Summer 2025 Travel Guide: AirHelp reveals top Irish airports and destinations to avoid disruptions

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Summer 2025 Travel Guide: AirHelp reveals top Irish airports and destinations to avoid disruptions

Last updated on 25 June 2025
  • Flight punctuality during July and August of 2024 at just 70%

  • More than 61,000 passengers departing from Ireland were eligible for compensation

  • Ireland West Airport Knock ranked as the most disrupted airport in summer 2024

Ireland – 19 June 2025 – As the summer holiday’s approach and families from across Ireland prepare to take trips abroad, AirHelp, the leading travel tech company supporting passengers with flight disruptions, has analysed recent summer tourism trends to uncover which routes and airports are most likely to offer a disruption-free experience.

AirHelp analysed flights from across July and August of 2024 to reveal which airports and destinations achieved the most consistent service across the busiest two months of the year. During this period, more than 26,500 flights departed from Irish airports, carrying over 4 million passengers, with 29% suffering from a disruption.

The worst affected airport was Ireland West Airport Knock, which saw 44% of its passengers disrupted across July and August of 2024. Dublin Airport performed better, with 70% of its passengers departing on time, but saw almost 53,000 passengers left eligible for compensation under the EC 261 regulation. Including cancellations, more than 61,000 Irish passengers were eligible for compensation across the summer travel season.

Under EC 261, the European Union's air passenger rights regulation, passengers are entitled to financial compensation if they experience delays of more than three hours, cancellations less than 14 days before departure, or are denied boarding due to overbooking - provided the airline is at fault.

However, these rules are currently under dispute, following a European Union vote last week that proposed increasing the threshold from three hours to four or six hours, and reducing the compensation available to passengers. The changes would heavily reduce the protection available to passengers, with 60% fewer travellers being eligible for compensation, and the remaining percentage receiving a reduced financial amount.

For passengers trying to find air travel routes that minimise disruption, destinations in the Nordic region seem likely to remain more issue free even during the busiest months, with flights from Irish airports to Denmark and Iceland operating without disruption 86% and 84% of the time.

For passengers aiming to minimise travel disruption, data highlights several highly punctual European routes departing from Ireland. Leading the list is routes from Cork to Amsterdam, with 95% of flights arriving on time. This is followed by Cork to Faro, with an 87% on-time rate, and Dublin to Brussels, where 86% of flights were punctual.

Conversely, routes to key European holiday destinations such as Turkey are more likely to see disruption during the summer months. Flights from Ireland to Adnan Menderes Airport had the highest disruption rate at 57%. This was followed by Dublin to Split, where 48% were disrupted.

Flights to Italy also suffered severe disruptions, with 34% of all travellers to the country being disrupted on their journey. Passengers travelling on routes from Dublin Airport to Bergamo Orio Al Serio Airport Airport and Dublin Airport to Rome Fiumicino Leonardo da Vinci Airport were particularly affected, with disruption rates of 47% and 31% during the summer in 2024.

Tomasz Pawliszyn, CEO of AirHelp, comments: “AirHelp has one of the most reliable and accurate collections of flight data in the world. This helps us provide holidaymakers with a calculated analysis of which airports and destinations performed well during the summer months of 2024. With flight disruptions continuing to rise in 2025, there is some concern that summer travel will once again worsen, and knowing which airports and destinations are likely to remain disruption-free, gives passengers the best chance of enjoying a smoother air travel experience.”

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About AirHelp

AirHelp is a travel tech company tackling flight disruptions. Since 2013, it has won compensation for over 2.7 million passengers with a flight delay or cancellation. 10 million passengers have protected their flights with AirHelp+ Protection, and countless millions more benefit from the expert information freely available on www.airhelp.com/en-ie/. AirHelp has also just released its new app, which offers real-time flight tracking, disruption alerts, and options for extra protection, download it here!

AirHelp is dedicated to investing in a greener future — it has pledged to plant 1 tree for every 100 flight disruptions and so far, it has planted 108,324 trees. As air passenger rights advocates, AirHelp cares about people, and caring about people also means caring about the planet.

#1 source for flight compensation worldwide

With innovative artificial intelligence and a dedicated team of over 400 AirHelpers, AirHelp makes it easy for any traveller in the EU, UK and beyond to receive up to €600 for flight delays and cancellations. For more information about AirHelp, visit: www.airhelp.com/en-ie/.

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