Ural Airlines


Ural Airlines is an airline based in Yekaterinburg, Sverdlovsk Oblast, Russia, that operates scheduled and chartered domestic and international flights out of Koltsovo International Airport. In 2018, the company transported nine million passengers.

Overview

The airline was founded in 1943 as Sverdlovsk State Air Enterprises, and later became part of Aeroflot, the Soviet state airline, being in charge of Yekaterinburg Airport. Following the split-up of Aeroflot, Ural Airlines became a joint stock company incorporated under the laws of the Russian Federation on 28 December 1993, and the airline business was separated from the airport.
In 2010, Ural Airlines retired all of its Antonov An-24s, Ilyushin Il-86s and Tupolev Tu-154B-2s. The airline's Tupolev Tu-154M, in 164-seat two-class configuration, was retired on October 16, 2011.
Ural Airlines has 3348 employees.
As of 2012, the airline also planned to buy a training complex for the Airbus A330-300.
In 2017, Skytrax gave Ural Airlines three stars, which made it the fourth airline with three stars in Russia and CIS after S7 Airlines, Uzbekistan Airlines and Air Moldova.
Currently, the main hubs of Ural Airlines are Moscow-Domodedovo and Yekaterinburg. Ural Airlines has plans to increase its number of hubs, by developing hubs at Moscow-Sheremetyevo and Moscow-Zhukovsky.
In 2020, flights commenced to Russian-controlled Crimea.
In 2022, Ural Airlines was added to the European Union's sanctions list for transporting military personnel during the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

Corporate affairs

A million passengers per year was first achieved in 2006. Since then, the airline and its passenger numbers have both grown. In 2013, the airline transported 4.419 million passengers, the sixth most in Russia that year.
YearAmount
20189.001 million
20178.000 million
20166.467 million
20155.445 million
20145.161 million
20134.419 million
20123.525 million
20112.513 million
20101.792 million
20091.497 million
20081.450 million
20071.217 million
20061.011 million
20050.909 million

YearRevenueNet profit
2024₽143,4 billion
2023₽110,9 billion ₽17,1 billion
2022₽89,3 billion₽13,4 billion
2015₽43,843 million ₽285 million
2014₽36,666 million ₽559 million
2013₽29,199 million ₽206 million
2012₽23,102 million ₽145 million
2011₽17,329 million ₽143 million
2010₽13,061 million ₽30 million
2009₽10,573 million ₽-758 million
2008₽11,528 million ₽307 million
2007₽7,240 million ₽-138 million
2006₽6,241 million₽27 million

Destinations

As of November 2023, the airline serves 11 countries on 138 routes.

Codeshare agreements

Ural Airlines has codeshare agreements with the following airlines:

Fleet

Current fleet

, Ural Airlines operates an all-Airbus A320 family fleet composed of the following aircraft:

Fleet development

Ural Airlines also started considering updating its fleet with newer Airbus A320neo family or Boeing 737 Next Generation narrow-body aircraft and is still considering purchasing Airbus A330 wide-body aircraft. It took delivery of its first Airbus A320neo in August 2019. The airline also considered purchasing Irkut MC-21s, but the plans were probably withdrawn. In 2022, Air Lease Corporation are seeking to recover one A320neo and one A321ceo, as the lease payments are not being made. In December 2023 an agreement was reached with leasing company AerCap to buy 19 Airbus planes, with help from the Russian National Wealth Fund.

Retired fleet

AircraftTotalYear introducedYear retiredNotes
Antonov An-12219921998Accepted from Aeroflot's break up.
Antonov An-24219922006Retired from the re-branding of the airline.
Ilyushin Il-8642010One was leased from Siberia Airlines.
It was the only wide-body aircraft in the airline's fleet.
Tupolev Tu-154B32006Retired from the re-branding of the airline.
Tupolev Tu-154M52011The last Soviet-built aircraft.

Accidents and incidents

Passenger fraud incidents

In August 2023, a scandal broke out when wider public learned that one of the airline employees of Tatar ethnicity was for several years extorting money from passengers. The employee had used various excuses, particularly that passengers had to pay extra for luggage that was nevertheless undersize and underweight. He did not commit the fraud only against passengers from Tatarstan and North Caucasus regions as he had stated on his social media accounts.