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LOT Polish Airlines has adjusted its schedule for the upcoming 2025/26 winter season, which runs from October 26 to March 28, mostly increasing operations to markets in the former Yugoslavia compared to the previous winter, particularly during the first quarter of 2026. However, the carrier will temporarily suspend flights between Warsaw and Skopje for a month and a half. The route will be maintained three times per week in November, December and early January, before being halted from January 11 to February 21. Services will then resume at three weekly rotations for the remainder of the season. Last winter, LOT operated the route three times per week throughout the entire season.
The Polish carrier will boost its operations to Sarajevo by maintaining flights to Bosnia and Herzegovina’s capital throughout the entire winter season. Last year, the airline suspended the route from January 11 to February 22, but this winter it will operate three weekly rotations between the two cities without interruption. As reported earlier this week, LOT is also extending its winter service to Dubrovnik. In the previous season, flights from Warsaw to the coastal city ended on December 31 and resumed on March 1. This time around, the airline will continue operating twice weekly throughout January and February.
LOT is increasing frequencies on its Zagreb flights over the upcoming winter season, maintaining ten weekly services between the two cities, up from eight last winter. During one week in November, frequencies will rise to eleven per week. In Ljubljana, the airline will continue operating six weekly flights, with no reductions planned for January and February. Last winter, services were cut to five weekly during this period. Operations to Belgrade will remain steady at eleven weekly rotations, increasing to twelve weekly from February 23. Flights to Podgorica will continue to be maintained at three per week.
Over the upcoming winter, LOT is adding the most capacity on its Belgrade route when compared to the previous winter season, with an additional 7.600 seats, followed by Dubrovnik with an extra 4.200 seats, Zagreb with an added 3.800 and Sarajevo with an extra 2.800 seats, while Ljubljana and Podgorica remain unchanged. On the other hand, Skopje will lose 3.000 seats. Changes remain possible, particularly in capacity levels as LOT modifies its equipment deployment on a regular basis.
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