Air France-KLM Calms Summer Fuel Fears

Air France, KLM and Transavia say they will be able to operate their full summer flight schedule despite recent concerns about fuel availability. The Air France-KLM Group said current information allows its airlines to confirm that July and August services can go ahead as planned, covering the busiest part of the holiday travel season.
During the peak summer period, the three airlines expect to operate nearly 2,200 flights a day to more than 320 destinations worldwide. The group said it is continuing to monitor fuel availability across its network, while recent signals from French and Dutch government officials have been positive for the main summer travel months.
The airlines have also launched a flexibility campaign for trips departing from France, with tickets offering one free change from 3 June 2026. Air France will award double Flying Blue miles on long-haul Economy flights booked during the campaign. A similar offer for journeys starting in the Netherlands is due to follow through KLM and Transavia.
The update keeps a large range of summer trips on the table, from European city breaks and Mediterranean holidays to long-haul journeys across North America, Asia, Africa and the Caribbean. It also matters for passengers using Paris and Amsterdam as connecting hubs, where changes to one flight can affect an entire wider journey.
The clearest point for customers is that already paid bookings will not be recalculated if fuel costs rise. That gives people a firmer base for summer planning, especially those still comparing prices or waiting to book. Fuel concerns are not fully gone, but the group’s message is that its summer programme remains ready to fly.



















