A Famous Spanish Pilgrimage City Just Got Closer to Cork

Aer Lingus has started a new Cork Airport service to Santiago de Compostela, giving southern Ireland a direct link with Galicia in north-west Spain. The inaugural flight departed yesterday afternoon, with the route operating twice weekly. It is the second direct connection between Cork and northern Spain added in the last two years, strengthening the airport’s Spanish summer network for cultural trips.
Santiago de Compostela is best known as the final stop on the Camino de Santiago and the spiritual heart of Galicia. Its UNESCO-listed old town brings together cobbled streets, arcaded squares, historic monasteries and the Catedral de Santiago. The Pilgrims Office recorded more than 530,000 Camino completions last year, the highest figure on record, with Irish pilgrims ranking eighth by nationality.
The route is Aer Lingus’ second new Cork service this summer, after the twice-weekly Nice flights launched in May. Santiago de Compostela is also the airline’s sixth new route from Cork Airport since April last year. The service is expected to support outbound holidays and inbound tourism, with Spain remaining Ireland’s fifth-largest key source market for visitors to Ireland too.
The new flights make Galicia easier to reach for people across the south of Ireland. Beyond Santiago’s cathedral and old town, travellers can add the Costa da Morte cliffs, Cape Finisterre, Pontevedra’s beaches, A Coruña, Combarro or Vigo to a Spanish trip without routing through another airport. The service also opens a simpler path for Camino walkers starting or finishing in Galicia.
Santiago de Compostela is already familiar to many Irish walkers, city-break visitors and people planning northern Spain trips, so the new Cork service lands with a ready audience. It also gives visitors from Galicia a simpler way into the south of Ireland, without adding another airport change.



















