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Norse Atlantic reversing ‘unbundling’ as it launches £259 sale seats to New York

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Air fares, it seems, are finally returning to their pre-pandemic normal and Norse Atlantic is once again offering £259 transatlantic flights.

In 2018 and 2019 it wasn’t uncommon to see such fares offered by Norwegian, and Norse is now following in its footsteps.

The ‘September Sale’ is running until 12th September with travel from 1st October until 15th June 2025.

Norse Atlantic sale

All flights are from London Gatwick. Here are the headline fares:

  • New York JFK from £259 return
  • Miami from £275 return 
  • Orlando from £275 return 
  • Los Angeles from £275 return 
  • Las Vegas from £299 return 
  • Cape Town from £329 return 

The most exciting new route Norse is flying is to Cape Town. I was easily able to find return flights for £323 here, which is a good deal for the 11-hour journey.

Pricing for premium economy isn’t bad either, with a return to New York in Premium going for £581. Cape Town is £816 – far below the £1,200+ British Airways is demanding. You can read our review of Norse Atlantic Premium Economy to New York here.

Is unbundling over for Norse?

Part of the reason that Norse Atlantic has been able to offer low fares is that you get virtually nothing included with your ticket.

Free checked luggage? Seat selection? Forget it. Norse Atlantic doesn’t even offer you free food on its cheapest economy tickets.

More frustratingly, Norse Atlantic didn’t even include cabin baggage with Economy Light fares. Whilst many people fly short haul every day with literally no baggage, cabin or hold, I doubt many people flying to Cape Town go entirely empty handed.

This is now over. All Norse Atlantic tickets – irrespective of whether they are booked as part of the sale or not – will now also include a 10kg carry-on bag for free. This is in addition to the under-seat personal item previously offered.

It isn’t clear if this is Norse getting generous or if an advertising standards person has had a word. All ‘compulsory’ charges must be shown as part of the advertised price and realistically 99.9% of people would find it ‘compulsory’ to take some item of luggage (apart from a handbag / small laptop bag) on a long haul flight.

PS. Norse also revealed this week that it will allocate half of its fleet to the charter market for Winter 2024 as it struggles to find profitable routes opportunities. The airline is also returning three Boeing 787-8 aircraft to the leasing company, allowing it to cut capacity and move to a pure Boeing 787-9 fleet.


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Comments (49)

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

  • Callum says:

    A personal bag IS an item of luggage… I always fly with a personal bag only within Europe and happily go on up to 2 week trips with it.

    I completely get why people would WANT to take more so make no criticism of it, but the “literally no luggage allowed” etc. seems a bit melodramatic….

    • Rob says:

      Unless you’re a woman, in which case it is your hand bag. The limit is 40x30x15.

      Irrespective, the article says you can operate like this in Europe. For a one night stay I get all I need inside my laptop bag alongside my PC. But Norse has no short haul flights.

      • James says:

        “Unless you’re a woman”.

        Come on Rob, not this nonsense again. It’s 2024.

    • dannyc says:

      Seems extreme to me to just take one spare pair of undies on a 2 week holiday because that’s all that’ll fit in that bag when everything else is inside.

      • Callum says:

        I don’t know if you require undies made from a circus tent, but a normal person can fit more than a single pair in a backpack…

        • dannyc says:

          You must have a Mary Poppins bag then if you can fit 2 weeks worth of undies, socks, shirts, shorts/trousers, cables, laptop/tablet, and all the other stuff in a 40x30x15 bag 😂

          • Richie says:

            I know where the laundry services are at my destinations.

          • Rob says:

            If you’re paying for laundry on holiday I’d be surprised if you’re compromising by flying Norse! (Except for Premium, which we rate highly)

          • Callum says:

            No, just a completely normal bag…. Though I wouldn’t take a laptop/cables (beyond my phone charger) on holiday.

            This isn’t a competition and you’re allowed to bring more than the bare minimum if you want to, I’m just pointing out your characterisation of what will fit in a personal bag is ridiculous.

          • Danny says:

            Obviously we must go on vastly different styles of holiday, Callum.

            And no, I don’t buy my undies from CircusTentBoxers.com

          • Andrew. says:

            It’s an 18 litre bag. You can easily get 4 pairs of boxers, socks, and t-shirts in that space. Along with a couple of sweatshirts, shorts, swim shorts, goggles and a light pair of trainers. You’d wear your jacket and jeans onboard, and probably pop the liquids bag in the pocket.

            Hotel laundry is usually about $3 for a one hour wash, and another $3 for tumble dryer.

            And most importantly!

            “Everyone can also bring one airport shopping bag in addition to their ticket type allowance.”

            So you can buy all your toiletries and a couple of meal deals in Boots without affecting your under seat allowance.

      • Bernard says:

        Cheaper to buy basics at destination, wear once then put in recycling. Cheaper than checked bags each way.

  • NFH says:

    It’s worth pointing out that Norse allows maximum IATA size cabin baggage of 56x45x25cm, the same maximum size as British Airways and EasyJet. A dwindling number of airlines continue to allow this, particularly after Finnair and Iberia reduced their maximum size. However, 10kg is too low for 56x45x25cm. My Rimowa usually weighs around 15kg when fully packed.

  • Lumma says:

    I’m sure I read as part of one of the articles about the 100ml limit for liquids coming back across the EU that they were also going to force all EU airlines to allow 10kg carry on bags, to simplify things for the consumer. Perhaps this is just Norse getting ahead of the game

    • James C says:

      A classic example of unnecessary EU interference. Fine if this is about setting a minimum standard but I very much value BA’s 23kg cabin allowance and would be loathed to see that change.

      • MKB says:

        Agreed. I nearly always pick an airline, such as BA, that means I won’t have to check my cabin bag. The convenience and peace of mind that comes from not being parted from your luggage are invaluable. I am sure I am not alone.

        I wonder if other airlines realise how much business they lose with their paltry cabin baggage weight limits.

      • Callum says:

        A classic example of an anti-EU rant based on misinformation you decided not to verify.

        For those interested, the EU held a workshop in July discussing the possibility of creating common baggage size/weight standards. That is it…

        • MKB says:

          Quite. In my previous post, I was agreeing with the BA part, not the anti-EU bit.

          • Callum says:

            Sorry I was replying to James – didn’t refresh the page first so didn’t see your reply!

      • Timerichmoneypoor says:

        Just like them bendy bananas!?

    • sigma421 says:

      A few bloggers got overexcited about this. As far as I can tell, the regulation standardises the size of a ‘small bag’ and a ‘cabin bag’ but it doesn’t force anything.

  • Benilyn says:

    Great for those on the rawdogging a flight trend 🤣

  • Nick says:

    Gamechanger, hope it sticks. I can do a trip with an overhead bag, but not an underseat one. The legacy carriers will have to compete – they don’t even try on base fares, knowing everyone will add some kind of luggage – but that’ll change within weeks assuming Norse don’t backtrack. Finally some realistic competition and that’s good for customers.

    • Callum says:

      Norse are such a minor player in the industry that I find it very hard to believe anyone else will feel the need to compete with this.

      How many people even knew you couldn’t take a cabin bag on Norse in the first place?

  • jannis says:

    Can I get a discount if I remove cabin bag?

    • Rob says:

      No

      However, if you book via a travel agent you pay the same price but don’t get the cabin bag included 🙂

  • Gary Colclough says:

    Anyone know if Norse intend flying Las Vegas in the summer months? I remember Norwegian had to stop the flights due to the planes having heat issues in the summer temps over there

    • Londonsteve says:

      I think you’ve answered your own question. Take off weight limits due to the Nevada heat will impact on capacity and therefore whether they can make a profit from the flight. If Norwegian had problems flying essentially the same aircraft, Norse will too.

      • Bernard says:

        787-9 is far more capable than a full BA LGW 777-200.
        So unless Norse is planning a full cargo load as well, it unlikely heat limits will have much impact.
        Too much uninformed urban myth from TikTok etc in the comments.
        Can’t people fact check before posting these things?

        • Gary Colclough says:

          well the fact Norwegian had to stop them isn’t an urban myth

          • Bernard says:

            Incorrect.
            Norwegian found an excuse. It’s not the reason.
            787 very capable for hot and high performance. Eg LAN from JNB. Qatar ex Doha in summer etc. Ethiad in summer too. Qantas ex Perth to LHR in summer – a far longer route.

        • Rhys says:

          Don’t 777s have better take-off performance vs the 787s?

  • Bernard says:

    Some incorrect facts here claiming 787 can’t operate out of Las Vegas.

    Firstly, Virgin fly the 787-9 from Las Vegas. Similar seat count to Norwegian but UC seat is a heavier seat. So that rather disproves the point.

    787 is very capable hot/high aircraft. Hence used by Etihad, Qatar in gulf summer (think 45c+), LAN from jnb, Ethiopian, and Qantas for Perth-London. Departure from Perth now as hot but a far heavier payload of fuel.

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