Norwegian-flygplan parkerat vid gate med flygplatsfordon framför nosen.
AIR TRAFFIC: A Norwegian plane stands at the gate before departure as the company reports a higher cabin factor and stable demand despite reduced capacity.

2.03 million flew with the Norwegian group in March

The month was characterised by strong demand due to the early Easter.

Published

Norwegian's capacity (ASK) was 2,610 million seat kilometres in March, a decrease of 6 percent compared to March 2025. Actual passenger traffic (RPK) was 2,290 million seat kilometres, an increase of 2 percent compared to the same period last year. In March, Norwegian had an average of 78 aircraft in operation. The cabin factor was 87.7 percent, an increase of 6.7 percentage points from last year. The cabin factor and unit revenues were positively affected by Easter falling early this year. Regularity, the proportion of completed flights, was 99.2 percent. Punctuality, the proportion of departures that are on schedule, was 87.8 percent.

- We are pleased with stable demand and good booking numbers ahead of the summer, but at the same time, we are monitoring the general economic development, including the recent rise in fuel prices. Through fuel hedging, we have created a buffer for price fluctuations. It is crucial to continue offering competitive airfares in the coming season, says Geir Karlsen, CEO of Norwegian.

Widerøe's capacity (ASK) was 166 million seat kilometres, a decrease of 1 percent from last year. Actual passenger traffic (RPK) was 122 million seat kilometres, an increase of 3 percent from March 2025. The cabin factor was 73.8 percent, up 3.1 percentage points from last year. Regularity, the proportion of completed flights, was 97.5 percent. Punctuality, the proportion of departures that are on schedule, was 89.8 percent, a significant improvement from 80.7 percent last year.

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