
Váradi told the transportation minister during their meeting that “In the next three years, we will add 4,000 jobs in Israel, and about 500 employees will be hired directly by Wizz.”
Wizz Air is pushing to establish an operational base for the Hungarian airline in Israel, which would invest $1 billion in the Israeli market and base 10 new aircraft in the country, the CEO Jozsef Varadi told Transportation Minister Miri Regev in a meeting with her on Thursday.
Regev and representatives from the Civil Aviation Authority met with the Wizz Air CEO on to discuss negotiation the terms of the deal.
Váradi told the transportation minister during their meeting that “In the next three years, we will add 4,000 jobs in Israel, and about 500 employees will be hired directly by Wizz.”
In accordance with the plan, Wizz Air showed interest in building 50 runways in addition to the 20 currently in use.
By implementing the planned expansion, the Hungarian airline aims to increase its annual passenger volume in Israel from 3 million to 7 million.
Váradi added, “Our plans for the Israeli market are to launch new routes, to add more seats,” KAN News reported. The CEO confirmed that the company's goal is to open the Ben-Gurion base in April of 2026, with a possible extension for Ramon Airport, in Eilat.
Miri Regev pushes Wizz Air for Eilat flights and low fares
Miri Regev emphasized that she has the prime minister's full backing to advance this matter. "I don’t intend to blink for a second. We all want flight prices to go down,” according to KAN News.
As a condition for Wizz Air's establishment of services in Israel, the country requires the company to operate domestic flights to Eilat, international flights from Ramon Airport, and maintain service even during wartime, reported KAN News.
During the meeting, Regev, to encourage airlines to fly from the southern airport, offered Wizz almost a full exemption of operational fees.
This action encouraged Váradi to clarify that for Wizz Air, “the main interest is Ben-Gurion Airport,” but stressed that the company is “very open to operating at Ramon Airport,” adding: “There are almost two million citizens in the southern region who we want to bring into our aviation market,” reported KAN News.
A the same time the visit took place, senior figures in Israel’s aviation industry and the Histadrut criticized the plan.
Adv. Eyal Yadin, Chairman of the Transport and Seaports Workers Union in the Histadrut, sent a letter to Miri Regev on Thursday morning requesting that she halt the advancement of the agreement, Passport News reported.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
A Manual for Pick Great Lawful Discussion Administrations For New businesses In 2024 - 2
The wolf supermoon will kick off 2026 with a celestial bang. Here's when and how to see it. - 3
Protester climbs on to balcony of Iranian embassy in London - 4
UAE-backed Yemeni Southern Transitional Council denies disbandment rumors - 5
RFK Jr.'s diet guidelines emphasize red meat, full-fat dairy. How healthy are they?
2026 Golden Globes live updates: Red carpet arrivals will kick off the night; Nikki Glaser set to host
74 suicide warnings and 243 mentions of hanging: What ChatGPT said to a suicidal teen
Banks for High Fixed Store Rates: Augment Your Investment funds
The Best Portable Applications for Psychological wellness and Prosperity
The Fate of Gaming: 5 Energizing Advancements Not too far off
A Time of Careful Eating: Individual Tests in Nourishment
A company is trying to unlock a key to aging, in a long-overlooked body part
Falcon 9 rocket launches Starlink satellites before making 550th SpaceX landing (video)
Global measles cases drop 71% in 24 years as vaccination coverage improves, WHO says













