Lufthansa Group Adds Extra Long-Haul Flights as Demand Jumps
Lufthansa Group is adding extra long-haul flights in response to stronger demand, particularly on routes to Asia and Africa. Lufthansa and Austrian Airlines have both released additional services for sale. Further flights may be announced as demand continues to be monitored.
Lufthansa has already placed several additional flights on sale for the coming weeks. These include four extra return services between Munich and Singapore, as well as two return flights between Frankfurt and Cape Town. The airline is also planning two extra flights between Frankfurt and Riyadh. The published services are already bookable through Lufthansa Group sales channels, giving people more immediate options on several busy long-haul routes.
Austrian Airlines has also moved quickly, adding ten special return flights between Vienna and Bangkok. That is the largest single increase mentioned in the group’s update and points to particularly strong demand on the Thai route. Lufthansa Group said all flights already released can be booked now, while any further additions will depend on how demand develops across its long-haul network in the days ahead.
Extra flights now added
- Munich to Singapore
- Frankfurt to Cape Town
- Frankfurt to Riyadh
- Vienna to Bangkok
The extra services open up more room on routes tied to city breaks, business travel and longer holidays. Singapore offers easy access to Southeast Asia, while Bangkok remains a major gateway for Thailand and nearby destinations. Cape Town sits at the start of South Africa’s autumn travel season, and Riyadh continues to draw both business and visiting family traffic. Extra seats on these routes may help ease pressure where demand has been running ahead of schedule.
This update suggests airlines are no longer waiting for the next seasonal timetable before reacting to demand. When seats sell quickly, carriers are now more willing to add flights at short notice on routes that show clear momentum. That can give people a better chance of finding space without changing plans completely, though it also shows how quickly popular long-haul markets can tighten when demand rises faster than expected.