Vilnius International Airport - Airlines and Destinations - Passenger

Passenger

Airlines Destinations
Air Malta Seasonal Charter: Malta
Aer Lingus Dublin
Aeroflot Moscow-Sheremetyevo
Aerosvit Airlines Kiev-Boryspil
airBaltic Riga
Austrian Airlines
operated by Tyrolean Airways
Vienna
Aurela Seasonal Charter: Abu Dhabi, Almaty, Antalya, Dubai, Hurghada, Kiev-Boryspil, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Malé, Moscow, Nouadhibou, Riga, Sharm el-Sheikh, Stockholm-Arlanda, Tallinn
Brussels Airlines Brussels
Czech Airlines Prague
Estonian Air Tallinn
Finnair Helsinki
Finnair
operated by Flybe Nordic
Helsinki
Iceland Express
operated by Holidays Czech Airlines
Seasonal: Reykjavík-Keflavík
LOT Polish Airlines
operated by EuroLOT
Warsaw-Chopin
Lufthansa Frankfurt
Norwegian Air Shuttle Oslo-Gardermoen
Ryanair Barcelona, Milan-Bergamo, Bremen, Brussels-Charleroi, Cork, Dublin, Karlsruhe/Baden-Baden, Leeds-Bradford, Liverpool, London-Luton, London-Stansted, Oslo-Rygge, Paris-Beauvais, Rome-Ciampino, Weeze
Scandinavian Airlines Copenhagen
Small Planet Airlines Seasonal Charter: Antalya, Bangkok-Bangkok-Suvarnabhumi, Barcelona, Bergamo, Bodrum, Dalaman, Heraklion, Hurghada, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Malaga, Marsa Alam, Monastir, Rhodes, Palma de Mallorca, Salzburg, Sharm el-Sheikh, Simferopol, Taba
SmartLynx Airlines Seasonal Charter: Bangkok-Bangkok-Suvarnabhumi, Bilbao Airport, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Varna
Sun d'Or International Airlines
operated by El Al
Seasonal: Tel Aviv-Ben Gurion
Transaero Moscow-Domodedovo
UTair Aviation Moscow-Vnukovo
Wizz Air Barcelona, Bergamo, Bergen, Cork, Doncaster-Sheffield, Dortmund, Eindhoven, Liverpool, London-Luton, Paris-Beauvais, Oslo-Torp, Rome-Fiumicino, Stavanger, Trondheim

Read more about this topic:  Vilnius International Airport, Airlines and Destinations

Famous quotes containing the word passenger:

    Every American travelling in England gets his own individual sport out of the toy passenger and freight trains and the tiny locomotives, with their faint, indignant, tiny whistle. Especially in western England one wonders how the business of a nation can possibly be carried on by means so insufficient.
    Willa Cather (1876–1947)