Direct answer: Ryanair announced the closure of its Thessaloniki base for Winter 2026, with corresponding reductions in flights and routes at Thessaloniki and Athens, due to ongoing disputes over airport charges with Fraport Greece.
What happened and when:
- Ryanair said it will close its three-aircraft Thessaloniki base for Winter 2026, cutting seats and routes from the city (winter schedule). This aligns with statements made in May 2026 and subsequent coverage.[1][2]
- The decision follows a dispute over airport charges, with Ryanair citing rising fees at Fraport Greece-operated airports as a main driver.[2][1]
- Reports also indicate reductions at Athens Airport and the potential suspension of operations at other Greek airports in the off-peak period.[1]
Context and reactions:
- Ryanair’s CCO Jason McGuinness characterized the charges as uncompetitive and tied to Fraport Greece’s fee practices, noting no progress in talks.[2][1]
- Media outlets describe the move as a significant capacity reduction for Greece, particularly impacting winter connectivity for Thessaloniki.[3][9]
Notes on specifics:
- The Thessaloniki base closure is part of broader Greece capacity reductions announced by Ryanair for Winter ’26, including the suspension of some routes and movements at other Greek airports.[4][1]
- Fraport Greece has publicly disputed Ryanair’s characterization of the fee situation, framing the cuts as Ryanair’s strategic response rather than solely an airport charge issue.[10]
If you’d like, I can pull the latest primary sources and summarize quotes from Ryanair and Fraport Greece, or provide a brief timeline of announcements and airport-by-airport impact.
Sources
Speaking to reporters in Athens, Ryanair's Chief Commercial Officer Jason McGuinness said there was no progress in talks between the low-cost carrier and Fraport, which has raised charges at a number of Greek airports.
infra.economictimes.indiatimes.comRyanair will close its Thessaloniki base in October 2026, cutting Greece winter flights and raising concerns over higher fares and reduced routes.
www.crystaltravel.co.ukRyanair will close its operating base at Greece's Thessaloniki airport this winter and cut the number of flights in and out of the city after airport operator Fraport hiked annual fees, a senior executive has said.
www.rte.ieRyanair to shut Thessaloniki base in Greece due to high fees, says senior executive Financial News
www.lse.co.uk700,000 SEATS CUT, 12 ROUTES LOST AND 2 AIRPORTS CLOSED DUE TO FRAPORT GREECE AND ATHENS AIRPORT’S REFUSAL TO PASS THROUGH ADF CUT Ryanair, Europe’s No. 1 airline, today (Fri, 8 May) announced the closure of its three aircraft Thessaloniki base and reductions in capacity at Athens Airport for Winter ‘26, resulting in the loss of 700,000 seats (-45%) and 12 routes for the upcoming Winter ’26 season. This devastating loss in off-peak winter connectivity […]
corporate.ryanair.comAirport operator says airline’s cuts reflect commercial strategy, not airport charges.
ground.newsSpeaking to reporters in Athens, Ryanair's Chief Commercial Officer Jason McGuinness said there was no progress in talks between the low-cost carrier and Fraport, which has raised charges at a number of Greek airports.
infra.economictimes.indiatimes.comRyanair to shut operating base at Greece's Thessaloniki airport due to high fees, says senior executive Financial News
www.lse.co.ukRyanair’s decision to close its Thessaloniki base this winter slashes low cost capacity, exposes a bruising airport fee battle, and tests Greece’s regional tourism model.
www.thetraveler.orgRyanair has officially notified its staff of plans to close its operational base at Thessaloniki’s "Macedonia" Airport.
greekreporter.com