The Irish carrier freezes growth on the island and dangles 2 million extra passengers as leverage. But is volume-at-any-cost what Sardinia actually needs? RENTAL12 argues: companies that refuse to invest in a destination should not dictate its policy.
Ryanair's playbook is well-documented: pressure regions to abolish aviation taxes by threatening to freeze or cut capacity, then redirect aircraft to regions that comply. It has worked in Calabria, Abruzzo, and Friuli Venezia Giulia. But Sardinia is not Calabria. The island generates €34 million from the surtax alone, nearly double the combined revenue of the three regions that abolished it. And the question nobody is asking loudly enough is: does Sardinia actually need 2 million more low-fare passengers, or does it need fewer, better-spending visitors who fund the services that make the island liveable?
Fact: Ryanair confirmed 3 aircraft based in Cagliari, 73 total routes, and 4.5 million passengers for Summer 2026. Head of Communications Italy Fabrizio Francioni stated: "Traffic on the Island will remain flat compared to summer 2025, due to the presence of the municipal surtax."
Viewpoint: "Flat" at 4.5 million passengers is not a crisis. Ryanair is not leaving. They are applying pressure by withholding growth, not withdrawing service. Operators should not panic.
Fact: Ryanair CCO Jason McGuinness has repeatedly stated: "Remove it or we will reduce connections." The carrier promises +2 million passengers/year (+40%), 4 additional aircraft ($400M investment), a new base in North Sardinia with 900 jobs, and new routes to Germany, France, the UK, and Nordic countries.
Viewpoint: This is the same script Ryanair runs everywhere. The question is whether 2 million additional low-fare passengers actually benefit Sardinia, or whether they accelerate the overtourism pressure that the island is already struggling to manage in July and August.
Fact: Regional Transport Councillor Barbara Manca clarified: "The current revenue from the application of the surcharge on passengers transiting through Sardinian airports is worth 34 million euros, almost double the overall value of the other three regions that have decided to suspend the tax."
Viewpoint: Abolishing the tax would cost the Region €34M/year in lost revenue. That money funds infrastructure. The Region has offered a compromise: suspend the tax during the winter IATA season only (cost: ~€10M), which would boost off-season connectivity without subsidizing peak-summer volume that the island cannot absorb.
Fact: While Ryanair freezes, other carriers are expanding into Sardinia for 2026: Delta Air Lines (first-ever JFK-Olbia transatlantic, May 2026), British Airways (Stansted-Olbia), Eurowings (Graz-Olbia), Transavia (Eindhoven-Olbia), and Aeroitalia (5 of 6 PSO domestic routes secured).
Viewpoint: Sardinia is not short of carriers willing to invest. The market is diversifying toward higher-value source markets (US, UK, Austria, Netherlands) that spend more per night and stay longer. That is the strategic direction, not a race to the bottom on fares.
Fact: Olbia municipality raised the tourist tax to €3.50/person/night for 2026, a 75% increase. This signals the city expects demand strong enough to absorb higher costs and intends to fund better services with the revenue.
Viewpoint: The tourist tax and the municipal surtax serve the same philosophy: those who use the destination should contribute to maintaining it. Sardinia recorded 21.8 million overnight stays in 2025. The constraint is not demand. The constraint is quality of experience, service infrastructure, and sustainability. Flooding the island with 2 million additional budget passengers does not solve that. Investing in the island does.
The Ryanair standoff is a regional and carrier-strategy issue that does not affect Olbia's flight connectivity or RENTAL12's operations. Here's why:
Ryanair's complaint is about Cagliari-based capacity and the municipal surtax. Olbia is served by multiple carriers including Delta (JFK), British Airways (Stansted), Eurowings (Graz), and Transavia (Eindhoven). New routes are being added every month. You have more options in 2026 than ever.
While Ryanair withholds Cagliari growth, international carriers are actively investing in Olbia. The JFK-Olbia transatlantic route is a historic first for North Sardinia. This is the market shifting upmarket, exactly where RENTAL12 focuses.
Olbia's €3.50 per person per night tax increase will fund infrastructure, cleaning, and emergency services. Every guest who pays it supports the services that make their stay enjoyable. That's an investment in quality, not a punitive tax.
We manage properties and welcome guests regardless of which carrier is growing or which region is negotiating taxes. Our owner-operator model means we are not dependent on volume trends from any single airline. Quality and consistency are guaranteed.
Browse available apartments and villas, or check emergency support and local guidance if you need it.
Confirmed new carriers and routes launching into Olbia and North Sardinia for 2026, independent of the Ryanair standoff:
| Carrier | Route | Origin City | Start Date (2026) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aeroitalia | Domestic PSO Routes (5 of 6 secured) | Milan, Rome, Bologna, Florence, Naples | Summer 2026 |
| British Airways | Stansted–Olbia | London Stansted | March 2026 |
| Delta Air Lines | JFK–Olbia (transatlantic) | New York | May 2026 (seasonal) |
| Eurowings | Graz–Olbia | Graz, Austria | Summer 2026 |
| Transavia | Eindhoven–Olbia | Eindhoven, Netherlands | Summer 2026 |
Note: Ryanair maintains 73 routes from Sardinia (primarily Cagliari) with flat summer 2026 capacity. The above routes represent new entrants and expansion by carriers investing despite the municipal surtax environment.
"Two million extra passengers sounds impressive on paper. But not every passenger is a net positive for Sardinia. Companies that refuse to invest in our island, that demand tax abolitions as a condition for showing up, are maybe better replaced by carriers that actually want to be here. We should preserve Sardinia and keep it enjoyable. No freebies."
"The math is simple. Sardinia collects €34 million from the surtax. Abolishing it to gain volume passengers who spend less per night is not an investment. It is a subsidy to a foreign corporation. Meanwhile, Olbia's €3.50 tourist tax funds the very services that make guests return. That is how you build a destination: everyone invests, no one rides for free."
"On the ground, what matters is service quality at arrival. More volume without more infrastructure means longer queues, dirtier beaches, and overwhelmed restaurants. We would rather host fewer guests at a higher standard than flood the island and dilute the experience. The carriers investing in Sardinia right now — Delta, BA, Eurowings, Aeroitalia — they bring guests who value what we build. That is the partnership model."
Ryanair remains operationally committed to Sardinia. The airline's stance is about growth strategy and tax policy, not exit. Operators should focus on diversifying source markets rather than depending entirely on Ryanair's summer capacity decisions.
The surtax is one of Sardinia's key revenue sources for transportation and infrastructure investment. It is distinct from the Olbia tourist tax (€3.50 per person per night), which is a local municipality levy that funds local services.
This is a significant commitment and reflects Ryanair's confidence in the Sardinia market. However, the Region has countered with a compromise proposal to suspend the tax only during the winter season, which would reduce lost revenue from €34M to approximately €10M annually while still attracting additional off-season connectivity.
The expansion by international carriers contradicts Ryanair's assertion that the surtax makes growth impossible. These carriers have determined that Sardinia's market is attractive enough to justify investment even with the current tax environment. This signals market confidence and supports RENTAL12's argument that quality and strategic partnerships matter more than volume at any cost.
Quality tourism supports higher revenue per guest, extends shoulder seasons, and creates stable year-round employment. RENTAL12's operating model and the municipal tax increase demonstrate that the market is shifting toward premium positioning, which makes Ryanair's volume ultimatum strategically misaligned with Sardinia's actual development goals.
Guests have more flight options to Olbia in 2026 than ever before. The tourist tax increase supports better local services, cleaner beaches, and improved emergency response. RENTAL12's owner-operator model ensures consistent quality and direct communication regardless of which carriers are expanding or contracting. Book with confidence.
| Source | Why It Is Relevant | Link |
|---|---|---|
| Il Sole 24 Ore (English) | Primary source. Details on Ryanair's flat growth announcement, the Francioni statement, and the conditional offer of 2 million extra passengers. | Open source |
| L'Unione Sarda (English) | Regional context. Jason McGuinness statement: "Remove it or we will reduce connections." Region confirms surtax generates €34M, nearly double the three regions that abolished it combined. | Open source |
| Ryanair Corporate (Italian) | Official Ryanair press release for Summer 2026 Sardinia operations. Confirms 73 routes, 3 aircraft, 4.5M passengers, and the conditional growth plan including a new North Sardinia base. | Open source |