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Why are flights so expensive in Germany?

Air travel in Germany has become notably pricier after the pandemic and there are a number of factors driving up the costs.

A Lufthansa Airbus A321-200 takes to the skies above Munich Airport.
A Lufthansa Airbus A321-200 takes to the skies above Munich Airport. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Felix Hörhager

As of mid-2023, Germany’s Statistical Office reported a staggering 25 percent surge in prices for international flights, with Europe-bound flights seeing an even steeper 32 percent increase compared to the previous year. While the high-priced summer holiday season is drawing to a close, flight costs are not expected to get cheaper even as autumn approaches.

For instance, at the start of the autumn holidays in Hamburg, a one-way flight to the Spanish city of Málaga is priced at €443, while Condor is charging €499 for the same route. 

Low-cost companies avoiding the German market

One reason for the expensive tickets is the relatively high airport fees charged in Germany. Germany charges airlines some of the highest airport fees, aviation security fees and aviation tax in Europe and, when it comes to travel across European borders, Germany is one of the only countries to apply higher taxes for domestic flights than for trains (19 percent versus seven percent).

READ ALSO: On which popular routes in Europe is train travel cheaper than flying?

As a result, some low-cost airlines like Ryanair, Easyjet, and Wizz Air have avoided flying in Germany. Their offers at German airports in the first half of the year reached only 63 percent of the 2019 level as, with limited capacity, the companies first looked at where they could earn money most easily.

The German aviation fee structure was called “dysfunctional and non-competitive” by Ryanair boss Eddie Wilson in a recent interview with the WELT newspaper. He warned that, while the European budget airline will continue to expand, the comparatively high costs on the aviation industry in Germany mean that the company will not prioritise expansion in the Bunedesrepublik. 

Limited supply

The most important reason for the high prices remains the unfavourable ratio of supply and demand for consumers. The German aviation market is recovering much more slowly from the pandemic shock than in many other EU countries; in the first half of the year, the number of available flights reached around 75 percent of the pre-crisis level of 2019. 

READ ALSO: Why are fewer people taking domestic flights in Germany?

Larger airports still have problems recruiting sufficient personnel for the tough shift work in aircraft handling. To avoid a repeat of the chaos in the summer of 2022, tens of thousands of flights were cancelled from the start of the summer schedule for 2023.

Other factors

Gerald Wissel, an expert from consulting firm Airborne, points to a number of reasons for the price hikes. Inflation has led to a significant increase in costs for essentials ranging from personnel to maintenance services. and airports and air traffic control have also increased their charges accordingly.

Wissel elaborates that the German Air Traffic Control faces a specific legal dilemma, where it must operate on a cost-recovery basis. However, this approach isn’t adopted uniformly across European states.

“The German Air Traffic Control has the specific legal problem that it must work on a cost-recovery basis in principle. They are now trying to make up for the losses from the Corona period with significant fee increases. This is not the case in all European states.”

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TRAVEL NEWS

EES: Why is the UK-France border such a problem for the EU’s new biometric passport checks?

The EU's proposed new system of passport checks known as the Entry & Exit System will apply to all of the Bloc's external borders - so why are most of the warning lights coming from the France-UK border? And is it really Brexit related?

EES: Why is the UK-France border such a problem for the EU's new biometric passport checks?

The EU’s new Entry & Exit System of enhanced passport checks – including biometric checks like facial scans and fingerprints – is due to come into effect later this year.

You can read a full explanation of how it works HERE and see our frequently-asked-questions section HERE, including information for non-EU citizens who are resident in an EU country and the system for dual nationals.

EES will apply to the whole of the EU and Schengen zone and will apply at external borders, but not for travel within the Schengen zone itself (eg between France and Germany or Italy and Switzerland).

You can hear the team at The Local discuss the latest developments on EES on the Talking France podcast – listen here or on the link below

The EU has plenty of external borders from land borders such as the Greece-Albania border to the airport frontiers that occur when, for example, an American flies into Italy.

But while several nations have expressed concern that their infrastructure is not ready, the loudest and most dire warnings are coming about the border between France and the UK.

READ ALSO Travellers between France and UK could face ’14-hour queues’ due to new passport system

So why is this border such a problem?

The problems with the UK France border are threefold; volume of traffic, space and juxtaposed borders.

Volume of traffic – This is simply a very busy border crossing, about 60 million passengers a year cross it by ferry, plane, Channel Tunnel or Eurostar. For people travelling from the UK, especially those crossing by car on the ferry or Channel Tunnel, France is simply a stopping point as they head into Belgium, Germany, the Netherlands or to Spain or Italy.

Around 70 percent of those passengers are British, which means they will have to do the EES checks.

READ ALSO Could the launch of EES be delayed again?

Space – The second problem is to do with the space that is required to process all those passengers as several crossing points – especially the Port of Dover and the embarkation area at London St Pancras – are quite crowded and for various reasons don’t have room to expand.

Extra infrastructure is required to complete EES pre-registration checks and this will be difficult to physically fit into some crossing points – for context the EES pre-registration area for the Channel Tunnel at Coquelles covers 7,000 square metres.

Juxtaposed border controls – the UK-France border is also unique within the EU because of its juxtaposed border controls, which are the result of a bilateral agreement between France and the UK known as the Le Touquet agreement.

Juxtaposed border controls exist at Paris Gare du Nord and London St Pancras for those using the Eurostar, the ports of Dover and Calais and the Channel Tunnel terminals at Folkestone and Coquelles – these mean that when you leave the UK you get your passport checked by both British and French authorities, and then there are no passport checks when you arrive in France – and vice versa.

This means that if there is a hold-up at one border control it has a knock-on effect on the other and means that very long queues can quickly build up – as has been seen several times at the Port of Dover since Brexit.

The Brexit effect

Part of the problem with the UK-France border is that discussions about EES began while the UK was still a member of the EU, and then the conversation changed once it had left.

However, even when it was in the EU, the UK never joined the Schengen zone so there were always passport checks for travellers between France and the UK.

The difference is that EU citizens are exempt from EES – so those 70 percent of passengers crossing that border who are British would have been exempt from the changes had it not been for Brexit.

French and other EU citizens remain exempt and will not have to complete EES pre-registration once the system is up and running. 

Therefore EES would have only applied to a tiny minority of travellers entering the UK – for example American tourists arriving into London – which logistically would be a much easier challenge, especially for the Port of Dover whose customers are overwhelmingly either British or EU nationals.

What about Ireland?

Had it not been for Brexit, the UK would have been in a similar situation as Ireland is now – since Ireland is a member of the EU but not the Schengen zone.

Under the new system Ireland will not use the EES system at its own borders and will carry on manually stamping passports.

However, anyone who has an Irish passport will be exempt from EES when they are travelling within Europe – for dual nationals this only applies of they are travelling on their Irish passport.

READ ALSO Your questions answered about the EU’s new EES system

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