Corsair International, legally Corsair S.A., previously Corsairfly and Corse Air International, is a French airline headquartered in Rungis[3][4] and based at Orly Airport.[5] It is a subsidiary of German investor Intro Aviation (53%) and TUI Group (27%). It operates scheduled long-haul services to leisure destinations in the French overseas territories, Africa and North America, as well as charter flights to other destinations.[6]
History
Early years
Corse Air International was established in january 1981 by the Corsican Rossi family and started operations on the following 17 May. It dealt with charter fligts only with a fleet of Sud Aviation SE-210 Caravelles. As business grew, the company first purchased the more modern Boeing 737 twin-jet aircraft and then also Boeing 747s. In 1990 it was acquired by Nouvelles Frontières, an important French tour operator, and the name was changed to Corsair. In 1991, the airline obtained worldwide traffic rights. In March 1999 the airline started the first scheduled flights, favoring those destinations that had already shown the greatest customers traffic. Great capacity Airbus A330 were bought and these twin-engined jetliners seemed the best answer to the increased demand for long-distance transport.
In 2000, the German TUI Group, one of the world's leading tour-operator firms, took over Nouvelles Frontières. In 2004, Corsair aircraft started being repainted with the colours of TUI, a blue fuselage with the TUI-logo, like its sister airlines. At the end of 2005, the TUI Group decided to rename all its affiliated airlines TUIfly. As an interim step Corsair aircraft were repainted with Corsairfly markings, although all airlines in the group were expected to have adopted the common TUIfly brand by 2008.[5]
The airline held the record for most seats on a passenger aircraft, with 587 seats on its Boeing 747-400s,[7] until they received a new interior which led to a new lower capacity of 533 passengers.
In 2008, the airline announced its intention to expand its medium-haul network to the Mediterranean and its long-haul network to Canada and the United States (where it regularly flew in the 1990s), including the establishment of codeshare agreements with Air Canada.[8] The first destination in this expansion was Miami in June 2010, but the rest of the plan was later abandoned due to a change in the airline's strategy.
Development since 2010
In May 2010 Corsairfly announced its "Takeoff 2012" modernisation plan, including a reduction of workforce by 25%, the replacement of three Boeing 747-400 aircraft by two Airbus A330-300 aircraft from TUI Group, the refurbishment of all aircraft cabins, leaving the charter flights market, and the termination of routes to Kenya, the Dominican Republic, Québec City, Moncton and Israel.[9][10][11]
In March 2012 the airline announced it would change its name to Corsair International and unveiled a new corporate image corresponding to planned operational changes. In 2015 Corsair's owner, German tourism company TUI Group, tried to sell the loss-making airline. After take-over negotiations with Air Caraïbes, the potential buyer walked away after advanced talks due to ongoing opposition from Corsair's staff unions regarding the proposed future developments and cost reductions.[12] Also in 2015, TUI Group announced that all TUI companies and airlines except Corsair were to use the TUI name.[13]
In late 2018 it was reported that the TUI Group had restarted talks to sell the loss-making airline. It was expected to be sold by the end of the year to German investment corporation Intro, which had owned several other airlines in the past.[14] In May 2018, a Corsair shareholder announced that Corsair International would retire its three remaining Boeing 747-400s by September 2021 as part of fleet renewal and replacement plans.[15] In March 2019, Corsair officially announced that it would lease three Airbus A330-900s to replace its three Boeing 747-400s.[16]
In March 2019 TUI announced that it had agreed to sell 53% of Corsair to a German airline investor, Intro Aviation, for an undisclosed sum. TUI would retain 27% of the airline, while employees would hold the remaining 20%.[17] In October 2019, Corsair ended its codeshare agreement with Air Caraïbes.[18][19]
The company announced on 19 April 2020 that it would immediately retire its three Boeing 747-400s because of the COVID-19 crisis and grounding. The then mixed fleet would have been transitioned to an all-A330 fleet, expected to comprise 13 aircraft by 2023.[20] On 17 August 2021, Corsair and Air Austral announced the formation of a joint venture between the two companies.[21]
On 13 March 2024, Corsair received its first of four additional Airbus A330-900s as part of transitioning to a fleet composed entirely of A330-900s, thus retiring its remaining A330-300 aircraft by the end of the year.[22]
Destinations
As of August 2024, Corsair International operates or has previously operated to the following destinations:[23]
Airline partnerships
Corsair International has interlining agreements with the following airlines:
The airline also partners with easyJet through its Worldwide by easyJet program,[35] and additionally has codeshare agreements with the SNCF, the French national railway operator.[36]
- Air Antilles
- Emirates[32]
- ITA Airways[33]
- Winair[34]
Fleet
Current fleet
As of November 2025, Corsair International operates an all-Airbus A330 fleet:[37]
Former fleet
While the company started in business as an operator of short- and medium range aircraft such as the Sud Aviation Caravelle and various versions of the Boeing 737, beginning in the 1990s, it progressively shifted its operations to long-range only. As a long-range airline, Corsair has operated the following jet aircraft types:[38]
See also
External links
References
- CSR Policy Corsair | Corsair^
- CORSAIR Company website consulted on 10/19/20 10 June 2021^
- "Historique de Corsairfly ." Corsairfly. Retrieved on 2 June 2009.^
- "Nos métiers ." Corsairfly. Retrieved on 23 September 2009. "CORSAIRFLY – DRH 2 avenue Charles Lindbergh 94636 RUNGIS Cedex "^
- Directory: World Airlines Flight International, 2007-04-03^
- Contenu de la balise "Title" retrieved 10 July 2015^
- Corsair.fr retrieved 10 July 2015^
- Corsair : Etats-Unis, Québec et Israël en ligne de mire^
- Corsairfly: plan de 380 départs volontaires sur deux ans retrieved 15 April 2019^
- Corsair.fr retrieved 10 July 2015^
- Corsair restructuring decision expected this week retrieved 2010-10-18^
- Gespräche in letzter Minute gescheitert: Tui wird Corsair doch nicht los aeroTELEGRAPH, 8 March 2015, retrieved 10 July 2015^
- Arke Fly kicks off TUI Group rebranding exercise ch-aviation, retrieved 2017-03-01^
- Tui verkauft französische Corsair an Intro airliners.de, 18 October 2018^
- Corsair International - Book Flights and Save www.alternativeairlines.com, retrieved 15 April 2019^
- Oliver Clark. Corsair to lease A330neos and go all-Airbus under new owner Intro Flightglobal.com, 19 March 2019, retrieved 15 April 2019^
- Oliver Clark. TUI confirms sale of majority stake in Corsair to Intro Flightglobal.com, 18 March 2019, retrieved 15 April 2019^
- Partenariat aérien Air Caraïbes, retrieved 14 September 2020^
- Serge Fabi. Air Caraïbes et Corsair arrêtent leur partage de codes sur les Antilles 27 July 2019, retrieved 14 September 2020^
- Oliver Clark. Corsair to lease A330neos and go all-Airbus under new owner Intro 19 March 2019^
- François Duclos. Un projet d'alliance entre Air Austral et Corsair Air Journal, 17 August 2021^
- AerCap Delivers First of Four New Airbus A330neo Aircraft to Corsair AerCap, PRNewsWire, 13 March 2024, retrieved 4 April 2024^
- Passenger information Corsair, retrieved 28 December 2021^
- Routes In Brief: Rolling Daily Updates (W/C July 25, 2022) RoutesOnline, retrieved 25 July 2022^
- Thierry Blancmont. Corsair reliera Bordeaux à la Guadeloupe, Lyon et Marseille à l'île Maurice Air-Journal, 29 July 2021^
- Joël Ricci. Corsair renforce sa ligne Nantes / Fort de France Air-Journal, 10 July 2021, retrieved 12 January 2022^
- France's Corsair returns to Mali despite political standoff Ch-Aviation, 15 April 2022^
- Jim Liu. Corsairfly ends Dakar service in Jan 2019 Routesonline, Informa Markets, 2 October 2018^
- Jim Liu. Corsair resumes Miami service from June 2019 Routesonline, Informa Markets, 14 November 2018^
- Tatiana Rokou. Corsair services to the USA suspended indefinitely TravelDailyNews International, 8 October 2021, retrieved 28 December 2021^
- New York service changes from June 2020 Airlineroute, 16 January 2020, retrieved 16 January 2020^
- https://www.emirates.com/us/english/travel-partners/^
- Corsair's partners | Corsair^
- Winair www.fly-winair.sx, retrieved 12 May 2018^
- André Orban. easyJet adds four new partner airlines (Neos, Aurigny, La Compagnie, Corsair) to 'Worldwide by easyJet' distribution service Aviation24.be, 30 September 2017, retrieved 28 December 2021^
- Train + Air service Corsair, retrieved 28 December 2021^
- Fleet Corsair, retrieved 2 October 2024^
- https://www.airliners.net, photos of Corsair aircraft^