BA CityFlyer

Regional subsidiary of British Airways From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

British Airways Cityflyer (BA Cityflyer), also styled BA CityFlyer, is a British regional airline, and a wholly owned subsidiary of British Airways with its head office based in Harmondsworth, in the London borough of Hillingdon.[2] It operates a network of domestic and European services from its base at London City Airport. All services operate with BA's full colours, titles and flight numbers.[3] BA Cityflyer Limited holds a United Kingdom Civil Aviation Authority Type A Operating Licence, meaning that it is permitted to carry passengers, cargo and mail on aircraft with 20 or more seats.[4]

Founded25 March 2007; 19 years ago (2007-03-25)
AOC#2314
The British Airways Club (part of the Avios loyalty programme)
Quick facts IATA, ICAO ...
BA Cityflyer
BA Cityflyer Embraer E190 in standard livery
IATA ICAO Call sign
CJ[1] CFE FLYER
Founded25 March 2007; 19 years ago (2007-03-25)
AOC #2314
Operating bases
London City Airport, London Stansted Airport, Edinburgh Airport
The British Airways Club (part of the Avios loyalty programme)
AllianceOneworld (affiliate)
Fleet size20
Destinations33
Parent companyBritish Airways
HeadquartersHarmondsworth, England, United Kingdom
Key peopleTom Stoddart (Managing Director)
Websitewww.britishairways.com
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History

Former BA Cityflyer Avro RJ100 in 2005 wearing one of the British Airways ethnic liveries

British Airways' sale of BA Connect to Flybe in 2007 did not include the London City Airport operations and its associated fleet of ten Avro RJ100 regional jet aircraft.[5] This led to British Airways' decision to resurrect erstwhile Gatwick-based CityFlyer Express (which BA had integrated into its Gatwick mainline short-haul operation in 2001, following the acquisition of CityFlyer Express in 1999) as a new wholly owned subsidiary to take over this operation, as of March 2007. BA Cityflyer was awarded an Air Operators Certificate on 8 February 2007, and started operations on 25 March 2007.[6]

In summer 2008, two Avro RJ85 aircraft were added to the fleet for performance and economic reasons - this included overcoming payload restrictions in the summer that could limit existing aircraft to 60 passengers on some days.[5]

In the second half of 2008, BA Cityflyer announced an order for 11 aircraft from the Embraer E-Jet family compromising of six 76 seat Embraer E170 and five 98 seat Embraer E190 aircraft, plus options for three additional Embraer E190s with the first aircraft due in the second half of 2009.[7] The first Embraer E190 was received in 2010.[8]

In February 2016, BA Cityflyer announced that it would commence operating flights from London-Stansted in May 2016. In January and February 2017, it announced that it would commence summer seasonal services from Manchester, Bristol, Edinburgh, Dublin and Birmingham to a variety of destinations in Spain, Italy, Greece and France. This marks the return of BA to the regions after an absence of nearly 10 years. Flights will also operate in the summer between London City and Manchester, operating with Embraer E190 aircraft.

In 2018, the airline reported nearly doubled profits,[9] with profits increasing 28% and revenue up by 18%. Recently, the airline has pulled out from operating at both Birmingham and Bristol on weekends and has made several changes to its schedule increasing frequency and adding new services to Rome.[citation needed]

In July 2020, in light of the COVID-19 pandemic it was announced that the crew base at Edinburgh Airport would close on 31 October 2020, with the loss of several ground based office jobs and the option for cabin crew and pilots to relocate to London City Airport.[10] On 9 December 2020, it was announced that BA Cityflyer would operate from Southampton Airport starting in May 2021 with flights to 14 European destinations mostly operating on weekends.[11]

BA Cityflyer announced in September 2024 that it would withdraw its remaining services to Southampton Airport, having already ended all winter 2024 flights.[12]

Destinations

In addition to their scheduled flights from London City, the airline also operates a number of scheduled and charter flights from Edinburgh,[13] Glasgow,[14] London-Stansted[15] and Belfast City[16] airports primarily to leisure destinations. The airline focuses on serving the financial market, though it has recently expanded into the leisure market, offering routes to Ibiza, Palma and Venice.[17] In 2021, BA Cityflyer started operating 14 weekend flights from Southampton.[11]

As of October 2024, BA Cityflyer operates scheduled and charter flights to the following destinations:[18]

More information Country, City ...
Country City Airport Notes Refs
AustriaSalzburgSalzburg AirportSeasonal
CroatiaSplitSplit AirportSeasonal
Czech RepublicPragueVáclav Havel Airport PragueSeasonal
DenmarkCopenhagenCopenhagen AirportTerminated
FranceBergeracBergerac Dordogne Périgord AirportSeasonal
CalviCalvi–Sainte-Catherine AirportSeasonal Charter[19]
ChambéryChambéry AirportSeasonal
LimogesLimoges–Bellegarde AirportTerminated
LyonLyon–Saint-Exupéry AirportTerminated
NiceNice Côte d'Azur AirportSeasonal
ParisOrly AirportTerminated
QuimperQuimper–Bretagne AirportTerminated
GermanyBerlinBerlin Brandenburg Airport
BremenBremen AirportTerminated
DüsseldorfDüsseldorf AirportSeasonal
FrankfurtFrankfurt Airport
HamburgHamburg AirportTerminated
MunichMunich AirportTerminated
GibraltarGibraltarGibraltar International AirportTerminated
GuernseyGuernseyGuernsey AirportSeasonal Charter[20]
GreeceMykonosMykonos AirportTerminated[21]
SantoriniSantorini International AirportTerminated
SkiathosSkiathos International AirportSeasonal
ThessalonikiThessaloniki AirportSeasonal
IcelandReykjavíkKeflavík International AirportTerminated
IrelandDublinDublin Airport[22]
Isle of ManDouglasIsle of Man AirportTerminated[23]
ItalyFlorenceFlorence Airport
MilanLinate Airport[24]
Milan Malpensa AirportTerminated
RomeRome Fiumicino AirportTerminated
VeniceVenice Marco Polo AirportTerminated
VeronaVerona Villafranca AirportTerminated
JerseySt HelierJersey AirportSeasonal Charter[25]
LuxembourgLuxembourg CityLuxembourg AirportTerminated
NetherlandsAmsterdamAmsterdam Airport Schiphol
RotterdamRotterdam The Hague Airport
PolandWarsawWarsaw Chopin AirportTerminated
PortugalFaroFaro AirportSeasonal
SpainBarcelonaJosep Tarradellas Barcelona–El Prat Airport
GranadaFederico García Lorca Granada AirportTerminated
IbizaIbiza Airport
MálagaMálaga AirportSeasonal
MadridMadrid–Barajas AirportTerminated
MenorcaMenorca AirportTerminated
Palma de MallorcaPalma de Mallorca Airport
San SebastiánSan Sebastián Airport[26]
SwitzerlandGenevaGeneva AirportSeasonal[27]
ZürichZurich Airport
United KingdomAberdeenAberdeen AirportTerminated
BelfastBelfast City Airport
BirminghamBirmingham AirportTerminated
EdinburghEdinburgh Airport
ExeterExeter AirportTerminated
GlasgowGlasgow Airport
Leeds/BradfordLeeds Bradford AirportTerminated
LondonGatwick AirportSeasonal[28]
London City AirportBase[24]
London Stansted AirportBase[27]
ManchesterManchester AirportTerminated
NewquayNewquay AirportTerminated
SouthamptonSouthampton AirportTerminated
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Fleet

BA Cityflyer Embraer E190
A former BA Cityflyer Embraer E170, phased-out in 2021

Current fleet

As of August 2025, BA CityFlyer operates the following aircraft:[29]

More information Aircraft, In service ...
BA Cityflyer fleet
Aircraft In service Orders Passengers Notes
Embraer E190 20 106
Total 20
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Former fleet

In the past, BA Cityflyer operated the following aircraft:[citation needed]

More information Aircraft, Total ...
Aircraft Total Introduced Retired References
Avro RJ85 2 2008 2010 [5]
Avro RJ100 10 2007 2010 [5]
Embraer E170 6 2009 2021 [30]
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Statistics

BA Cityflyer carried over 2.8 million passengers in 2019, a 4.8% increase from 2018.[31]

More information Year, Total passengers ...
YearTotal passengersTotal flightsLoad factorPassenger change YoY
2008 713,67015,68743.9%
2009 699,67014,19749.0%Decrease2.0%
2010 798,52314,33066.0%Increase14.1%
2011 1,125,75819,09968.0%Increase41.0%
2012 1,184,81021,74565.2%Increase5.2%
2013 1,371,99323,89369.3%Increase15.8%
2014 1,710,92029,32671.0%Increase24.7%
2015 1,933,15532,80572.0%Increase13.0%
2016 2,192,84736,35172.8%Increase13.4%
2017 2,379,94237,14373.5%Increase8.5%
2018 2,697,95641,06875.3%Increase13.4%
2019 2,827,616 42,406 73.9% Increase4.8%
2020 500,001 8,929 61.2% Decrease82.3%
Source: UK Civil Aviation Authority [31]
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Accidents and incidents

The BA Cityflyer Avro RJ100 involved in the February 2009 incident

On 13 February 2009, BA Cityflyer Flight 8456 (an Avro RJ100, registered G-BXAR, flying from Amsterdam) suffered a nose-gear collapse whilst landing at London City Airport. None of the 67 passengers or five crew members were seriously injured in the incident, but three passengers suffered minor injuries, two of whom were kept in hospital overnight. After a normal approach the nose landing-gear fractured as it was lowered onto the runway, due to the presence of a fatigue-crack in the upper internal bore of the landing-gear main fitting.[citation needed] It was found that the crack had formed as a result of poor surface finish during manufacture, and the incomplete embodiment of a manufacturer's service bulletin, which the landing-gear maintenance records showed as being implemented at its last overhaul in June 2006.[32][33] The aircraft was damaged beyond economic repair, and was written off by insurers in May 2009.[34]

On January 4, 2025, BA Cityflyer Flight 7016, an Embraer E190 (G-LCAF) was flying from Florence Airport to London Stansted, when the left engine failed midflight and the crew had to shut it down and divert to Milan Malpensa airport. The plane landed safely, no one was injured. The plane was grounded at Terminal 2 for about a month waiting an engine replacement

References

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