Ryanair cancels flights from Memmingen: Tel Aviv and Riga affected!
Ryanair is canceling flights from Memmingen to Tel Aviv and Riga from October 27, 2025, while new destinations are being added to the winter flight schedule.

Ryanair cancels flights from Memmingen: Tel Aviv and Riga affected!
Air travel in Germany has been struggling recently, and Ryanair's recent announcements make it clear that the decline will have a noticeable impact on many passengers' travel plans. A few hours ago it was announced that Ryanair was canceling a total of 24 routes in Germany, removing 800,000 seats, which would result in a massive reduction in service. Loud Augsburger Allgemeine Two connections will be canceled at Memmingen Airport: flights to Tel Aviv in Israel and to Riga in Latvia.
The discontinuation of the Riga connection had already been announced in advance, while the closure of the Tel-Aviv route is due to the tense political situation in the region. Further Ryanair flights at Memmingen Airport will be reduced, but the existing connections will remain. For everyone who still wants to visit Italy, there is a new connection in the winter flight schedule: Lamezia Terme is being added.
Regional influence and ongoing challenges
In Bavaria, the effects of the cuts are noticeable, but can be classified as minimal. Nuremberg Airport will also remain unaffected by the cuts and will retain its usual range of flights. The flights there continue to go to Sofia in Bulgaria, Thessaloniki in Greece and London in England, as also reported by Mercury is held.
The general situation in German air traffic remains tense. Ryanair regularly publishes traffic updates and recently announced that the German market is the weakest in Europe. While other airports such as Cologne or Hamburg are slowly recovering, Berlin Airport is only reaching 71% of its pre-pandemic traffic volume. The situation is completely different in countries like Ireland and Hungary, where access costs have been reduced in order to promote the recovery Ryanair.
The future of air transport in Germany
In general, Ryanair plans to offer around ten percent fewer seats in the coming winter flight schedule in Germany than originally planned. CEO Eddie Wilson has called on the German government to abolish high taxes and fees that are seen as barriers to positive development in national aviation. Ryanair wants to double passenger numbers to 34 million per year and is investing $3 billion in new aircraft and routes as well as creating 1,000 new jobs.
It remains to be seen how air traffic will develop in the coming months. However, the current changes appear to be having a significant impact on the plans of many travelers for the time being and necessitating an adjustment to travel ideas.