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Ryanair bullish on Newcastle bookings as rivals' customers turn to its routes amid travel chaos

The low cost airline says Newcastle International Airport had performed well throughout current challenges affecting the sector

A Ryanair plane(Image: newcastle chronicle)

Ryanair has talked up performance of its Newcastle routes following the launch of its new base - and says customers of competitors beset by disruption are turning to its fares.

The budget airline said it had experienced a strong start to its summer season across 19 routes from Newcastle, eight of which were when the carrier introduced a new aircraft to be based at the airport. Speaking to Business Live, Dara Brady, director of digital and marketing at Ryanair, said "good decisions" during the pandemic saw the airline retain staff while some competitors shed workers - a move industry experts have said is one of the factors causing well publicised disruption at º£½ÇÊÓÆµ airports in recent months.

Read more: Port of Tyne returns to profit and hails strategic milestones

Mr Brady said: "Since we announced the start of the new base we've been very happy with the operation over the summer period. I think Newcastle International Airport in particular has been one of the better performing airports. There's been a lot of disruption at other airports.

"We've had a very solid start to our summer season and we'd see ourselves as the best performing airline in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ in terms of reliability and operation.

"We're delighted to say that for people at Newcastle we've had no disruption in terms of flight cancellations. We'd launched an awful lot of new routes for the summer season including Ibiza, Menorca and Chania - with a relatively small amount of time to build up a bit of momentum but the booking profile has been very strong. Demand has been very good.

"We're now moving towards our biggest ever winter schedule at Newcastle - we'll be flying over 50 to 60 weekly flights."

Despite inflationary pressures, including fuel costs, Mr Brady said pricing was "pretty good" and that customers can access cheap flights for around £25 to £30. He acknowledged that future price rises were likely - driven by continued cost pressures and a reduction in capacity.