
Air Serbia recorded a historic first quarter by way of passenger numbers, with the airline highlighting the importance of the consequence in opposition to the backdrop of ongoing disruption within the world aviation trade attributable to the battle within the Center East. The Serbian provider dealt with 813.188 passengers between January and March, representing a 3.1% enhance on 2025 figures, or an extra 24.087 travellers. Though the airline didn’t disclose its common cabin load issue for the interval, it’s estimated to have hovered round 74% based mostly on accessible capability. Throughout the first quarter, Air Serbia expanded its capability ranges by 2.5%, whereas the variety of operated flights grew by 2% to 10.032. Throughout the ongoing second quarter of the yr, Air Serbia has a 3.7% enhance in capability, complemented by a 5.6% enhance in scheduled flights.
Commenting on the figures, Air Serbia’s CEO, Jiri Marek, stated, “The outcomes achieved within the first quarter verify environment friendly community and capability administration, in addition to rising passenger confidence in Air Serbia’s companies. This success at first of the yr positive aspects further significance when contemplating the present challenges within the world aviation trade – from the complexity of provide chains to operational pressures at main European hubs, thereby confirming Air Serbia’s resilience and operational stability. The belief our passengers place in us motivates us to proceed optimizing our vacation spot community and to enter the summer season season with totally ready capacities, with steady adaptation to present market circumstances”.
In keeping with the airline’s figures, the busiest locations inside its community have been Podgorica, Tivat and Ljubljana inside the area. It additional famous that Paris, Zurich, Milan, London, Barcelona, Vienna, Frankfurt, Rome and Amsterdam ranked amongst its busiest routes in Western Europe, whereas Athens, Istanbul and Larnaca topped the listing within the Euro-Mediterranean area.



