During summer '25 Ryanair will fly 71 routes from Cagliari, Alghero and Olbia: here are the summer operations for Sardinian airports
With the start of summer 2025 less and less to go, Ryanair has announced its summer operations for the Sardinian airports of Cagliari, [...]

It is less and less until the start of the summer 2025: Ryanair, for this, he announced the summer operative for the Sardinian airports of Cagliari, Olbia e Alghero. The Irish low-cost airline reported that they will be 4 aircraft based in Sardinia (all in the Cagliari airport) and 71, in total, routes.
In this article:
Specifically, in addition to flying to 19 destinations in Italy (including Bologna, Genoa, Milan-Malpensa, Palermo, Rome (CIA) and Venice, to name a few), from Cagliari one will be able to fly to Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Ireland, Malta, Poland, Portugal, the United Kingdom, Spain, Sweden and Hungary. From Olbia, however, Ryanair will fly to and from 3 Italian cities (Bergamo, Bologna and Trieste). Not only that: connections to Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France, Ireland, Poland and the United Kingdom will also be available.
Finally, Ryanair will connect Alghero with 10 Italian cities (Bari Bologna, Catania, Bergamo, Milan-Malpensa, Naples, Palermo, Pescara, Pisa and Venice). From the Catalan city, it will also be possible to fly to Belgium, Denmark, Germany, Ireland, Poland, the United Kingdom, Slovakia, Spain and Hungary.
"Ryanair, Europe's and Italy's No. 1 airline, is pleased to announce its summer operations to Sardinia, which will see Ryanair operate 71 routes between Alghero, Cagliari and Olbia, with 3 based aircraft ($300 million invested), supporting over 3,300 local jobs, with 4.4 million passengers annually. However, Sardinia continues to be held back by the regressive municipal surtax, which hurts connectivity, tourism and job creation. While other Italian regions such as Calabria, Abruzzo and Friuli Venezia Giulia are experiencing significant growth after the abolition of the municipal surtax, Sardinia is losing millions of additional passengers and new investment. It is time for Sardinia's regional government to act, eliminating this excessive tax to unlock the island's full potential," said Jason McGuinness, Ryanair's Chief Commercial Officer.