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What is the 25 minute turnaround on Ryanair?

We pre-board our planes to get them back in the air as quickly as possible. Less time on tarmac means less airport fees and more flights. That's what gets your fare low. We aim to get passengers off & on the plane, and back in the air, in 25 minutes.



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Ryanair is keen to let you know if you've arrived at your destination before the expected arrival time, and you are likely to hear this sound on a Ryanair flight. The airline operated 837,703 flights in 2019, with 92% arriving on time. In 2021, 96% of the airline's 339,858 flights arrived on time.

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Which airlines have cancelled most flights? Ryanair was the best-performing major airline worldwide - it has cancelled just 0.3% of flights so far this year.

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If you act fast, you can make changes without having to pay any fees. Ryanair offers a 24-hour grace period² where you can change dates and times (and reverse the routing destinations if you accidentally get your airport arrivals and departures the wrong way around) free of charge.

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A Ryanair passenger is entitled to compensation in the event of any of the following: Flight delay: If your Ryanair flight arrived at your destination more than 3 hours later than expected. Flight Cancellation: if you were not informed of the cancellation or informed less than 14 days before departure.

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Our data indicates that there were 10 Ryanair flights delayed by more than 3 hours over a 24-hour period. 0.40% of domestic flights and 0.31% of international flights were delayed more than 3 hours.

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Ryanair, for example, takes as little as 25 minute to complete the whole process for a short-haul flight. They managed to cut the time dramatically after removing seatback pockets from their aircraft in 2004.

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When all is said and done, the Airbus A380 needs 3,000 m (9,800 ft) of runway to take off fully-loaded, while the Boeing 747-8 requires 3,100 m (10,200 ft).

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An A380 crosses the landing threshold at a docile 140 knots and touches down, depending on its landing weight, at a speed as slow as 130 knots, about the same touchdown speed of some corporate jets that weigh 1/50th as much as the world's biggest airliner.

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