
Wizz Air is set to slash the number of its flights departing from Gatwick in an attempt to cut operating costs.
The budget Hungarian airline said redirecting “inferior” departure slots from the UK’s second busiest airport to Luton would improve its financial performance.
Airline CEO József Váradi told The Telegraph: “Gatwick is expensive and we have been operating an inferior set of slots there.”
He said: “We think that we can enhance financial performance by operating that capacity from Luton.”
Wizz Air will start by permanently moving one plane to the Bedfordshire aviation hub in hopes of achieving “the most profitability”.
That shift would give the Luton fleet 13 aircraft, with just seven operating at Gatwick.
The airline currently flies several direct routes from Gatwick to popular European cities, including to Budapest, Prague and Rome, and holiday hotspots such as Malaga, Faro and Antalya.
Mr Váradi added, “You have to churn your network for profit. We are simply more efficient financially in Luton.”
From Luton, Wizz Air flights connect with destinations in Spain, including Barcelona, Madrid and Mallorca, and Turkish cities such as Dalaman and Istanbul.
As part of the changes, the London Gatwick to Athens route has been suspended, and from 15 December, three Gatwick to Hurghada rotations will be replaced with three Gatwick to Tel Aviv services.
A Wizz Air spokesperson told The Independent: “Wizz Air UK confirms an adjustment to its winter flying programme at London Gatwick (LGW), which is effective since 4th November 2025. This seasonal capacity adjustment supports the airline’s broader strategy to optimise cost efficiency and operational resilience.”
They added: “London Gatwick remains an active and valued part of Wizz Air UK's network, in addition to Luton airport, where Wizz Air UK is the largest operator of the airport. Wizz Air UK is implementing a strategic capacity realignment across both airports to optimise performance."
In September, Gatwick’s £2.2 billion second runway plan was given the go-ahead by transport secretary Heidi Alexander.
The West Sussex airport will move its emergency runway 12 metres north, enabling it to be used for around 100,000 more flights a year from around 2029.
Jet2 will also start scheduled flying from London Gatwick airport in March 2026 – adding to the ferocious competition at the Sussex hub.
The airline said it has “secured slots for six aircraft following the release of additional capacity by the airport.”
Jet2’s Airbus A321neo planes will serve all the key holiday airports in Spain, Faro in Portugal, Verona and Naples in Italy and 10 Greek destinations.
The new arrival faces intense competition. Gatwick is the main base for Britain's biggest budget airline, easyJet, which has “70 odd” aircraft based there, said CEO Kenton Jarvis.
According to the Wizz Air boss, Gatwick slots are “stuck” and Jet2 will be “very sub-scale versus the established players”.
Read more: What the Gatwick expansion really means for passengers and politicians
Everything you need to know as Ryanair bans paper boarding passes
Falling economy air fares bring some cheer amid gloom of flight cuts
Heathrow on cards for easyJet ‘if price is right’ says airline CEO
F1 tech deployed to speed up wifi on UK trains
London borough calls for a tourist tax to be introduced in the capital
The change that will stop tens of thousands of travellers from getting train fines