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Austrian Airlines tests low cost short haul flights to Dubai – will customers go for it?

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Would you fly to Dubai on the same short haul aircraft that takes you to Amsterdam or Berlin?

The lines between budget and full service airlines are blurring as legacy airlines resort to increasingly innovative ways to compete.

Austrian Airlines – which is part of Lufthansa Group, together with SWISS, Brussels Airlines et al – has just announced a new, seasonal winter trial.

Starting on 1st December, it will operate flights to Dubai five times a week. Rather than use the long haul twin aisle aircraft you would expect on this route, Austrian will operate a short haul configured A320neo.

Austrian Airlines tests low cost short haul flights to Dubai

Note that this is not the ‘Long Range’ variant of the A321neo, which many airlines are now flying with special long haul cabins.

These are standard short haul aircraft that feature the standard narrow seat pitch (leg room) and lightly padded seats with no in-flight entertainment – all things seen as acceptable on the shorter routes they typically fly.

The Dubai flights, which will operate on Mondays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, Saturdays and Sundays, will take between 5:30 and 6:30 hours depending on the direction. Flights arrive into Dubai at 3.40am with the return leaving at an equally unfriendly 6.05am.

In a self-aware move, Austrian is calling these flights the ‘Dubai Deal’ as it seeks to attract budget-conscious travellers and differentiate it from the rest of its longhaul network.

Return fares are being marketed from €314 in hand baggage-only economy or €374 with a checked bag. Eurobusiness class is priced at €699 return – less than half of what you’d expect to pay in a sale for a flat bed on this route.

The trial is an attempt to make better use of Austrian’s fleet. Austrian Airlines CEO Annette Mann says it will “deploy an aircraft that would otherwise be idle during winter.” With airline schedules typically busiest during the summer, winter marks a less efficient utilisation of aircraft.

“An aircraft in the air is always better than one on the ground – and at the same time, we want to offer our guests a compelling deal. We understand this route comes with strong and very comfortable competition.”

Austrian Airlines tests low cost short haul flights to Dubai

The new service blurs the boundaries between full service and low cost carriers. Up until now, it has largely been ultra low cost carriers such as Wizz Air that have launched long haul routes using short haul configured aircraft, such as its flights between London and Saudia Arabia.

Austrian Airlines is widely regarded as a full service legacy carrier and is not known for its low-cost services.

Rather than pitching these flights under a different brand (perhaps budget sister airline Eurowings?) Austrian is choosing to operate the Dubai service under it’s own name, potentially muddling its reputation.

It’s an interesting choice. Despite the upfront messaging it is still likely to confuse many passengers.

Will other airlines follow suit? Virtually all European carriers have a quieter winter season which is when scheduled maintenance is prioritised. As we’ve seen with the adoption of ’empty middle seat’ Eurobusiness class, where one airline leads many will follow.

Austrian Airlines will have to compete with Emirates with its ‘proper’ long haul economy, premium economy and business class cabins.

Will cheap fares make this trial a success? Dubai, after all, is very expensive if you want a beach resort during the peak winter months, and if you can afford the hotel, you can probably afford to fly on a long haul aircraft. The 3.40am arrival and 6.05am departure times are also far from ideal.

Comments (76)

  • BlairWaldorfSalad says:

    Is Austrian continuing to offer long haul flights into DXB? Or did they ever? Might be confusing it with Swiss. Eurowings use DWC instead of DXB but presume Austrian won’t move to DWC whilst the LH Group lounge and catering contract (with Emirates I think) is in place at DXB.

    • CamFlyer says:

      By keeping it as a mainline flight, Austrian also attract connecting passengers, and will offer status benefits. It’s really not a bad option if VIE is a logical connecting point, and/or if the pricing in business compares to PE on another carrier.

  • Erico1875 says:

    A bit like the sho shine boy giving Warren Buffet stock tips Larry

  • Early Riser says:

    Honestly, the deal breaker with these flights for me would less likely to be the comfort level and more likely the timings. Arrival at 0330 in DXB basically kills the first day of a holiday, and departure at 0600 does the same to the last day. Given that you are essentially wasting two hotel nights, I would be more inclined to save on those and put the money towards a more reasonably times Emirates flight… And by the way, FlyDubai does many of these routes (and longer) on short haul aircraft, with short haul economy seats and long haul (flat bed) business seats. Given their extortionate fares, there seems to be a huge market for it!

    • Throwawayname says:

      If one normally sleeps e.g. from 01:30 to 07:30, as I do, messing up with one’s sleep cycle is the only thing that can be achieved by paying for a hotel on either end of such a flight. I would leverage the schedule to maximise time on the outbound (working remotely up to departure) then staying caffeinated until check in and having a strictly timed nap upon entering my room. On the way back, there won’t be a shortage of bars open until after 02:00. The lack of sleep certainly won’t be ideal, but I’d have already saved a day’s leave on the way out, so I can take the day off to recover and readjust on arrival.

      • Lumma says:

        It’s not pleasant but I also wouldn’t pay for a hotel room when arriving somewhere at 3.30am also. Just drop your bags at the hotel and power through until after lunch.

        Its anecdotally of course, but I’ve found that when you turn up extremely early you’re more likely to get an early check in than turning up at say, 1pm

        • SammyJ says:

          Dubai hotels are often so ridiculously cheap that there’s no reason not to pay for a hotel, even decent midrange stuff can be bad for £50 for much of the year.

          • Ian says:

            Agree. I really didn’t understand the comment in the article about Dubai’s being an expensive destination. I just paid less than 200 AED (c £40) for a very decent hotel including breakfast.

          • Rob says:

            Is there any point going to Dubai if you’re not in a beach hotel?!

        • Tariq says:

          Indeed, arrived early many times and got straight into a room. Or gives you a full day by the pool.

      • Tom says:

        Needing to take a day of leave to recover from a six hour flight is madness to me. Just pay for economy on a day flight or go somewhere else for your leave where you can afford to book a day flight instead if that is too expensive.

        • Throwawayname says:

          It’s a wash for me. Even if it’s a flat bed, I can’t manage to get a worthwhile amount of sleep on a flight of that length, and travelling in the daytime means writing most of the day off anyway- in this case one day each way.

          • Tom says:

            I take EK5 back to London (admittedly not in economy…). 4pm departure from Dubai, turn up at the airport about 75 mins before departure and get almost a full day in Dubai, arrive in London at about 8pm and sleep in my actual bed since I have the same issue with sleeping on planes. Dubai is an easy one to take a day flight back.

          • Throwawayname says:

            I can see that working, particularly if you’re the sort of person that tends to wake up and get going early in the morning.

            Still wouldn’t work for me though! Going to BHX I would need to take EK37 which departs at 14:50, and not being a regular visitor I’d want to try and be at the airport two hours before departure- day duly written off! …and that’s without considering that I wouldn’t be keen on choosing EK for a Y flight when I’ve got *G and E+ status.

  • Budva says:

    For me it would be about it being a day or night flight. Daytime would be OK, overnight never

    • Throwawayname says:

      But can you really manage to catch more than 2.5-3 hours of sleep on a 5.5 hour flight? I find it completely impossible- even when I am in a flat seat and I deliberately combine tiredness, alcohol, and lounge food with the aim of falling asleep ASAP, I typically wake up 1.5-2 hours into the flight and struggle, or at least need time, to fall asleep again.

  • ADS says:

    I had a play on the Lufthansa website for a couple of dates in January from London to Dubai … the connecting Austrian flights are mostly slightly more expensive than connecting through ZRH or FRA and getting a widebody on the DXB flight

    and a quick comparison on Skyscanner suggests that they’re about £150 more expensive than RJ, £90 more expensive than TK, £60 more expensive than QR … and £50 more expensive than the direct Virgin flights!

  • The real Swiss Tony says:

    Interesting, I read Eurowings are fitting recliners into some of their planes to cover mid haul, which I believe includes their Dubai route.

  • Throwawayname says:

    Are you talking Y or C? If it’s the former, they’re probably channelling the loads to the year-round services which have more capacity. If it’s the latter, there’s no point in them even trying to compete in the UK market as the APD alone is about a third of the return business class fare from Vienna.

  • The real Swiss Tony says:

    From Rob at 1230pm… (I can’t reply)

    “Is there any point going to Dubai if you’re not in a beach hotel?!”

    You’re right. Absolutely no one goes to Dubai to stay with friends or relatives or in their own second property or on business, or back to work after a holiday at home in Europe…

    The “bubble” comments earlier look increasingly increasingly valid.

    • Throwawayname says:

      Indeed, I have been there a handful of times, only stayed in a beach hotel once, and didn’t feel like I’d been missing out on anything when staying elsewhere. At the end of the day, Dubai isn’t Aruba or the Maldives – it’s got decent beaches but not quite the best of the best.

    • Jake says:

      What “bubble”.

      Rob’s views will represent those of the majority of his readership (namely UK based, well-above average earning professionals).

      The fact that may represent a wider minority is irrelevant, given this website doesn’t have to (or aims to) appeal to all audiences?

      • Throwawayname says:

        @Jake, it’s not like that unless you start to do segmentation around geography and occupation. Upper middle and senior managers in the NHS (and there’s a huge amount of them) earn well above average salaries, but they’ll be far less likely to holiday in Dubai than those earning similar amounts as specialist recruiters or commercial property agents. Equally, someone in a high-earning IT job who lives in Leeds won’t have the same spending habits as their opposite number in London (they may be less willing to tolerate high prices for services because they don’t routinely drink £6 coffees and £10 pints and/or more open to splashing out on luxuries due to having low fixed costs).

      • The real Swiss Tony says:

        To suggest the only reason people go to Dubai is to sit on the beach is the sort of line you’d expect to read in the Daily Mail. Plenty of readers of HfP will travel to Dubai on business, may be based out there, may have friends & family there and so on.

    • Larry says:

      stayed in melia desert palm before, would definitely stay there again over any of the massively overpriced hotels in palm jumeirah

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