PARIS — Air France is ramping up service from Canada for summer 2026, operating up to 60 weekly flights at peak season – an increase of one additional flight compared to summer 2025.
The added capacity comes with the introduction of a fourth weekly frequency between Quebec City and Paris. The seasonal Quebec City service will run from June 18 to Oct. 6.
At peak, Air France’s Canadian schedule will include 28 weekly flights from Montreal, 14 from Toronto, seven from Ottawa and seven from Vancouver, alongside four weekly departures from Quebec City.
The Canadian expansion comes as part of a broader global schedule that will see the airline serve close to 170 destinations across 73 countries. Long-haul capacity is set to increase by 2% compared to summer 2025, driven largely by continued growth in North and South America.
Among the highlights is the launch of a new direct route between Paris-Charles de Gaulle Airport and Las Vegas, operating three times weekly starting April 15, 2026. The new service will be operated by Airbus A350-900 aircraft and will mark Air France’s 19th destination in the United States.
In addition, the carrier will double frequencies to Newark Liberty International Airport starting in June 2026. By peak summer, Air France will offer up to 11 daily flights between Paris-Charles de Gaulle and New York-area airports, in partnership with Delta Air Lines.
MIDDLE EAST UPDATES
Network adjustments continue to be influenced by the ongoing Middle East crisis. Air France has extended the suspension of services to Tel Aviv, Beirut, Dubai and Riyadh.
Flights to and from Dubai and Riyadh are suspended until March 31, 2026, inclusive (until April 1, 2026, for flights departing form Dubai). Service to and from Tel Aviv and Beirut is suspended until April 4, 2026, inclusive.
Since the start of the conflict, Air France has been deploying additional capacity to popular Asian destinations, including Bangkok, Singapore, Delhi, Mumbai and Manila, as well as Nairobi in Kenya. Larger aircraft have also been operated on select flights to Bangkok, Phuket, Singapore, Delhi and Tokyo.
The increase in capacity will continue throughout the 2026 summer season, with additional flights scheduled to Bangkok, Singapore, Bengaluru, Tokyo and Osaka, and the use of larger aircraft on certain flights to Delhi and Mumbai.
LE PREMIERE CABIN
On the product side, Air France continues the rollout of its new La Première suite, currently available on routes between Paris-Charles de Gaulle and New York-JFK, Los Angeles, Miami, Singapore and Tokyo-Haneda. It will be introduced this summer on flights to Abidjan and San Francisco.
The airline is also expanding its free high-speed Wi-Fi offering, with 40% of the fleet expected to be equipped by the end of March 2026 and near full coverage by year-end.
SHORT- AND MEDIUM-HAUL
Across its short- and medium-haul network, Air France will operate up to 630 daily flights to more than 90 destinations. Frequencies are increasing to several European and Mediterranean cities, including Dublin, London-Gatwick, Marrakech, Rabat, Naples, Seville and Porto.
The airline is also moving ahead with its domestic restructuring plan, centralizing Paris operations at Paris-Charles de Gaulle, with the exception of flights to/from Corsica. Flights to Toulouse, Nice and Marseille, as well as services to French overseas territories, will operate from the hub to improve connectivity.
Further supporting the group’s network strategy, Transavia France – the low-cost subsidiary of the Air France-KLM Group, is set to become the company’s flagship carrier operating out of Paris-Orly. Starting March 29, 2026, Transavia will launch routes between Paris-Orly and Toulouse, Nice and Marseille.
For full flight schedules, visit airfrance.com and transavia.com.