Ryanair to cut 1M passengers at Brussels & Charleroi due govt decision to double aviation tax
- 12/19/2025
- 13 Day
Ryanair, announced it will cut -1m seats
(-22%), 5 based aircraft (loss of US$500m investment), and 20 routes from its
Brussels Winter 26/27 schedule as a result of the Belgian Govt’s backward
decision to double its harmful aviation tax to €10 per departing passenger from
2027, and the Charleroi city council’s proposal to introduce a €3 per departing passenger tax from next year
on passengers travelling from the airport.
This significant increase to access costs – which was
already hiked up +150% in July (just 5 months ago) – makes Belgium completely
uncompetitive compared to other EU markets like Sweden, Hungary, Italy, and
Slovakia, where Govts are abolishing aviation taxes to drive traffic, tourism,
and jobs. Even Germany has now recognised that aviation taxes don’t work and
has revised its decision to increase aviation taxes.
If the Govt really wants to revive Belgium’s economy,
they should abolish this harmful aviation tax to generate more traffic and
tourism, not double it. Ryanair calls again on Prime Minister De Wever and his
Govt to abolish the aviation tax or Belgian traffic will collapse and fares
will soar, just as they have done in Austria & Germany, where Govt’s
repeatedly increased access costs. Ryanair has today (Tues, 9 Dec) written to
Prime Minister De Wever, Transport Minister Crucke, Wallonia Minister of
Airports, Cécile Neven, and the Mayor of Charleroi, Thomas Dermine, to call for
the reversal of these increases.
Ryanair’s Jason McGuinness said: “The De Wever Govt
has bizarrely decided to further increase Belgium’s already sky-high aviation
tax by another +100% from Jan 2027, on top of the +150% in July last. These
repeated increases to this harmful aviation tax make Belgium completely
uncompetitive compared to the many other EU countries, like Sweden, Hungary,
Italy, and Slovakia, where Govts are abolishing aviation taxes to drive
traffic, tourism, and jobs. As a result of this second tax hike in just 5
months, Ryanair has been forced to cut -22% of its Brussels traffic (-1m
seats), -5 aircraft from our Charleroi base (loss of US$500m investment), and
20 routes (13 from Charleroi & 7 from Zaventem) for Winter 26/27. Should
the Charleroi city council proceed with its ill-judged proposal to introduce
further taxes on passengers departing from Charleroi next year, these cuts will
deepen as Ryanair will be forced to reduce flights, routes and based aircraft
at Charleroi from as early as April 2026 with thousands of local jobs at risk.
If Prime Minister De Wever and his Govt really wanted
to revive Belgium’s economy, they should abolish this harmful aviation tax, not
double it. Despite so many other EU countries taking this step to support their
economies, Belgium is going in the opposite direction, driving up access costs
and pushing airlines and tourism elsewhere. We urge Prime Minister De Wever to
scrap this damaging aviation tax before Belgian’s traffic, tourism, jobs, and
the wider economy collapse any further. Furthermore, the Charleroi city council
needs to abandon its lunatic plans to increase taxes driving job losses with
the effect of lowering payroll, VAT and corporate tax receipts for the local
economy.”







