With new budget flights from Gatwick, is Saudi the new Spain?

Plane Talk: ‘Build the air links and they will come,’ seems to be the national refrain in the kingdom

Simon Calder
Travel Correspondent
Wednesday 26 February 2025 10:18 GMT
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Wizz Air Bets on Passengers Sacrificing Comfort for Savings

“Some more pics from a dream holiday,” writes Carrie Johnson, current wife of the former prime minister. She posted this week from the beach in Saudi Arabia on Instagram: “I forgot to mention how incredible the water sports are too – particularly the diving and the snorkelling.”

Let us leave Ms Johnson and her family beside the warm waters of the Red Sea and switch to Wizz Air – which is pushing the boundaries of no-frills flying. The Hungarian budget airline finds itself competing in an increasingly crowded European aviation market in which it occupies an uncomfortable third place behind Ryanair and easyJet.

The sensible response: create some new routes. Equipped with brand-new long-range Airbus A321XLR aircraft, Wizz will connect Sussex with Saudi Arabia from this summer on two links.

One of the new routes from London Gatwick airport is Jeddah, the main city on the Red Sea. National carrier Saudia already flies from London Heathrow three times a day, with plans to launch from Gatwick, while British Airways flies to Jeddah and back daily.

Both of the incumbents use wide-bodied aircraft with long-haul amenities, while Wizz Air will be strictly economy. The typical one-way Gatwick-Jeddah fare on the budget airline in spring and summer is £135, which for almost 3,000 miles of flying is remarkable.

More interesting, though, is the route announced on Tuesday: Gatwick to Medina, the second-holiest city in Islam after nearby Mecca. On the day it starts, 1 August, the temperature in the inland city is likely to be 45C. This is a route that initially is aimed at helping Saudi travellers escape to the relatively benign climes of the UK.

Later in the year, though, Wizz Air visualises British tourists fleeing winter for the bright skies of Arabia. What with a 2.20am arrival in Medina and a 3.15am departure, the airline may have to drop its standard outbound price of £234 to fill the planes in November. Doubtless some will be attracted by the city itself – opened up fully to non-Muslims four years ago – and the nearby cultural jewel of Saudi Arabia, Al Ula. This is an oasis city that grew up astride trade routes and gives access to monuments hewn from sandstone cliffs.

But many will be deterred by the kingdom’s human-rights record – which includes the murder of the journalist Jamal Khashoggi, discrimination against women and frequent executions.

“Same-sex relations are illegal,” adds the Foreign Office. As is alcohol, though some expatriates seem to find ready access to the evil drink.

Saudi is not (yet) the new Spain. The Red Sea coast, though, remains a prime asset. Experience shows that if the price is right an airline – or nation – can attract British holidaymakers. We will also tolerate low-cost airline standards even on six-hour flights, which Wizz Air is about to extend to seven.

Saudi Arabia is pouring money into its infant tourism industry, aiming to create from a standing start a dazzling array of beach holidays, adventurous journeys and city breaks. “Build the air links and they will come,” seems to be the national refrain.

Waiting in the wings: Riyadh Air, a state-funded sister airline to Saudia, the existing national carrier. Saudia aims to create a hub in Jeddah that may one day rival Doha or Dubai. Meanwhile, the newcomer in the kingdom’s capital is all about bringing people in. The plan: “Leveraging Saudi Arabia’s strategic geographic location between the three continents of Asia, Africa, and Europe, Riyadh Air will offer better connectivity to Riyadh – a global destination for transportation, trade and tourism.”

Having briefly visited the capital, I think Riyadh has some way to go before it justifies the “48 Hours in …” treatment. My expectation is that, initially, Riyadh Air will compare to Gulf Air, based in Bahrain, with neither anything like the scale of Emirates or Qatar Airways. But competition in aviation always benefits the traveller. As does some indulgence.

“They also have a really wonderful spa,” writes Carrie Johnson from her Saudi sojourn. “I booked a massage with Rabina and I felt like a new person afterwards.”

After a low-cost flight to the kingdom, arriving in the early hours, you might feel like a rub-down too.

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    1. Comment by Slightly Tipsy Max.

      I wonder which Football club Riyadh Air's owners will buy?

      • Comment by MikeGr.

        Hmmm, I think the difference between Spain and Saudi might be alcohol...

        • Comment by Nomoneyinthebank.

          Hell on earth for many reasons and not just the heat.

          • Comment by TomHawk.

            I will never go on holiday to a country where religious courts pass judgement including stoning to death and amputating peoples hands based on on belief instead of evidence. Look up human rights abuse. But some will see the cheap deal and think it is all OK until they get charged with violating a local custom.

            • Comment by Gom Jabbar.

              Always thought that there was something evil about dictatures , but that seems to be only 'Them' dictatures , not 'us' dictatures , the comparison with Spain should be "Franco's Spain " where so many people were happy to holiday, while those who opposed the regime where garroted..

              • Comment by ouleejit.

                How 'bazzar' 🤭

                • Comment by Jim Kit.

                  I seem to have missed from the article how much they pay you to go.

                  • Reply by Schweinsbraten.

                    More interesting is, how much was Carrie Johnson paid to ooze with praise!

                • Comment by Omar65.

                  How much leg room is there ? Nowadays I can barely tolerate a 3 hour flight on budget airlines. It would be great for doing umrah. Currently the price for a comfortable plane is about £800.

                  • Comment by Letter_from_Captain_Swing.

                    Saudi Arabia isn't woke, BrexCon pensioners will love it

                    How's the eggs, chips and beans - as good as Benidorm ?

                    • Reply by LordNelson3.

                      I.m told the Pork Sausages aren't up to much.

                    • Reply by IndySpannerPhones.

                      Extra beer can, extra bacon.

                  • Comment by Letter_from_Captain_Swing.

                    - “Some more pics from a dream holiday,” writes Carrie Johnson, current (third) wife of the digraced former prime minister, Alexander Johnson.

                    Oh, Alexander, just as you predicted

                    http://boris-johnson.com/2006/06/29/tony-blairs-premiership/

                    It is a wonderful and necessary fact of political biology that we never know when our time is up. Long after it is obvious to everyone that we are goners, we continue to believe in our “duty” to hang on, with cuticle-wrenching tenacity, to the perks and privileges of our posts.

                    We kid ourselves that we must stay because we would be “letting people down” or that there is a “job to be finished”. In reality, we are just terrified of the come-down.

                    Every time Blair thinks it is time to jack it in and head for Dunsmarmin in Barbados, he has a mental peek at life after office. He sees a hell of speeches to half-filled stadia in Minnesota, and the audience fanning themselves with their programmes like dying butterflies.

                    No more outriders, no more adrenaline, no more do-or-die Dispatch Box jousts; no more staring soulfully into the camera, with the little red light on to tell him that he is now going live to every house in the country; no more feeling our pain, no more watching us watching him feel our pain.

                    “I’ll show them,” he mutters. “They won’t get rid of me that easily, and, in any case, my public still love me. I am still the people’s Blair,” he tells himself.

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