(YEREVAN, ARMENIA) Turkish Airlines said it will launch new direct flights to Yerevan, marking a notable step in the slow but steady thaw between Turkey and Armenia after decades of political strain. The carrier disclosed the decision in a regulatory filing on Tuesday, September 29, 2025, but emphasized that no start date or frequency has been set. The schedule will be shaped by market demand, according to the airline’s filing, signaling a cautious but forward-looking approach to a sensitive route.
The move immediately places Armenia’s capital back on the radar of one of the world’s largest international networks. Turkish Airlines already flies to more than 300 destinations and is widely cited as the carrier that serves the most countries worldwide. Adding Yerevan is both a business play and a diplomatic signal, tying aviation growth to efforts at regional normalization.

Background: normalization momentum and route history
Air travel between the neighbors has long told the story of fits and starts in their ties. The land border has been closed since 1993, but an air corridor opened in 1995, first allowing charter flights run by Armenia’s Armavia and several Turkish operators.
In October 2015, charter links gave way to regular scheduled service by AtlasGlobal, the Turkish private airline that, by January 2016, was operating almost daily flights between Istanbul and Yerevan. That service ended in 2020 when AtlasGlobal declared bankruptcy, halting direct connections for roughly two years.
On February 2, 2022, commercial service returned as Pegasus Airlines and FlyOne Armenia launched the Yerevan–Istanbul route.
Turkish Airlines now plans to add its brand and global connectivity to that corridor. For travelers, the benefits are straightforward: more seats, more schedule choices, and easier one-stop access to Europe, North America, the Middle East, and Asia through Istanbul.
For families split across borders, students, and small business owners, direct flights reduce time, cost, and stress—practical gains that matter in everyday life.
Political context and regional implications
The timing dovetails with intensified dialogue between Ankara and Yerevan, following a U.S.-brokered peace deal between Armenia and Azerbaijan. That agreement includes plans to reopen a transport link connecting mainland Azerbaijan with its Nakhchivan exclave through Armenian territory, now commonly referred to as the “Trump Corridor” after Washington secured exclusive development rights to the project.
Relations remain fragile:
- Armenia and many international bodies describe the mass killings and deportations of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire during World War I as genocide—a label Turkey rejects.
- Turkey supported Azerbaijan through the conflict over the Artsakh region (Nagorno-Karabakh), including the 2020 war that cost more than 6,000 lives.
In this context, a carrier’s route decision doubles as a signal of political space opening—carefully, and with caveats.
Turkish Airlines’ broader strategy and fleet expansion
Turkish Airlines’ Yerevan plan is part of a broader expansion that includes new service to Timișoara, Romania, alongside recent launches to Moscow and Saint Petersburg.
The airline has also placed a massive aircraft order—up to 225 Boeing jets, including:
- 75 Boeing 787 Dreamliners
- 150 Boeing 737 MAX
These aircraft are slated for delivery between 2029 and 2034, forming the backbone of a next-generation fleet plan aiming for a 2035 horizon with an average annual growth rate of about 6%.
Yerevan fits within that map as a manageable market with outsized symbolic value.
What this could mean for travelers and the region
Aviation analysts view the planned Yerevan service as a test of whether air links can reinforce diplomacy. Direct air connectivity reliably boosts trade, tourism, academic exchange, and family visits.
When neighbors carry heavy historical burdens, planes can become practical bridges—allowing ordinary people to move, meet, and do business while leaders argue over borders and documents.
According to analysis by VisaVerge.com, additional lift and competition on a politically sensitive city pair often create a feedback loop: more travelers, more commercial ties, and stronger public support for keeping routes open.
Travelers should watch for three near-term developments:
- The initial schedule: frequency, days of operation, and time banks in Istanbul that match onward connections.
- Fare strategy: whether Turkish Airlines prices aggressively to win share from existing operators or enters at a premium tied to its network advantages.
- Seasonal patterns: whether summer peaks drive more flights and if winter reductions follow.
For people planning trips tied to family events, study, or medical care, the fine print will matter. While Turkish Airlines has announced its intent, tickets will not be available until schedules are loaded and sales open.
Trip planners should:
- Monitor the carrier’s booking channels.
- Compare options with Pegasus Airlines and FlyOne Armenia, which already operate the route.
- Verify entry requirements and documents before purchase.
Important: Always verify entry rules before purchasing tickets. Official guidance for Armenia is available from the country’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs at the Republic of Armenia MFA visa and entry page. Airlines must comply with the documents listed in carrier TIMATIC systems at check-in, regardless of public statements.
Market and policy watchers: stakes and indicators
Officials in both countries will also watch how the market responds:
- A strong start could support confidence-building steps beyond aviation.
- A weak response could slow momentum, especially if political talks stall.
Even a modest, steady schedule can be meaningful if it runs reliably and on time.
The policy backdrop remains complex. The United States 🇺🇸 helped broker the recent Armenia–Azerbaijan deal and, according to source material, secured exclusive development rights for the so-called Trump Corridor. If implemented, that initiative could reshape the South Caucasus transport map and ease logistics around Armenia’s closed land frontier with Turkey. In the meantime, air remains the most practical link.
Key milestones that frame the current moment
Year / Date | Event |
---|---|
1993 | Turkey–Armenia land border closes. |
1995 | Air corridor opens; charter flights begin. |
Oct. 2015–2020 | AtlasGlobal runs scheduled Istanbul–Yerevan service; ends with the airline’s bankruptcy. |
Feb. 2, 2022 | Pegasus Airlines and FlyOne Armenia restart commercial service. |
Sept. 29, 2025 | Turkish Airlines announces intent to launch direct flights; start date and frequency pending. |
Commercial logic and human impact
For Turkish Airlines, the strategic logic is clear: the carrier can funnel passengers from Yerevan through its Istanbul hub to dozens of cities with one ticket, one check-in, and protected connections. The airline’s global reach, paired with upcoming fleet expansion, suggests capacity to sustain the route even if demand builds gradually.
For Yerevan, entry by a flag carrier can:
- Raise the city’s profile on international booking platforms.
- Attract more visitors.
- Give local businesses wider access to suppliers and customers.
The human side is harder to chart but just as real. Students moving for a semester abroad, grandparents meeting a new grandchild, and entrepreneurs sourcing parts across borders all depend on predictable, affordable air links. Every additional flight turns those plans from hope into something close to routine.
That is why analysts often describe air service as a leading indicator of political warming—even when core disputes remain unresolved.
Bottom line
Ultimately, the success of Turkish Airlines’ Yerevan plan will hinge on market demand and the durability of diplomatic progress between Turkey and Armenia. If talks keep moving and travelers respond, the route could grow from a cautious launch into a steady bridge. If tensions spike, airlines will feel it first through bookings and schedules.
For now, the message is simple: a major global carrier is preparing to put Yerevan back into its network map, with details to follow. In a region where borders can feel like walls, planes still open doors.
This Article in a Nutshell
On Sept. 29, 2025, Turkish Airlines filed plans to launch direct flights to Yerevan, though it gave no start date or frequency, saying schedules will depend on market demand. The decision places Armenia’s capital onto the route map of a carrier serving more than 300 destinations, combining commercial opportunity with a diplomatic signal amid thawing ties between Ankara and Yerevan. Air links previously existed through charters from 1995, scheduled AtlasGlobal service from 2015–2020, and commercial resumption by Pegasus and FlyOne Armenia in 2022. Turkish Airlines’ broader expansion and large Boeing order for 2029–2034 underpin capacity growth. Travelers should watch schedule announcements, compare fares with existing carriers, and confirm entry rules before buying tickets. Analysts say reliable flights could strengthen trade, tourism and people-to-people ties, while weak demand or political setbacks could limit progress.