Arkia
Arkia Israeli Airlines Ltd. is Israel's second-largest airline, founded in 1949 to provide domestic air services connecting Tel Aviv to other regions of the country.[1][2] Headquartered in Tel Aviv with its primary hub at Ben Gurion International Airport, the carrier operates scheduled domestic flights, primarily to Eilat, alongside international charter and scheduled services to leisure destinations across Europe, the Mediterranean, and select long-haul routes.[1][3] As of October 2025, Arkia serves 1 domestic and 33 international destinations in 23 countries, focusing on vacation packages, organized tours, and last-minute deals.[3][4] Over its history, Arkia has grown from a small domestic operator using piston-engine aircraft to a mid-sized carrier with a modern fleet emphasizing efficiency and passenger comfort for holiday travel.[1] It maintains a fleet of 10 aircraft, including Airbus A320-family jets and Embraer E-Jets, with an average age of 14 years, supporting both narrow-body short-haul and occasional wet-leased wide-body operations for extended routes.[1] Notable expansions include the introduction of transatlantic services to New York in 2025, marking a shift toward long-haul markets amid competitive dynamics in Israel's aviation sector.[5] While primarily known for reliable leisure connectivity, Arkia has faced typical operational challenges such as flight delays and technical issues, resolved through regulatory compliance and passenger compensation where applicable.[6][7]History
Founding and early domestic focus (1949–1960s)
Arkia, initially named Israel Inland Airlines, was founded in late 1949 as a domestic carrier to connect Tel Aviv with Israel's peripheral regions, particularly Eilat, amid growing demand for internal air travel following the state's establishment. The initiative stemmed from Transport Minister David Remez's decision to revive and expand services previously provided by the pre-state Aviron company, with ownership divided equally between El Al Israel Airlines and the Histadrut labor federation.[8][9][10] Operations commenced with the inaugural scheduled flight from Tel Aviv to Eilat on February 28, 1950, using a Curtiss C-46 Commando (registration 4X-ACT) transferred from El Al and crewed by El Al personnel. The early fleet comprised two de Havilland DH.89 Dragon Rapides for shorter routes and two C-46 Commandos each seating 36 passengers, sourced from the Israel Defense Forces. By the mid-1950s, Douglas DC-3 aircraft supplemented the fleet, supporting up to two daily Tel Aviv-Eilat flights and extending services to northern destinations like Rosh Pina and Haifa.[11][12][8] The airline's domestic emphasis facilitated transport of government officials, tourists, and settlers to underdeveloped areas, bolstering regional connectivity when road infrastructure was limited. In October 1959, Arkia pioneered Israel's first civilian helicopter operations, enhancing access to remote sites. That year, former U.S. First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt arrived in Eilat via an Arkia flight, underscoring the carrier's role in notable domestic travel.[13][9]Expansion amid security challenges (1970s–1990s)
In March 1970, Arkia suspended mail flights to Eilat following consultations with Israeli internal security services, citing inadequate safety measures amid threats from cross-border attacks, highlighting early operational vulnerabilities on southern routes.[14][15] This incident reflected broader aviation risks in Israel during the 1970s, including the Yom Kippur War of 1973, which disrupted fuel supplies and regional airspace, yet Arkia maintained its core domestic network, primarily serving Tel Aviv to Eilat with turboprop aircraft like the Handley Page Herald and Vickers Viscount inherited from earlier decades.[16] The airline's focus remained on short-haul domestic connectivity, carrying government officials, tourists, and settlers, while adapting to heightened security protocols that became standard for Israeli carriers amid rising Palestinian fedayeen activities and international hijacking attempts.[17] Privatization in 1980 marked a pivotal shift, making Arkia the first state-owned Israeli company to transition to private hands under Knaf Arkia Airlines and employee ownership, ending chronic losses and enabling aggressive restructuring.[18][19] This facilitated radical overhauls in fleet, management, and operations, including the introduction of STOL-capable aircraft such as Shorts Skyvans and de Havilland Canada Dash 7s for resilient domestic service on shorter runways amid ongoing security disruptions like the 1982 Lebanon War.[16] By the mid-1980s, competition intensified with the entry of a rival domestic carrier in 1981, prompting Arkia to diversify into international charter flights to Western Europe, leveraging jets for longer routes despite airspace closures and terrorism risks during the First Intifada starting in 1987.[16] In 1981, Arkia ordered two jet aircraft specifically for charter expansion, with deliveries commencing in June 1982, signaling a move toward jet-powered international operations.[20] ![Arkia Boeing 737-200][float-right] By 1989, these efforts yielded substantial growth, with Arkia transporting approximately 420,000 passengers on domestic flights and 100,000 on international charters, underscoring successful adaptation to a volatile environment.[8] The airline also ventured into maintenance services, bolstering revenue streams independent of flight operations strained by periodic security alerts and economic pressures from regional conflicts. Throughout the 1990s, Arkia sustained this trajectory, incorporating Boeing 737-200 jets into its fleet for efficient charter and domestic augmentation, while Israeli aviation's rigorous security—shaped by events like the 1976 Entebbe hijacking—remained a core operational constraint, though no major Arkia-specific incidents were recorded in this era.[21] This period of modernization positioned Arkia as Israel's secondary carrier, balancing expansion with the imperatives of national defense priorities.Commercial modernization and international growth (2000s)
In the early 2000s, Arkia pursued fleet modernization by introducing the Boeing 757-300, with its first aircraft delivered in February 2000.[22] This stretched variant of the 757 series offered higher capacity and efficiency compared to Arkia's aging Boeing 737-200 jets, which were phased out by the end of 2000.[22] The new aircraft enabled expanded international charter operations, including increased frequencies to destinations in England, France, Germany, Italy, Switzerland, and other European countries, supporting leisure travel demand from Israel's growing tourism sector.[22] Ownership transitioned in March 2006 when the Nakash brothers, through their Jordache Enterprises affiliate, acquired a 70% controlling stake in Arkia's parent company from the previous Borovich family interests, marking a shift toward private investment focused on commercial expansion.[23] This acquisition injected capital and a renewed strategic vision, emphasizing modernization of operations and route development beyond traditional domestic and ad-hoc charters.[23] Under the new ownership, Arkia achieved a milestone in international growth in 2007 when Israel's Transportation Minister Shaul Mofaz granted the airline its first scheduled operator licenses for routes to Larnaca, Cyprus, and Dublin, Ireland—filling gaps left by El Al's service reductions.[24] These approvals represented Arkia's pivot from primarily charter-based international services to regular scheduled flights, enhancing reliability for passengers and positioning the carrier as a competitor in short-haul European markets amid rising outbound tourism from Israel.[24] By the end of the decade, these developments had solidified Arkia's role in leisure-oriented international connectivity, with the Boeing 757 fleet supporting up to dozens of weekly flights across its network.[25]Fleet renewal and market adaptation (2010s)
In the 2010s, Arkia initiated a strategic fleet modernization program to replace its aging Boeing narrow-body and wide-body aircraft with more fuel-efficient models, aiming to reduce operating costs amid intensifying competition from low-cost carriers and liberalized bilateral air service agreements. The airline phased out its Boeing 757-300 fleet by 2019, which had been in service since the early 2000s for medium-haul leisure routes, as these older jets became less economical due to higher fuel consumption and maintenance demands.[26] This shift addressed the challenges of a domestic market experiencing turbulence, including financial pressures reported in 2012 from employee-management disputes and rising fuel prices.[27] Key to this renewal was Arkia's pivot to Airbus, beginning with a July 2012 order for four A321neo aircraft powered by CFM International LEAP-1A engines, valued at approximately $400 million.[28] Deliveries commenced in late 2018, with the first A321LR variant—capable of up to 4,000 nautical miles range—entering commercial service on December 9, 2018, from Tel Aviv to destinations like Lisbon and Larnaca, making Arkia the launch operator for this long-range narrow-body configuration.[29] In July 2016, the airline further committed to four A330-900neo wide-bodies, valued at $1.15 billion at list prices, to bolster capacity for transatlantic and extended European leisure flights, though initial deliveries were deferred into the 2020s.[30] These acquisitions, supported by a 2017 engine maintenance agreement with Safran for the LEAP-1A worth $200 million over 15 years, emphasized lower emissions and operational reliability.[31] Complementing narrow-body upgrades, Arkia incorporated Embraer E-Jets (E190/195) into its fleet around 2017 for regional and domestic operations, enhancing flexibility on shorter routes to Cyprus and Greek islands amid booming Israeli outbound tourism.[26] This adaptation aligned with market dynamics, including expanded "open skies" pacts that increased seat capacity to Israel by 5% annually through 2013, pressuring legacy carriers to differentiate via leisure-focused charters and seasonal schedules to Western Europe.[32] By prioritizing high-density, point-to-point vacation services over El Al's hub-and-spoke model, Arkia captured demand from price-sensitive travelers, though it navigated security-driven route suspensions, such as to Turkey in 2014.[33] The renewed fleet supported a 2017 rebranding emphasizing modern amenities, positioning Arkia as a nimble second-tier player in Israel's privatized aviation sector.[26]Resilience during crises (2020–present)
During the COVID-19 pandemic, Arkia suspended most operations for several months in 2020, a strategic decision by its owners to minimize costs amid global travel restrictions and border closures that grounded much of Israel's aviation sector.[13] This approach contrasted with competitors like El Al and Israir, which sought prolonged government support while maintaining limited services; Arkia's shutdown preserved liquidity but relied on subsequent state aid packages totaling up to $85 million across Israeli carriers, including three-year bonds without interest accrual approved in January 2022.[34] Arkia secured state-backed loans from commercial banks at a 75% guarantee level by mid-2020, enabling survival through 2021's Delta variant resurgence, which prompted an additional $44 million in cabinet-approved aid.[35][36] Recovery accelerated post-vaccination rollout, with Arkia resuming domestic and select international routes by late 2021, benefiting from pent-up domestic demand in Israel where tourism inflows remained suppressed. By 2024, Israeli airlines including Arkia carried 9.1 million passengers, a 25% increase from prior years, reflecting broader sector rebound amid reduced foreign competition.[37] Operations adapted to heightened biosecurity protocols, such as mandatory testing and capacity limits, which Arkia implemented alongside fleet maintenance to avoid depreciation during idle periods. The October 7, 2023, onset of the Israel-Hamas war exacerbated airspace risks from rocket fire and regional tensions, yet Arkia demonstrated operational continuity by landing flights amid intercepted barrages and temporarily relocating aircraft during acute threats, such as in July 2022 pre-war escalations.[38] Foreign carriers' widespread suspensions created opportunities; by mid-2024, Arkia, El Al, and Israir collectively doubled their market share to over 70% of Israel-bound capacity, as international airlines cut routes due to security insurance premiums and crew reluctance.[39] This shift enabled fare hikes—credit card spending on Israeli airline tickets reached a record $145.7 million in May 2025 amid Houthi threats—bolstering revenues despite sporadic cancellations, like the full halt from June 13-30, 2025, followed by non-refundable rescue flights for stranded citizens.[40][41] Arkia's resilience extended to strategic expansion, announcing Tel Aviv-New York flights starting February 8, 2025, leveraging high-tech sector demand and reduced competition to challenge El Al's transatlantic dominance, with preliminary talks for further North American routes by November 2024.[42][43] These moves, supported by Israel's partial airspace reopenings post-cease-fires, underscore adaptation to persistent geopolitical volatility through domestic focus, government-backed financing, and opportunistic capacity growth.[44]Operations
Destinations and route network
Arkia operates a route network centered on Ben Gurion Airport (TLV) near Tel Aviv, with supplementary services from other Israeli airports, emphasizing domestic connectivity and international leisure travel.[3] The airline's domestic operations focus on high-demand routes within Israel, including frequent flights from TLV to Ramon Airport (ETM) in Eilat, as well as services to Uri Michaeli Haifa International Airport (HFA) and Rosh Pina Airport (RPN), supporting tourism to southern resort areas and northern regions.[45] These routes typically utilize narrow-body aircraft for short-haul efficiency.[46] Internationally, Arkia serves 33 destinations across 23 countries as of October 2025, with a emphasis on seasonal scheduled and charter flights to European vacation spots, supplemented by routes to the Middle East, Asia, and North America.[3] Primary European hubs include Athens (ATH), Barcelona (BCN), Milan (MXP), Paris (CDG), Rome (FCO), and London Stansted (STN), alongside Cyprus (Larnaca LCA and Paphos PFO), Georgia (Tbilisi TBS), and others like Munich (MUC) and Amsterdam (AMS).[3] Middle Eastern services feature Dubai (DXB), while North American operations include seasonal flights to New York (JFK).[3] For the 2025–2026 winter season, Arkia plans over 250 weekly flights to 25 destinations, incorporating expansions such as resumed service to Lisbon (LIS) starting October 27, 2025, Bangkok (BKK) from November 26, 2025, and a new route to Hanoi (HAN) in January 2026.[47][48] These additions target cost-competitive long-haul leisure demand, with fares positioned lower than competitors on select routes.[49] The network's flexibility reflects adaptations to geopolitical constraints, prioritizing direct connections from TLV to minimize layovers for Israeli passengers.[3]Business model and market position
Arkia operates as Israel's second-largest airline, focusing on a hybrid model that combines scheduled domestic flights, primarily to leisure destinations like Eilat, with international charter and scheduled services to Europe, the Mediterranean, and emerging long-haul routes such as New York.[50][8] This structure emphasizes flexibility through wet-leasing aircraft to scale capacity seasonally or during peak demand, as evidenced by agreements for Airbus A320s, A321s, and widebodies like the Boeing 787 Dreamliner and Airbus A330-200 for routes to the United States and Asia.[51][52] Revenue streams derive mainly from passenger ticket sales across these operations, supplemented by ancillary services and a maintenance, repair, and overhaul (MRO) division serving its fleet, other carriers, and the Israeli Air Force.[8][53] In the domestic market, Arkia maintains a dominant niche, holding approximately 70% share on the Tel Aviv-Eilat route before the 2019 closure of Sde Dov Airport, and contributing to a combined 61% market share for domestic carriers like Arkia and Israir amid reduced foreign airline presence during the 2023-2025 Gaza conflict.[54][55] Internationally, its position is smaller, with a scheduled seat share of about 6.2% at Tel Aviv's Ben Gurion Airport in 2024, trailing El Al's dominance but targeting underserved leisure segments through charters and codeshares.[56] This leisure-oriented strategy, bolstered by recent expansions like daily New York flights starting February 2025 using leased widebodies, positions Arkia to erode El Al's near-monopoly on key routes while navigating geopolitical disruptions via adaptive leasing and cost controls.[57][58]Fleet
Current fleet
As of October 2025, Arkia operates a fleet primarily composed of narrow-body Airbus aircraft and Embraer regional jets suited for domestic Israeli routes and short- to medium-haul international flights to Europe and nearby destinations. The airline supplements this with wet-leased wide-body aircraft, such as the Airbus A330-200, for long-haul operations including transatlantic services to New York. This hybrid model allows flexibility amid fluctuating demand and geopolitical constraints affecting Israel's aviation sector, with wet-leases sourced from operators like Hi Fly and GullivAir.[1][59][60] The carrier's in-service fleet totals nine aircraft, with an average age of 14.1 years, reflecting a mix of modern efficient types like the A321neo and older A320s. One Embraer E190 remains parked, and Arkia has one Airbus A320-200 on order to support ongoing domestic and charter operations. Efforts to transition to an all-Airbus fleet by late 2025, including the potential sale of Embraer jets, are underway but not yet complete as of this date.[1][61]| Aircraft type | In service | Parked | On order | Average age (years) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Airbus A320-200 | 4 | 0 | 1 | 18.6 | Primarily for domestic and short-haul; some may be wet-leased.[1][62] |
| Airbus A321neo | 2 | 0 | 0 | 6.9 | Long-range variants (A321-200NX/LR) for extended European and potential transatlantic backup.[1][63] |
| Airbus A330-200 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 17.5 | Wet-leased for New York and Thailand routes.[1][64] |
| Embraer E190 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 11.6 | Regional jets focused on high-frequency domestic services to Eilat.[1] |
Historical fleet
Arkia's historical fleet commenced with piston-engine aircraft shortly after its founding in 1949. The airline initially acquired two surplus Douglas DC-3 Dakotas from the Israeli Air Force in the early 1950s, utilizing them for key domestic routes including twice-daily Tel Aviv-Eilat services.[8] These aircraft, seating 32 passengers, represented an upgrade from smaller initial types and were loaned back to military operations during conflicts like the 1956 Sinai Campaign before returning to civilian use.[8] By the 1960s, Arkia shifted to turboprop aircraft to enhance capacity and efficiency on short domestic sectors. The fleet included five Handley Page Dart Heralds, optimized for regional operations, and three Vickers Viscounts, introduced around 1967 for improved speed and passenger comfort.[1][65] These types supported growing demand, with the Viscounts handling up to 40-50 passengers until phased out in the 1970s amid jet introductions. The 1970s and 1980s marked Arkia's entry into jet operations, starting with two BAC 1-11 Series 500s for medium-haul charters.[1] Domestic focus persisted with the acquisition of 13 De Havilland Canada DHC-7 Dash 7s beginning in 1981, prized for short takeoff and landing capabilities on Israel's austere airstrips.[1][66] Jet expansion included seven Boeing 737-200s from 1982, enabling international charters until their retirement around 2000.[1] In the 1990s, Arkia adopted wide-body and stretched narrow-body jets for long-haul growth. Three Boeing 757-200s entered service in 1993, followed by two 757-300s in 2000, supporting leisure routes to Europe; these were retired by 2007 and 2019, respectively.[1] Two Boeing 767-300s and three Airbus A320-200s supplemented the fleet for high-capacity charters before eventual phase-out. Regional jets like three Embraer ERJ-190s operated briefly in the 2010s, while one De Havilland Canada DHC-6 Twin Otter and an Embraer Phenom 100 served niche roles.[1] Additionally, ATR 72-500s flew from 1998 to 2017 for prop-based domestic efficiency.[1]| Aircraft Type | Number Operated | Primary Era |
|---|---|---|
| Douglas DC-3 | 2 | 1950s |
| Handley Page Herald | 5 | 1960s–1970s |
| Vickers Viscount | 3 | 1960s–1970s |
| De Havilland Canada DHC-7 | 13 | 1980s–1990s |
| Boeing 737-200 | 7 | 1982–2000 |
| Boeing 757-200/300 | 5 | 1993–2019 |
| Boeing 767-300 | 2 | 1990s–2000s |
| Airbus A320-200 | 3 | 2000s |
| Embraer ERJ-190 | 3 | 2010s |
| ATR 72-500 | Unspecified | 1998–2017 |