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Virgin Atlantic to finally launch Seoul flights in 2026

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Two years ago (March 2023 to be precise) Virgin Atlantic gave a binding agreement to the UK Competition & Markets Authority to launch flights to Seoul. This was part of a deal to allow UK Government approval of the Korean Air and Asiana merger.

At the time we wrote that “Flights are expected to launch during the Summer 2024 flying season which starts in late March 2024.”

They didn’t, although this was due to the Korean / Asiana merger not completing until December 2024.

However, the official announcement has now been made. Flights to Seoul will begin on 29th March 2026, three years after Virgin Atlantic agreed to do so.

Virgin Atlantic Korean

With British Airways not having flown to Seoul for a number of years, the prospect of the only two airlines offering direct services merging caused concern in the UK.

As well as fears that the 150,000 passengers who flew between London and Seoul annually pre-covid could face higher fares for direct flights, there was also concern that cargo pricing could increase and raise costs for British businesses who rely on Korean imports.

Korean Air entered into a series of undertakings across both its passenger and cargo businesses to ease these concerns.

What will the deal involve?

Korean Air has provided Virgin Atlantic with slots at London Heathrow and Seoul Incheon to operate this service. From this point of view, it’s a low risk investment by Virgin Atlantic.

What is odd is that Virgin Atlantic and Korean Air will codeshare on the flights. Virgin Atlantic is already codesharing with Korean Air on its existing Heathrow services.

And, of course, both Virgin Atlantic and Korean Air are members of the SkyTeam airline alliance, allowing passengers to earn and spend frequent flyer miles on each others services.

You may therefore wonder what ‘competition’ this new service will provide ….

There’s more upside for Virgin Atlantic. It must operate the route for at least three years, albeit this is subject to ‘commercial viability’. After three years, Virgin Atlantic is allowed to use the Heathrow slots it received from Korean for a different route, although it cannot sell or lease them to another airline.

Virgin Atlantic agrees to launch Seoul

Given the cost of Heathrow slot pairs, Virgin Atlantic could happily sustain losses for three years if it meant inheriting the slots in perpetuity. Whilst, admittedly, it cannot sell these particular slots, it could move another flight into them and sell the OTHER slots it vacated.

Will the route be a success? The fact that Virgin Atlantic is putting a Boeing 787-9 onto it, with the old ‘coffin’ seat, means that it will face an uphill struggle to generate business class revenue.

When will services operate?

Flights will start on 29th March 2026.

Services will operate daily using a Boeing 787-9.

The outbound flight leaves London Heathrow T3 at 09.45, arriving at Seoul Incheon at 06.05 the following day.

The return flight leaves Seoul Incheon at 08.35, landing at 15.05.

Virgin Atlantic has agreed a codeshare agreement with Korean Air to connect to 14 cities. These are Busan, Osaka, Nagoya, Tokyo, Fukuoka, Okinawa, Hokkaido, Sydney, Brisbane, Auckland, Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City, Da Nang and Hong Kong.

You cannot book today. Tickets, for cash or Virgin Points, will be available from 14th May.

Comments (54)

  • danstravel says:

    Great news! Finally a route that I fancy flying with VS. Let’s just hope redemption prices are reasonable….

    For those that are VS Points Poor and with the dynamic redemption pricing meaning peak pricing will likely be out of reach for my modest balance (125k points). What do we reckon off season will be for Korea?

    I am thinking November, January, February and March will be fairly quiet and therefore reflected the the points required?

    • Throwawayname says:

      It’s too bloody cold though. I was in Busan in March maybe 15 years ago and it was freezing. Seoul is even colder, and in January usually sees temperatures well below zero. It’s a lot more pleasant during spring and autumn with people out and about.

      It doesn’t look like they’re making any effort to attract high-yield traffic, so I am hoping they’ll be dumping Y seats at low prices and then at least price premium economy well enough for it to be a good use of the credit card voucher as a non-elite.

      • Novice says:

        I was there touring April 24 and was unlucky some days with rain. And as I was on a tour, it was just set route even in rain. Just wore raincoat and got on with things…wtd

      • Danny says:

        Indeed, I went to Seoul in December a few years ago and it was COLD. Made a Glasgow winter seem like the Bahamas

        The worst thing was the pavements were not salted, so it was an ice rink. Took your life in your hands walking kn the street.

        Do not go in Winter.

        • CorkGirl says:

          My Toronto friends went in a January and were frozen! They’re hardly not accustomed to cold either. We went mid October and it was very pleasant.

  • LittleNick says:

    So in this particular scenario Virgin is much less likely to pull the route before it takes off (as we know Virgin have track record here) because they’ve given guarantees to the UK CMA and after the three years they then get a slot to play with? Presumably if the route is pulled they lose the slot?

    • JDB says:

      Korean had to agree to provide slots etc and that is legally binding as a condition of the CMA accepting undertakings in lieu of a reference.

      Virgin hasn’t had to undertake to start the route or operate the route for three years. If it hadn’t started the route, the opportunity would have been offered to another airline with the access/slots offered by Korean. If Virgin doesn’t operate for three years, it will lose the slots but otherwise not suffer any penalty.

  • Alex G says:

    Presumably, this is just a case of an Asiana or Korean flight being swapped with a Virgin one, so no additional availability on the route. In fact, it’s probably swapping a good airline for a poorer one.

    • Aston100 says:

      I was well impressed by my Asiana flight.

      • Solartravels says:

        Me too, I flew Asiana A380 Frankfurt to Seoul before covid. It was pretty good at the time. I flew the VS 787 Coffin to PVG last year, as a 6’3″ it was the worst!
        On the other hand flew VS Upper from Orlando to Man last year on new A350 and was impressive.

        I will go to Tokyo and Seoul this year via AMS / KL – not sure I’d fancy the coffin.

  • GMT says:

    The points required in UC will be interesting seeing as they are using the 787 with the poor seat, you can fly LHR>DOH>ICN for 80k Avios one way and they use the Q-Suite on the DOH>ICN leg.

  • Nick says:

    787 was always inevitable, it’s too long a route for the A330 to operate (particularly while Siberia is closed), A35K is far too much capacity for an untested new route… and they don’t have anything else to put on it.

    Codesharing doesn’t mean sharing revenue or colluding on pricing, so there should still be an element of competition. Any block space agreements should at least support it enough to be viable.

    • Rhys says:

      Yes, it’s just a shame they still haven’t committed to refurbishing them.

      • LittleNick says:

        Agreed, as someone that’s now more than willing to dump BA for long haul cash flights they’re not exactly making it very attractive with the ancient coffin seats on the 787s and no commitment to refurb them.

  • sturgeon says:

    Love the new route but fully daytime flights both ways in the ancient 787 seat is really unattractive vs competitor options. Why do they do this and how are they getting away with no updates whatsoever on upgrading this aged layout? Will be interesting to see the dynamic pricing but the choice of aircraft significantly reduces any excitement for this.

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