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Leisure carrier, Condor Airlines, offers great fares to/from the United States and some of the brightest liveries you’ll ever see on a commercial aircraft. It held an agreement with fellow German airline, Lufthansa, to provide feeder traffic from its much larger network. Lufthansa was held by the German government to do this as it helped ensure competition. This ended recently and Condor has pulled back from many of the US cities it served. Today, another was added to the list of cuts.
The German Federal Court of Justice ruling from 2024 that just wrapped up can be held accountable for these cuts. So far, we have seen the following cities get the axe:
- Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport (BWI)
- Minneapolis-Saint Paul International Airport (MSP)
- Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport (PHX)
- San Antonio International Airport (SAT)
Now, Miami International Airport (MIA) has been added to the list. Currently, Condor flies to the following US cities:
- Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport (ANC)
- Boston Logan International Airport (BOS)
- Las Vegas Harry Reid International Airport (LAS)
- Los Angeles International Airport (LAX)
- New York John F Kennedy International Airport (JFK)
- Portland International Airport (PDX)
- San Francisco International Airport (SFO)
- Seattle-Tacoma International Airport (SEA)
Anthony’s Take: This is no surprise given that the strong passenger feed that Lufthansa provided has dried up. Let’s see if any of these others get chopped.
(Featured Image Credit: Condor Airlines.)
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Advertiser & Editorial Disclosure: The Bulkhead Seat earns an affiliate commission for anyone approved through the links above This compensation may impact how and where links appear on this site. We work to provide the best publicly available offers to our readers. We frequently update them, but this site does not include all available offers. Opinions, reviews, analyses & recommendations are the author’s alone, and have not been reviewed, endorsed, or approved by any of these entities.
1 comment
Ouch! Any idea to what routes the planes on the cancelled flights are being sent?