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Home » ‘Act now’ warning as Ryanair Spain cuts could add 30% to fares within weeks
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‘Act now’ warning as Ryanair Spain cuts could add 30% to fares within weeks

By staff5 September 2025No Comments3 Mins Read

This week budget airline Ryanair confirmed it would be closing its Santiago de Compostela base and suspending flights from Vigo and Tenerife North as its plan to ease back on its Spain services continued

STANSTED, UNITED KINGDOM - JUNE 30: Ryanair planes are parked in a stand at Stansted Airport on June 30, 2020 in Stansted, United Kingdom. Passengers travelling between the UK and some countries will no longer have to quarantine, under a new scheme to be announced by the government. The list of countries is expected to be announced later this week. (Photo by Dan Kitwood/Getty Images)
Ryanair announced the route cut this week(Image: Getty Images)

Ryanair’s decision to ditch key Spain routes and cut flight numbers to others may lead to a spike in ticket prices, according to one report.

This week, the budget airline confirmed it would be closing its Santiago de Compostela base and suspending flights from Vigo and Tenerife North. The company has stated that these extensive cuts are a reaction to Spain’s airport operator Aena’s announcement of a 6.5% increase in passenger fees by 2026.

Simultaneously, the airline will maintain the closure of their Valladolid and Jerez bases and decrease capacity in Asturias, Santander, Zaragoza, and the Canary Islands this winter.

These reductions form part of Ryanair’s strategy to cut its capacity by 41% in the Spanish regions and by 10% in the Canary Islands this winter. Eddie Wilson, CEO of Ryanair, cautioned that this would result in “a loss of investment, connectivity, tourism, and employment in regional Spain, as many routes will be economically unviable.”

READ MORE: Ryanair cancels flights to Canary Islands in fresh blow to Brit holidaymakersREAD MORE: Iconic UK attraction trials queue ban in ‘extremely unBritish’ move

Landscape of Playa de las Canteras in Las Palmas, capital of Gran Canaria
Getting to the Canaries may soon be a little harder

While much of the coverage has focused on the political row with Aena, the real issue for travellers is financial: when to book replacement flights.

New analysis from Dot Dot Loans suggests that, based on historic patterns, when low-cost carriers like Ryanair pull capacity, fares on affected routes typically rise by 20-30% within four to six weeks of an announcement. The analysis blames a drop in supply for the price rise.

“This creates a fare squeeze, where passengers waiting for ‘last-minute bargains’ end up paying much more,” the firm noted in a statement this week.

Similar past closures, such as Ryanair’s 2024 cuts in Germany in response to tax hikes, saw immediate 10-20% fare jumps on affected routes as inventory dried up. Competitors like easyJet or Vueling may absorb some demand, but initial scarcity often leads to short-term price spikes before stabilisation.

The analysis suggests that the price of tickets on affected routes for January could rise from their current £55-£60 price tag now to £80-£85 by October.

“In a cost-of-living crisis, where UK holiday budgets are already stretched by 3% inflation, waiting could add £50-£200 per ticket for a family of four, exacerbating financial pressure,” the Dot Dot Loans statement continues.

“Passengers who secure alternatives early, whether through multi-airport searches (London “LON” instead of just Stansted) or by booking rail plus flight combos (for example, flying into Porto, then taking the train into Galicia), can lock in fares before the price spike. Waiting not only risks higher prices but also fewer seats on family-friendly dates like Christmas and New Year’s.

“If your plans are flexible, waiting can yield deals as competitors could respond with promotions to capture Ryanair’s market share, potentially dropping fares by 10-15% in the short term. Off-peak travel is less affected, and last-minute sales could emerge if demand softens. Ultimately, the decision depends on your risk tolerance: book now for certainty if dates are fixed, or monitor if you’re adaptable.”

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