LOT Polish Airlines is expanding its European network with four new routes that give travelers in southern Poland more direct access to some of the continent’s most in-demand city destinations. The carrier has launched new year-round flights from Krakow to Rome, Barcelona, and Madrid, while also adding a new connection between Warsaw and Bologna. Together, the additions signal a broader push to deepen LOT’s presence beyond Warsaw and strengthen Krakow’s role as a larger regional base.
The timing matters. European carriers are increasingly competing not just on network size, but on how well they connect secondary hubs to major leisure and business markets. For Krakow, that means better links to cities that serve both weekend travelers and corporate passengers.
Rome remains one of the strongest year-round destinations in Europe, Barcelona blends tourism with business demand, and Madrid adds a major Iberian gateway that had clear appeal for both outbound and inbound traffic. Bologna, meanwhile, gives LOT a foothold in another important northern Italian market and marks the airline’s debut at that airport.
A Bigger Role for Krakow in LOT’s Network
LOT says the new Krakow routes launched on March 30 and are part of its permanent year-round network rather than a short seasonal experiment. Rome will operate up to five times a week during the summer and up to four times weekly in winter. Barcelona will run four times a week throughout the year, while Madrid will see up to six weekly flights year-round. The Warsaw-Bologna route began a day later and will operate six times a week.
That is a meaningful step up for Krakow Airport, which is increasingly being positioned as more than a feeder point into Warsaw. LOT is expanding its summer 2026 schedule from Krakow to as many as 11 destinations and supporting that growth with an additional Boeing 737 MAX 8 aircraft. Airport leadership has also pointed to a sharp rise in LOT’s activity there, with stronger domestic, European, and even long-haul connectivity helping raise the airport’s profile.
For travelers, the appeal is straightforward. More direct flights reduce dependence on connecting itineraries and make short European trips much easier to plan. For the region, the benefits are wider. Better air access tends to support tourism, trade, and business ties, especially when routes connect to large capital cities and established cultural centers. Rome, Barcelona, and Madrid are obvious draws for leisure passengers, but they are also major economic and conference destinations.
LOT is also leaning into product messaging, highlighting that carry-on baggage is included in the fare and that the Boeing 737 MAX 8 cabins feature updated interiors. That alone will not define the success of the routes, but it helps frame the expansion as part of a larger effort to make Krakow a stronger and more visible part of the airline’s network.