For Winter 2022/23, Condor will offer three weekly flights from Düsseldorf to Punta Cana in the Dominican Republic, as well as two weekly flights to Cancún, Mexico. Additionally, the carrier will fly twice-weekly between Munich and Punta Cana.
On Friday (April 29, 2022), Condor announced additions to their winter 2022/23 schedule with service to some of the Caribbean’s most beautiful beaches from Düsseldorf and Munich. From Düsseldorf, the carrier will offer three weekly flights to Punta Cana in the Dominican Republic on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, as well as twice-weekly service to Cancún, Mexico on Tuesdays and Sundays. Additionally, Condor will operate two weekly flights between Munich and Punta Cana on Thursdays and Saturdays. Both routes will be operated with a Boeing 767-300ER, as the airline continues their long-haul commitment to Düsseldorf and Munich this winter.
Service from the additional airports will complement Condor’s comprehensive winter 2022/23 flying program which includes 21 long-haul destinations from Frankfurt, including service to Cape Town, as well as all-new flights to Johannesburg. Service to Mombasa has also been resumed, and flights to New York, Toronto, Los Angeles and Seattle will continue with several weekly flights. In addition to North America, Condor’s winter 2022/23 schedule includes destinations in Mexico, Cuba, Jamaica, the Dominican Republic, Grenada and Tobago, along with the carrier’s ‘dream destinations’ such as the Seychelles, the Maldives and Mauritius in the Indian Ocean.
Founded in 1956, Condor is Germany’s favorite leisure airline and serves over nine million guests annually to 90 destinations in Europe, Africa and America from nine German gateways, Zurich and Vienna. The German leisure carrier has a fleet of over 50 aircraft which are meticulously maintained to the highest safety standards by their wholly-owned subsidiary Condor Technik with facilities in Frankfurt and Düsseldorf. Starting in Fall 2022, Condor will become the German launch customer for the Airbus A330neo.
Source: Condor
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