taxes and incentivising traffic growth, and we expect this trend to continue.'
Competitive fuel hedging would provide a 'key advantage' amid volatile oil markets, the airline added, with the 2026 financial year nearly 85 per cent hedged at $76bbl.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Bloomberg
2 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Trump Will Impose 39% Tariff Rate on Imports From Switzerland
President Donald Trump will impose a 39% levy on imports from Switzerland, according to an executive order he signed Thursday night. Switzerland was among the countries that have not yet finalized trade frameworks with the US before the Aug. 1 deadline for so-called reciprocal tariff rates to take effect.


Bloomberg
7 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
London Heathrow Proposes £49 Billion for Runway Expansion Plans
London Heathrow Airport has submitted a proposal to the UK government for a £49 billion ($65 billion) expansion that includes construction of the controversial third runway, as the biggest European hub seeks to maintain its competitive edge. The plan involves a £21 billion, 3,500-meter (11,500 feet) runway, as well as building a new terminal, upgrading current facilities, and rerouting the M25, a major highway that circles London. The expansion project would allow 276,000 more flights a year and increase annual passengers from 82 million today to 150 million, Heathrow said on Thursday.
Yahoo
30 minutes ago
- Yahoo
France new car registrations down 7.66% in July, Tesla sales drop 26.57%
(Reuters) -New car registrations in France slid 7.66% in July from a year earlier to 116,377 vehicles, data from French car body PFA showed on Friday. Tesla sales in the country fell 26.57% to 1,307 vehicles last month. Since the start of the year, Tesla's sales have slumped by 38.52%, while the overall French market has shrunk by 7.91% over the same period.