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Flybe returns with an impressive 23 routes, including Heathrow, & £10 off if you book today

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Flybe has finally revealed its route network for when it officially restarts its flying programme on 13th April.

Flights start at £19.99 one-way, which includes a £10 discount valid today (Tuesday) only.

When Flybe collapsed in 2020 we weren’t particularly hopeful that it would ever return. The subsequent sale of assets by the administrators in late 2020 seemed more of a play for Flybe’s precious Heathrow landing slots than a serious plan to reboot the airline.

We were wrong. In the past 17 months Flybe’s new owners have slowly been ramping up operations with the intention of restarting flights this Summer.

Flybe returns

The image above is the old purple livery. The new livery is pictured further down the page.

Where is Flybe flying to in 2022?

Flybe is operating an impressive 23 routes, a far bigger launch than we were expecting. That said, this is still significantly down on the 70 destinations it operated to in 2019, according to aviation analytics firm Cirium.

The majority of flights are operated from Belfast City or Birmingham, its two main bases. The first flight will be from Birmingham to Belfast City on 13th April with a departure time of 08:55.

Here is the full list of routes:

From Belfast City

  • Belfast City – Birmingham from 13th April (up to 4x daily)
  • Belfast City – Glasgow from 14th April up (up to 4x daily)
  • Belfast City – Leeds Bradford from 28th April (up to ­­­3x daily)
  • Belfast City – London Heathrow from 28th April (up to 2x daily)
  • Belfast City – Amsterdam from 28th May (daily)
  • Belfast City – Edinburgh from 23rd June up (3x daily)
  • Belfast City – East Midlands from 7th July (up to 2x daily)
  • Belfast City – Manchester from 7th July (4x daily)
  • Belfast City – Southampton from 28th July (up to 2x daily)
  • Belfast City – Aberdeen from 25th August (up to 4x weekly)
  • Belfast City – Inverness from 25th August (up to 4x weekly)
  • Belfast City – Newcastle from 25th August (daily)
Flybe 2022 routes

From Birmingham

  • Birmingham – Amsterdam from 28th April (daily)
  • Birmingham – Brest Bretagne from 9th July (weekly)
  • Birmingham – Avignon Provence from 9th July (weekly)
  • Birmingham – Edinburgh from 28th July (up to 4x daily)
  • Birmingham – Glasgow from 28th July (up to 3x daily)
  • Birmingham – Aberdeen from 18th August (daily)

From other UK airports

  • East Midlands – Amsterdam from 28th April (daily)
  • London Heathrow – Leeds Bradford from 28th April (up to 3x daily)
  • London Heathrow – Amsterdam From 29th May (up to 2x daily)
  • Southampton – Avignon Provence from 23rd July (weekly)
  • Southampton – Toulon Hyères from 24th July (weekly)

There are three routes to/from Heathrow: to Amsterdam, Belfast City and Leeds Bradford. All flights will be operated from Terminal 2.

Flybe dash 8

The new routes are all sensible tried and tested destinations. Birmingham and Belfast City were Flybe’s 2nd and 3rd largest cities in 2019. Interestingly, the new owners have decided not to return to Manchester which was previously Flybe’s biggest airport.

‘New’ Flybe will face increased competition in a lot of places, however. Loganair, Eastern Airways and other domestic carriers quickly expanded to plug the gaps. Emerald Airlines, the new regional franchise partner for Aer Lingus, has also just launched at Belfast City.

Flybe operates in a very specific niche, on routes which are big enough to support an 80 seat aircraft but not big enough to attract interest from easyJet, Ryanair etc. It remains to be seen how many of these routes there are post-covid.

The Heathrow routes may not operate year-round

Flybe’s Heathrow position is a little odd.

‘Old Flybe’ picked up Summer and Winter slots under the ‘bmi remedy rules’ under which British Airways was required to release slots on specific routes. The deal was that, after three years, the slots vested and the airline holding them could fly to any destination in Europe.

As we understand it, at the time ‘old Flybe’ collapsed, the Summer slots had vested but the Winter slots had not.

Airlines are currently being invited to bid for the ‘bmi remedy’ slots for the upcoming Winter season – see here (PDF). Flybe would be forced to fly to Edinburgh, Aberdeen or Nice if it applied for them – it could not use them to continue Amsterdam, Belfast and Leeds Bradford. That said, it is likely that Flybe could borrow slots to continue these routes from other airlines who were not yet ready to go back to pre-covid frequencies.

What aircraft is Flybe using?

All flights will be operated by the De Havilland Canada Dash 8-400 twin-turboprop (more commonly known as the ‘Dash 8’). These are likely to come with 82 economy seats in a 2-2 layout.

How much are flights?

Fares are available from £29.99 one-way, although Flybe is offering £10 off all one-way tickets today, 22nd March.

£13 of this is Air Passenger Duty so Flybe will be operating on thin margins, particularly with today’s high fuel prices. You can choose from three fare classes:

  • Flybe Lite which includes a small cabin bag 45cm x 36cm x 26cm that must fit under the seat in front of you
  • Flybe Smart which includes a free checked bag up to 15kg and free seat selection in the first 5 rows
  • Flybe Plus which includes priority boarding, a checked bag up to 23kg, extra leg room seats and free flight changes

There is no loyalty programme available (yet?).

You can book on the Flybe website here.

PS. American Express is not accepted on the Flybe website!

Comments (46)

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

  • Chris L says:

    As a semi-regular Flybe customer pre-Covid, it’s great to see them return. More choice and competition is never a bad thing for customers. One thing I would add is that on more popular routes where they are competing with Easyjet, Ryanair etc, Flybe would have the added benefit of increasing the frequency. Particularly as a business traveller ultimately your choice often comes down to finding a flight at the right time of day – Flybe were generally much better able to offer this on the routes I used to fly with them.

    Wishing them every success.

  • Mr(s) Entitled says:

    Shame they are not returning to Manchester but good to see them back all the same. Hopefully they survive.

  • Andrew. says:

    Typo, you’ve got the cabin bag size as 45cm x 30cm x 26cm, the website says 45 x 36 x 20cm (up to 7Kg). Usefully 45x36x20 is exactly the same size as Easyjet cabin bag. Hopefully the bag sizers will accurate.

    Not entirely confident that free seat selection in the front 5 rows will work on the Q400s. There’s generally a lot of seat swapping to balance the aircraft.

  • Pedro says:

    Anyone know who is funding this? Genuinely interested (baffled).

    • Andrew. says:

      I was a touch surprised that there isn’t an EDI-LHR flight there. With BA charging eye-watering prices for domestic flights, a bit of competition would be good.

      But, Lumo is proving to be a bit of a disruptor between EDI & KGX, and rail prices are very keen if you can be choosy about dates and times.

      • NorthernLass says:

        They would have lots of takers for MAN-LHR and MAN-LGW. People are fed up with BA’s continual delays, cancellations and sky-high prices.

    • Rob says:

      Cyrus Capital, the private equity fund which was formerly a part-owner of old Flybe. Cyrus has a track record in airlines inc Virgin America.

      My guess is that they will get the Heathrow remedy slots for Winter, fly them for 3 years in order to ‘release’ the route restrictions, and then – around 2026 when Heathrow is full again – sell the slots (which will be all-year slot pairs at that point) for a decent sum, even if they can’t sell the airline.

      The benefit of PE over the old PLC structure is that PE is driven by profits, not a requirement to show turnover growth at all costs. Unlike ‘old Flybe’ they won’t be rushing out to start a fight with Loganair in Scotland or buy a pile of jet aircraft. The slots will be worth more than the airline by a long way.

      • Pedro says:

        Thanks. There is some logic then – they know the performance of the routes they are going to operate from last time and must have some confidence they can run profitably, or at a loss much less than the value increase they’ll turn by fully converting the Heathrow slots.

        I’ve always considered it a financial basket case of a business – as you say though, the PE discipline should stop them launching all the routes being requested by all the other commentators to this article!!!

  • Tom says:

    No love for Exeter (EXT) then? Formerly their base.

  • Luke says:

    Will it fly? Maybe?

  • Tracey says:

    Nothing for Cardiff CWL. 🙁

  • Billy says:

    Which terminal will it use at LHR?

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

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