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IAG launches a new airline in Austria, LEVEL, with just three weeks notice!

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To give Willie Walsh and the rest of the IAG management team some credit, they don’t mess around when they want to get something done.

IAG, the parent company of British Airways, announced yesterday that it is launching a new airline based in Austria.  In three weeks time.

The new airline will NOT use the Vueling branding, which is interesting.  I wonder if the huge service issues that Vueling has had in the last couple of years – primarily when Alex Cruz was running it ….. – mean that IAG feels that the brand is ‘tainted’?

The new airline will be called LEVEL.  This is, as most of you will know, the name of the start-up low-cost long-haul airline owned by IAG.  This currently operates out of Barcelona with Paris due to start imminently.

Why is IAG doing this?

You may remember that IAG was keen to buy Austrian carrier NIKI from the ashes of airberlin.  That deal fell through and Niki Lauda ended up buying back the carrier with financial support from Ryanair.

As it happens, Vueling actually had an Austrian operating certificate issued in the name of Anisec Lufthart.  This enabled it to launch LEVEL in Austria very quickly.  Legally, the low-cost LEVEL flights will be part of Vueling.

(The LEVEL flights from Paris will legally be operated by British Airways under its OpenSkies banner.  LEVEL flights from Barcelona are legally operated by Iberia.)

Fourteen destinations launched, including Gatwick

LEVEL will fly to fourteen destinations from Vienna.

It will initially use four A321 aircraft, in an all-economy 210 seat layout.  The first one, ironically, is an ex-airberlin / NIKI plane!

The first two, launching on 17th July, will be Palma Majorca and London Gatwick.

Over the following four weeks, LEVEL will add Barcelona, Malaga, Venice, Olbia, Ibiza, Paris Charles de Gaulle, Milan Malpensa, Dubrovnik, Larnaca, Alicante, Valencia and Bilbao.

In-flight service

Lead-in prices will include one item of hand baggage.

Checked baggage and in-flight food and drink will be chargeable.

Flights can be bought at flylevel.com.  If you are looking for a cheap trip to Vienna this Summer and can get to Gatwick, you might get a good deal here.

I’m intrigued to see how this works out, and even more intrigued as to how the separation between Vueling and LEVEL will work.


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Comments (113)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Concerto says:

    What will the airline code for these flights be? The same as the current one, IB?

  • Thomas Howard says:

    When so little is included in IAG premium brands economy fares (with no change in strategy in sight), what distinguishes Level and Vueling from BA or Iberia?

    • Lumma says:

      No status benefits?

      Iberia express and vueling seem to be the most confused brands

  • Ant says:

    Massive thanks to HfP for highlighting this. I just booked my family of four for a long weekend break during the summer holidays for 160 euros. I can’t imagine these fares will last long once they can be found on Skyscanner.

  • JPV says:

    Totally off topic – got an amex email about early access hamilton tickets. Sold out 40 mins after email arrived. But I did notice that there are currently about 20 tickets available for Tuesday July 3rd. £200 each, but still.

    Just a friendly heads up in case anyone has been on the lookout for them

    • Rob says:

      Hamilton tickets have ALWAYS been easy to get in London. Because they are impossible to transfer (photo ID of the purchaser must be shown at the theatre, plus the credit card shown, 100% enforced) anyone who bought months ago and now cannot attend has no choice but to sell them back to the theatre, who promise to buy them. As long as you are on the site at the right time you get them. We went a couple of months ago, booked 2 weeks in advance.

      • JPV says:

        Ah, good to know! I made the mistake of believing the hype and just assumed there would be no way to get them. Lesson learned

        • Anna says:

          I would love to see this – it’s on in DC when we’re visiting but $400 per ticket?!! I think I’ll wait for the DVD…

      • Kathy says:

        Yes, just keep checking the website for returns regularly and you’ll get in eventually – and for a lot less than the premium £200 tickets.

        • Harry says:

          Do you think the plat concierge will look out for the return tickets on my behalf?

  • meta says:

    O/T Groupon Ireland Avios arrived in my account (redeemed yesterday) and very easy and instant transfer from Aer Club avios.com account to BA.

  • SIDIDDLY says:

    O/T Just a quick query. I have priced up a cheap flight from AMS to BKK with BA in October. I know that the flight must be boarded at origin rather than Heathrow but on the way back the flight arrives at LHR at 18:20 and the connection is next day from LGW at 07:45. What are the implications if I just skip the last leg?

    • the real harry1 says:

      if you book direct (not thru an agency), very unlikely anything would happen for a one-off – agencies have been fined for this happening on ‘their’ bookings but BA have no history of going after individuals for further payment

      I think serial/ repeat offenders can get blacklisted, though

  • Paul says:

    “The LEVEL flights from Paris will legally be operated by British Airways under its OpenSkies banner. LEVEL flights from Barcelona are legally operated by Iberia.”

    It was announced last year that the AOC will transfer from BA to IAG, so the flights wont be legally operated by BA

    • Fred says:

      Yes, they will. IAG is just a holding company, it does not have an AOC. What was announced last year was that the plan was for Level to ultimately be a “proper” airline with an AOC of its own (rather than a virtual one piggybacking on other group airlines’ AOC as it is now). Until this happens, the information in the article is correct.

  • Fred says:

    Smart move! Expecting nothing less from Willie Walsh. They will have had plenty of time to study the Niki books (incidentally the one part of Air Berlin that was consistently profitable). And they’re showing the 2 fingers at Ryanair: this will be operational a full 3 months before Laudamotion is able to launch. Wondering how many ex-Niki staff they have managed to poach. It was widely reported in the Austrian media that most of them were not overjoyed by the prospect of working for Niki Lauda.

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