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Airlines

Algeria’s Domestic Airlines Launches Operations Linking Algiers to South

Domestic Airlines began operations in August 2025 after Air Algérie integrated Tassili Airlines, launching Algiers–Tamanrasset service. Starting with 15 aircraft, the carrier plans 16 ATR 72-600 deliveries (2026–2028) and has state backing and training investments to improve domestic connectivity and reliability.

Last updated: August 26, 2025 4:30 pm
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Key takeaways
Domestic Airlines launched commercial operations August 22, 2025, with inaugural public ceremony on August 25, 2025.
Carrier began with 15 inherited aircraft (Boeing 737s and Dash 8s) and initial Algiers–Tamanrasset route.
Air Algérie ordered 16 ATR 72-600s (deliveries 2026–2028) and bought Africa’s first ATR 72-600 full-flight simulator.

(ALGIERS) Algeria’s new domestic carrier, Domestic Airlines, officially entered service in August 2025, opening regular links between Algiers and key regional cities after a fast build-out of staff, aircraft, and schedules. The launch marks a major shift in how people and goods move inside the country, with early routes focused on the south, including Tamanrasset, and plans to reach more remote airfields in the months ahead.

The first flights began discreetly on August 20, 2025, followed by an official inaugural commercial flight on August 22, 2025. A public ceremony on August 25, 2025 confirmed full operations, with Algiers–Tamanrasset as the initial showcase route. Domestic Airlines flies as a wholly owned subsidiary of Air Algérie, after the state flag carrier acquired and integrated Tassili Airlines in July.

Algeria’s Domestic Airlines Launches Operations Linking Algiers to South
Algeria’s Domestic Airlines Launches Operations Linking Algiers to South

Launch and operations

Domestic Airlines took over Tassili’s fleet and many of its crews, starting with 15 aircraft that include Boeing 737s and De Havilland Canada Dash 8 turboprops. The opening services featured a Boeing 737-800 bearing registration 7T-VCD and a Dash 8-400, 7T-VNC.

Schedules are built for short, point-to-point hops, with a clear goal to bring air service closer to communities that have long faced lengthy road journeys. This is especially important in Saharan areas where distances are wide and weather can slow ground travel.

Air Algérie is also driving a major fleet update to support the new network:

  • Ordered 16 ATR 72-600s with PW127XT engines, ~72 seats each.
  • Delivery window: 2026 to 2028.
  • Company says this is the largest ATR order by any African airline.

Benefits cited by officials include improved match of aircraft size to route demand, better fuel burn, and higher reliability. Air Algérie has also purchased Africa’s first ATR 72-600 full-flight simulator to train pilots domestically, a move expected to speed training and cut costs tied to overseas sessions.

Hamza Benhamouda, CEO of Air Algérie: “The ATR 72-600 is the right aircraft to help us connect all regions of our country and support national development through reliable and efficient air transport.”

The new airline’s strategy is straightforward:

  1. Fly more frequent services on short routes where small and mid-size planes are economical.
  2. Keep pricing predictable.
  3. Pull traffic off congested highways.

Officials say this approach will strengthen tourism, ease business trips, and shorten family travel between the north and the deep south.

Policy support and oversight

The government backed the launch with funding and policy steps. In 2024, Algeria set aside $79 million to support local carriers, easing the early costs of merging fleets, reassigning crews, and standing up new schedules.

Transport Minister Said Sayoud oversaw the inaugural flight, stressing the state’s focus on better domestic links and fair coverage across the country’s vast territory.

The integration that formed Domestic Airlines followed Air Algérie’s full takeover of Tassili Airlines from Sonatrach Holdings, Algeria’s state oil and gas company. That consolidation:

  • Brought most internal air services under one umbrella.
  • Aims to create common service standards and economies of scale.
  • Frees fleet planners to match aircraft types with each city pair instead of splitting planes between two brands.

Regulatory oversight is led by the Autorité Nationale de l’Aviation Civile (ANAC), which enforces national and ICAO rules on licensing, safety, and airport standards. Travelers and industry staff can find official guidance and notices at the ANAC website: Autorité Nationale de l’Aviation Civile.

Authorities are also considering rule changes to allow private airlines. Officials describe a phased approach: keep Domestic Airlines as the core nationwide provider while creating room for new entrants on select routes. The longer-term aim is a stronger home market and the foundation for a future regional hub.

Note: Airspace limits with Morocco remain, but those restrictions do not affect domestic flights. Algeria is increasing cooperation with other partners on training, safety, and airport projects to improve standards and on-time performance over time.

Impact on travelers and regions

For residents of the south, the new Algiers–Tamanrasset flights drastically reduce travel time: some journeys that once took days by road are now a matter of hours. This benefits:

  • Workers rotating to field sites.
  • Students traveling for exams.
  • Families seeking medical care or public services in the capital.

For visitors, regular seats to Tamanrasset open easier access to desert tourism, including treks in the Hoggar range and visits to Tuareg cultural sites that were previously hard to include on tight schedules.

Passengers can expect:

  • More frequent departures on core routes as crews settle into the network.
  • Better same-day connections: early morning flights into Algiers with returns later the same day.
  • Turboprops on thin routes and 737s on busier links, matching demand to aircraft size.

For the aviation workforce, the merger brings Tassili pilots, cabin crew, and mechanics into one system, supported by the new ATR simulator. This should help standardize training and accelerate upgrades to captain, which in turn supports schedule growth as ATR deliveries begin in 2026.

Airports outside the capital also stand to gain. Increased service can justify:

  • Upgrades to terminals.
  • Improvements to navigation aids and rescue services.
  • Moves toward international standards.

Local businesses—from hotels to food suppliers—often see a lift when new flights start. Municipal leaders in the south say reliable air links can help retain talent by making travel to the capital simpler.

According to analysis by VisaVerge.com, stronger in-country air links also help travelers connect international arrivals with domestic connections more smoothly, supporting tourism and business travel alike.

Strategy, risks, and near-term priorities

Domestic Airlines’ early signals suggest a measured build rather than a rapid surge. By using planes it already owns, the carrier can:

  • Test schedules.
  • Learn which days and times attract the most bookings.
  • Avoid the cost of flying large jets half full.

The ATR arrivals will then allow planners to add more small-city stops without a large jump in seat supply that the market cannot absorb.

Officials emphasize the focus on reliability. Key consumer-facing priorities include:

🔔 Reminder
If you need specialized transport (medical, oversized cargo), contact the airline early—new turboprop and ATR rotations have limited capacity and operators can reserve space as schedules mature.
  • On-time departures.
  • Clear fare rules.
  • Simple change policies.

In a country as large as Algeria, trust in timetables is what persuades travelers to choose flights over buses. While the 2026–2028 aircraft deliveries will expand the network, the next few months are critical for setting customer habits and expectations.

Advantages for Domestic Airlines at launch:

  • A unified brand.
  • Shared maintenance resources with Air Algérie.
  • State support during the early stage.

Challenges to manage:

  • Weather in the south.
  • Long distances between bases.
  • Pressure to keep fares affordable amid fluctuating fuel and parts costs.

Outlook

For now, the promise is clear. With the inaugural Algiers–Tamanrasset link in place and more regional routes planned, Algeria’s domestic skies are busier, and the path between the capital and the country’s far reaches is shorter than it has been in years.

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Learn Today
Domestic Airlines → New domestic carrier in Algeria formed as a wholly owned subsidiary of Air Algérie after integrating Tassili Airlines.
ATR 72-600 → A twin-engine turboprop regional aircraft seating about 72 passengers, optimized for short, low-density routes.
Dash 8-400 → De Havilland Canada Dash 8-400 turboprop aircraft commonly used on short regional routes with good short-field performance.
PW127XT → A Pratt & Whitney Canada engine model specified for the ATR 72-600, designed for fuel efficiency and reliability.
ANAC → Autorité Nationale de l’Aviation Civile — Algeria’s civil aviation regulator overseeing safety, licensing, and compliance.
7T-VCD / 7T-VNC → Aircraft registrations cited in the launch: 7T-VCD (Boeing 737-800) and 7T-VNC (Dash 8-400).
Point-to-point → A route structure connecting two cities directly without routing passengers through a central hub, improving direct connectivity.

This Article in a Nutshell

Domestic Airlines began operations in August 2025 after Air Algérie integrated Tassili Airlines, launching Algiers–Tamanrasset service. Starting with 15 aircraft, the carrier plans 16 ATR 72-600 deliveries (2026–2028) and has state backing and training investments to improve domestic connectivity and reliability.

— VisaVerge.com
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