Interview Date: December 2025
Interviewee: Dušan Novota, CEO and Chairman of the Board, M. R. Štefánik Airport Bratislava (BTS)
Format: Written Response Interview

Bratislava Airport (BTS) has reached a critical threshold in its institutional development. After 16 consecutive years of financial losses, the airport posted a €2.499 million profit in 2024—a watershed moment that signals a transition from recovery toward potential structural advantage in Central European aviation.

This profit arrived amid unprecedented growth: passenger traffic surged to 2.4 million in 2024, the highest since 2019, driven by transformative partnerships with two major low-cost carriers (Ryanair and Wizz Air) simultaneously expanding their Central European operations. Ryanair now operates 33 routes from Bratislava with a three-aircraft base; Wizz Air launched its four-aircraft base in November 2025, immediately scaling from two routes to 29 scheduled services.

Bratislava Airport Celebrates 10 Years of Ryanair's Base with Five New Routes

More provocatively, BTS is positioned at the convergence of three structural trends that will shape European aviation infrastructure for the next decade:

  1. Low-Cost Carrier Consolidation.The dual-carrier model at BTS—with Ryanair and Wizz Air simultaneously expanding rather than competing for exclusive dominance—represents a rare configuration among regional European airports. This creates network density (62 combined routes), capacity redundancy, and competitive pricing for passengers, but also operational concentration risk rarely discussed in mainstream aviation media.
  2. Regional Hub Transformation. With 33 + 29 = 62 international routes, BTS is transitioning from a “secondary airport” to a genuine “regional distribution node” for Central Europe. However, this transformation is happening within a single 2012-era terminal designed for 5 million passengers annually—infrastructure that is sufficient in capacity but increasingly constrained operationally.
  3. EU Infrastructure Pivot. The European Union’s post-2027 Connecting Europe Facility (CEF) framework, with allocations doubled or tripled compared to 2014–2020, creates unprecedented co-financing opportunities for airports in geopolitical “bridge” locations like Slovakia. BTS’s leadership has begun positioning for these resources, particularly through the new military mobility funding envelope—a sophisticated strategic move that many peer airports have yet to recognize.

Against this backdrop, Aviaedge conducted this exclusive strategic interview with CEO Dušan Novota to explore how BTS leadership plans to navigate record passenger growth (projections exceed 4 million annually), maintain operational quality amid infrastructure constraints, secure EU funding for critical expansions, and position Slovakia’s premier airport for the next decade of Central European integration.


The insights below—many addressed here for the first time in strategic depth—reveal professional airport management executing disciplined growth strategy amid structural opportunity. They also reveal vulnerabilities, gaps, and concentration risks that warrant attention from investors, policymakers, and peer airport operators across Ukraine, Poland, Czechia, and the Balkans.