Brommaflyg is forced to cancel around 700 bookings made via external services, as the company has not received ticket revenue from its Danish partner. The flights will proceed as planned, but passengers must rebook their tickets directly with Brommaflyg.
The airline Brommaflyg is forced to take drastic measures after waiting for several months for ticket revenue from its Danish distribution partner GO7/WorldTicket. The outstanding amount totals approximately 500,000 euros, equivalent to nearly 5.5 million Swedish kronor.
In total, around 700 bookings made via travel agents and other external partners are now being cancelled. Among the first to be affected are travellers who had planned to fly to Almedalsveckan. However, this is not a case of the tours being cancelled, but rather tickets must be re-booked via Brommaflyg's own channels. Passengers affected by the cancellations will be contacted via their respective booking channels and referred for a refund or re-booking, the company announces in the press release.
”We deeply regret that our passengers are affected by this situation. We have therefore had no alternative but to take measures to protect the company's operations and ensure that air traffic can continue,” says Henrik Svensson, CEO of Brommaflyg, in the press release.
In an email to Di, he stresses that the situation is not due to decreased demand or operational problems.
”Our flights are operating on schedule and interest in our routes remains strong,” he comments.
Brommaflyg was established in 2025 and is owned by seven prominent business figures from Gotland, including Bygghemma founder Patrik Rees, Ica retailer Paul ”Dino” Larsson, and entrepreneur Henrik Svensson, who is also the CEO. The business concept is to re-establish a daily flight route between Visby and Bromma, following its discontinuation by BRA in December of the previous year. The target audience comprises tourists and business travellers. The company leases aircraft from the Estonian airline Nyxair, and ticket prices at launch started from 1,500 Swedish kronor per trip.
Source: DI.SE









