Airline flies to Dubai, Hurghada and Gran Canaria
Condor back at BER
Condor is back at BER and, after a two-year break, is connecting the capital region with three attractive sunny destinations this winter. Since October 26, the aircraft in the distinctive striped look have been taking off daily in the late evening hours for Dubai, the popular metropolis in the United Arab Emirates. The airline has been flying to Hurghada in Egypt since October 27. This route is on the flight schedule from BER four times a week (Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays and Sundays). Another popular vacation destination, Gran Canaria, will be added on October 31. The connection to the Canary Island will be flown twice a week (always on Thursdays and Saturdays).
“Welcome back! We are delighted that Condor is starting the 2024/2025 winter season with three popular sun destinations from BER. Travelers have a wide range of attractive travel options, especially via Dubai,” comments Aletta von Massenbach, Chairwoman of the Management Board of Flughafen Berlin Brandenburg GmbH.
Peter Gerber, CEO Condor: “For the first time, Condor is also represented with flights to Dubai from the German capital’s airport, which we are very pleased about and is an important step for us. The Canary Islands and Egypt are popular vacation destinations in the Condor route network, and the new destination Dubai gives guests the opportunity to fly to some of the world’s most attractive destinations with our partners. We are thus expanding our flight offering from Germany not only this winter, but also beyond in the coming summer season.”
Condor will fly the BER-Dubai route with modern Airbus A320neo aircraft. The modern short and medium-haul aircraft of the Airbus A32X family are equipped with highly efficient aircraft technology, consume less fuel, emit less CO2, are quieter and have improved aerodynamics. Airbus A321s are used for flights to Hurghada and Gran Canaria.
Unfortunately, Condor does not offer a real Business Class on medium-haul flights. Only the middle seat remains free.