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Review: What does a £1.79 Wizz Air flight get you? I try it out (Part 1)

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This is our review of a Wizz Air flight from London Luton Airport.

Whilst using points and miles to score premium flights is our bread and butter here at Head for Points, we do occasionally stick our head above the parapet and try out airlines that do not offer loyalty earning opportunities. Rob previously reviewed a £5 Ryanair flight and we often cover easyJet, although its new baggage rules have turned it into Ryanair-lite.

There is a new kid on the block, however. Hungarian airline Wizz Air has been on an aggressive expansion plan across Europe for the past few years and its growth has been unfettered by Covid. It even tried to buy easyJet last year.

The airline has been planting bases across Europe and now has 14 aircraft stationed in the UK, a number which is only likely to increase with the announcement that it will operate 14 routes from Gatwick next summer.

WizzAir flight review

With Wizz Air increasingly challenging both its low cost carrier rivals as well British Airways we thought it was worth taking a look at what they had to offer.

When Wizz launched a sale with one-way flights for £1.79 last month we figured now was the time to do it!

Let’s be clear – £1.79 is completely unsustainable for Wizz Air. Air Passenger Duty alone – the tax Wizz Air pays the UK government to depart the UK – is £13 alone, before you factor in the cost of the airport charges, fuel and staffing costs etc etc.

You will not find flights for £1.79 on a regular basis. This is a marketing cost for Wizz Air, which uses such low pricing to gain favourable press coverage and sell tickets to passengers that it can – it hopes – up-sell.

Even during the recent sale, £1.79 fares were limited to Bacău, Bucharest and Vienna (Bacău is a city in Romania). You are not exactly spoiled for choice – Vienna is the most traditionally touristy city on that list.

£1.79 Wizz Air flights were easy to find, hard to buy

To Wizz Air’s credit, these tickets were not difficult to find. I popped in some random travel dates in January and quickly found seats available.

Wizzair £1

The booking engine suggests these are Wizz Discount Club prices (membership starts at £26 per year) but click through and the same price was available for non-Club customers.

This is where the fun begins, however. Like all low cost carriers, Wizz Air hopes it can up-sell you on a myriad different add-ons in the hope of eking out some profit. I have seen few airlines, not even Ryanair, take it to quite the extremes that Wizz Air does. You need a PhD to avoid one of the many ‘traps’ that Wizz Air sets for you.

First off is deciding whether you want to proceed with the ‘basic’ fare or whether you want to upgrade to Wizz Go or Wizz Flex, both of which bundle a range of luggage, seat selection and other benefits. The cheapest option is, quite naturally, the least eye-catching.

You are then asked whether you want to pay for Wizz Flex for £8, which lets you change your flights or ask for a refund if you cancel your booking:

Wizz flex

On the next page, you are asked whether you want to subscribe for Privilege Pass, “your annual pass to hassle free travel for £171.50/year!” It’s not entirely clear what Privilege Pass is, although I imagine it is similar to easyJet Plus.

Wizz Privilege Pass

Next up are your baggage options. You can choose between 10kg (£26 one way) or 20kg (£34.50) or 32kg (£44) checked luggage. Note that, by default, Wizz Air only lets you take a small backpack / laptop bag / purse on board for free that fits under the seat in front of you. If you want to opt out you must tick the check box:

Wizz checked baggage

If you want to take a larger trolley bag on board with you then the only way to do so is by paying for Wizz Priority (£21.50):

Wizz cabin baggage

As I was trying to get the cheapest ticket possible I opted for the free carry on bag option.

You are then asked (again) whether you would like to upgrade to Wizz Go:

Upgrade Wizz Go

Seat selection is next. There is NO free seat selection with Wizz Air, at any time. You either pay for a selected seat or you are told where you are sitting at check in. By default, Wizz Air wants to charge you £6 for some middle-of-the-plane seats:

Wizz seat selection

Extra legroom seats, in the exit rows and row 1, cost £10. To avoid paying for seat selection you must choose the option to choose seats later, even if you have no intention of choosing seats later.

Once you have got through seating you can click through to the next page. Surely the up-sells must end here? Oh no! There’s more. Surely you didn’t expect Wizz Air to let you off lightly, did you?! You can now choose to add even more services:

  • Wizz Priority (again) – £21.50 one way and gets you a free trolley bag on board and priority check-in
  • Auto Check In – £1.50, automatically checks you in 50 hours before departure and sends you your boarding pass so you don’t have to do it
  • Airport Check In – normally, you must pay extra to check in at the airport. However, due to current covid document checks this is a free option.
  • Airport Transfer – from £7.75
  • Travel Insurance – between £4.32 PER DAY for a 3 day trip and £0.85 for a 30 day trip

After this you are once again offered the opportunity to join Wizz Discount Club:

Wizz discount club

You have now finally made it to the payment page. But wait! First you need to turn down ANOTHER opportunity to turn down travel insurance.

Fortunately that really is the last one. You can now book and pay for your flight – congratulations for making it this far! You have successfully turned down 13 up-sells. Here is the breakdown of my ticket:

Wizz £1.79 breakdown

As you can see, the flight itself costs only 14p whilst Wizz Air’s usual £7.50 administration fee has been steeply discounted. Nonetheless, as mentioned above, even £7.50 isn’t enough to cover the basic costs of operating this flight.

To see how the flight turned out, click here to read Part 2 of my Wizz Air review.

Head for Points made a financial contribution to the Woodland Trust as part of this trip. The Woodland Trust creates and manages forests in the UK in accordance with the Woodland Carbon Code.

Comments (55)

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

  • John says:

    I think W6 has got some of the best deals in the industry.

    I mean, if you build a reasonable package around their EUR 6.99 fares ATH-AUH, you still come out below EUR 40 one-way.

    For instance, I made a mock booking in which I added “Wizz Go” (which gives a large cabin bag, “priority” boarding, a 20 kg checked bag, and free standard seat selection) and paid an upcharge for an XL seat in row 1.

    Total comes out at EUR 34.09. This is pretty much unbeatable. Yeah, they use short-haul equipment. But on a seat with extra leg room, it should be acceptable for a 4 1/2 hour flight.

    I would def choose this over Ethihad if I had to travel between Greece and the UAE.

    Despite all the nickle-and-diming, you cannot ignore that value proposition, especially if you’re not based near a major hub.

    True long haul is a different story but on mid haul, people properly should start getting less invested in the points and mile game. You just can’t achieve that kind of value (IMHO).

  • Matarredondaaa says:

    As I said on another recent thread WizzAir’s webpage is a nightmare and even worse than Ryanair’s.
    Have used WizzAir a reasonable amount since they first started flying from Luton and never had an issue but have seen real problems for passengers who try to bend the rules!

    • Chas says:

      What do you mean by “bend the rules”?

      • Geoff 1977 says:

        Eg take a big trolley even though they only allow a smaller bag etc I’d imagine

        • Chas says:

          You might well be right, but that sounds more like completely breaking the rules rather than bending them! With the up-sell approach they have during the purchasing journey, I expect Wizz Air to squeeze as much margin out of each passenger as they can, and strictly enforcing the rules is one way of doing that. I was trying to ascertain just how much the OP felt was unjustified from his perspective.

      • nerock says:

        Eg. hand luggage size limit used to be enforced very strictly though I think not so much in recent years..

  • SammyJ says:

    Based at Doncaster, they’re our regular airline for weekends away. £8.99 e/w fares are common. The booking process is actually really simple – no worse than most others.

    Wizzair Privilege Pass is extremely good value if you travel often – a year of free seat selection (inc front row which is usually £20+ e/w), standard hand luggage (or a trolley bag) and Priority Boarding.

    Also worth noting that there is both Wizzair Hungary (W6/WZZ/Wizzair) flights, who fly from other bases in to the UK, and Wizzair UK (W9/WUK/WizzGo), who are UK based and operate flights from the UK bases, often tk places like the Canaries. The two are essentially the same for passengers but are classed as separate airlines.

  • John says:

    Now that Heathrow is my most convenient airport I can’t be bothered with any LCCs or wasting hours getting to LTN etc. Even though Heathrow is gouging us with their fees and BA won’t ever sell a loss-making ticket like this

    • Londonsteve says:

      Forgive me, that’s a little like saying that since I moved to Mayfair and Le Gavroche is now a short walk away, I can’t be bothered with Angus Steakhouse on Leicester Square any longer. There is much mention here of BA’s lead-in fares being cheaper than Wizz when you include a large cabin bag, but nobody has yet mentioned they are only available 9 months out and if you seek to book 2-10 weeks before the flight, BA is usually 5x the price of Wizz on a given route. They have to be, as LHR is so ludicrously expensive to operate from and their cost base is astronomical compared to the likes of Wizz.

    • Lady London says:

      BA has definitely sold loss-making tickets during Covid. I’m talking about real loss-making tickets where not even the marginal cost of transporting someone has been covered.

      • Londonsteve says:

        I’m not surprised, like all airlines they have been fighting for every scrap of revenue. Cashflow can sometimes trump profit or even be worth booking a loss further down the road if it gets you out of a hole. If your business isn’t terribly credit worthy and your banker is no longer willing to extend your overdraft, it might be the only option to generate cash in the short term. BA’s pricing strategy during the desperate times of Covid and the pricing philosophy they will revert to when things more or less return to normal (to the degree they ever will) are two discrete issues. On average, BA hasn’t a cat in hell’s chance of competing with LCCs operating out of LTN, STN or even LGW, especially not while LHR pursues its predatory charging strategy to claw back lost profit at the direct expense of their passengers.

      • Laura says:

        Definitely! I flew to PMI for £60rtn on a HBO fare. Not sure BA made much on my ticket at all.

  • Richie says:

    It appears you can’t add a larger hand luggage bag on its own, does it have to be part of a bundle?

    • Rhys says:

      I believe so, yes.

      • Richie says:

        Thanks Rhys, very useful reviews.

      • nerock says:

        You can add large cabin bag on it’s own also by adding Wizz Priority. Bit weirdly sometimes it’s priced higher than hold luggage however.

    • ADS says:

      I flew with them years ago, and was gobsmacked to learn that it was impossible to take both a handbag and a wheelie onto the plane – there was simply no purchase option available for a simple wheelie and handbag combination.

      Not sure if this has changed.

      • Alex Sm says:

        It keeps changing all the time – they look up at easy and FR. I can recall at least three different sets of rules for wheelie bags onboard in the last 8 years (paid extra, free, paid as part of the bundle)

    • Londonsteve says:

      It’s rolled into Priority Boarding or comes with one of the packaged fares including seat selection, hold luggage, etc. Course, they offer you the more expensive packages first before you discover you can take a large cabin bag if you buy priority boarding on its own. While Wizz up-selling can become annoying, there is a lot of sense in ensuring that those with large cabin bags board first, then those with small items come along later and fill in the gaps. It makes for a more seamless boarding experience than on a busy BA flight when most people have trolley bags and are battling to find space with cabin crew desperately looking for a gap down the front and back of the aircraft to help get the plane away on time.

  • Joe says:

    I actually find the booking process easy – there’s only as much up sell as any other airline.

    I also find the flight experience fine – I must have taken 50 Wizz flights in the last 3-4 years, and none have been significantly delayed.

    Small hand luggage only is fine for a weekend away, and it’s rarely ever checked for size.

    They’re by far the best of the budget carriers operating out of the U.K. !

    • Geoff 1977 says:

      Isn’t it more annoying/slow to have to click through 10 pages etc to reject add ons rather than being something that’s “difficult”?

    • Lady London says:

      What’s leg room like in the normal mid-plane seats like on Wizz?

      Do they do anything like that annoying trumpet on on-time arrival that Ryanair do?

      • nerock says:

        Legroom is comparable to EasyJet / Ryanair. Cabin service actually I find nicer than BA, there is a security demo, a food service and a boutique service. No trumpets, scratch cards or charity donations, they leave you in peace with cabin lights mostly dimmed on late / early flights.

  • Peter says:

    At least it doesn’t keep crashing like the BA website!

  • BlueThroughCrimp says:

    Been a while since I flew with Wizz, (2011 and 2014) and they flew to the cities in Poland I needed to go to – Wrocław and Warsaw.
    Both were football trips, and the first time wasn’t cheap, (£230.98 including £8 for extra legroom seat) but when draws for football competitions are close to match time not too much choice.

    The second time one way from Warsaw to Luton booked a week before was approx. £100 with bag and extra leg room. From memory, BA was double.

    Paid for the extra legroom emergency exit seat again, and glad I did, at the time it was well enforced.

    My abiding memory wasn’t the flights, but the arrival back in the UK at Luton with several Wizz flights from Central Europe arriving at the same time and the queues at Immigration. Thankfully, I had the e-passport at the time, and managed to pass the e-gates rather than the queue with all the passengers travelling on ID cards.

    Things have obviously changed physically and politically since my last border crossing at Luton, but I’d be less inclined to use the airport, but happy enough to fly Wizz.

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