RusLine

RusLine (, Aviakompanija «RusLajn») is a regional airline from Russia that operates mostly domestic regional flights, as well as holiday charters. Its headquarters are located in the Omega Plaza (Омега Плаза) business centre in Moscow, Russia.[2] As of June 2025, the airline is banned from flying into the EU like all other Russian airlines.[3]

History

The company was founded in 1999 as Aerotex Airlines and was originally based at Sheremetyevo International Airport.[4] In March 2013, it was renamed RusLine, which coincided with a move to Vnukovo International Airport shortly after.[4]

On 1 April 2010, RusLine acquired the assets and brand name of bankrupt Air Volga. This included six Bombardier CRJ200 aircraft, and Air Volga's base at Volgograd International Airport.[4]

Originally, the airline operated several ageing Soviet-built aircraft. The first Western airliner, a 50-seat Bombardier CRJ100, was introduced with RusLine in February 2008. Over the following years, further planes of that type (all of which had been acquired second-hand) were added. In April 2012, RusLine took delivery of two larger Airbus A319 aircraft formerly owned by easyJet in order to address the growing demand for charter flights.

Destinations

As of, RusLine operates scheduled flights to the following destinations.[5]

Fleet

Current fleet

As of August 2025, RusLine operates the following aircraft:[16]

Historic fleet

Over the years, the following aircraft types were operated:

Accidents and incidents

  • On 20 June 2011, 47 people died in the crash of Flight 243. The aircraft involved, a Tupolev Tu-134 (registered RA-65691) had been leased by RusLine from RusAir and was approaching Petrozavodsk Airport, completing a flight from Moscow-Domodedovo. Due to poor visibility conditions, the pilots were unaware that they descended too rapidly, so that the aircraft struck trees and impacted on a highway. There were five survivors.[18][19]

References

  1. Авиакомпания "РусЛайн" начинает базироваться в Улан-Удэ и запускает новый рейс в Иркутск airportbaikal.ru, 27 April 2018^
  2. "КОНТАКТЫ." RusLine. Retrieved on 21 June 2011. "КОНТАКТЫ ГОЛОВНОЙ ОФИС Адрес: 115280, г. Москва, ул. Ленинская слобода, д.19, бизнес-центр «Омега Плаза»"^
  3. The EU Air Safety List - European Commission transport.ec.europa.eu, retrieved 2025-02-07^
  4. ATDB.aero aerotransport.org AeroTransport Data Bank aerotransport.org, retrieved 23 April 2018^
  5. География полетов retrieved 2016-07-07^
  6. Алёна Ливнева. Из Челябинска запустили прямые авиарейсы до Ханты-Мансийска Pchela.news, Сетевое издание «ПЧЕЛА», 14 November 2025, retrieved 16 November 2025^
  7. Возобновление рейсов Белоярский – Москва (Жуковский) с 8 марта Airline "RusLine", retrieved 14 February 2025^
  8. Открытие рейсов по новому направлению Ханты-Мансийск – Салехард Airline "RusLine", retrieved 14 February 2025^
  9. Ася Думичева. Как летают самолеты между Салехардом и Ханты-Мансийском: расписание, подробности Интернет-сайт «Красный Север», 2 August 2025, retrieved 25 August 2025^
  10. Из кировского аэропорта Победилово вылетел первый рейс в Петербург ИТАР-ТАСС, 20 January 2014, retrieved 20 January 2014^
  11. ВАЛЕРИЯ ЭШКИНИНА. Взлетная полоса аэропорта Йошкар-Олы закрылась на ремонт Общественно-политическое сетевое издание «Марийская правда», 1 October 2023, retrieved 2 October 2023^
  12. Jim Liu. RusLine expands Adler/Sochi network in S19 Routesonline, 17 May 2019, retrieved 17 May 2019^
  13. Ирина Птуха. Аэропорт "Тамбов" принял первый рейс из Казани www.onlinetambov.ru, Онлайн Тамбов.ру, 18 June 2024, retrieved 19 June 2024^
  14. "РусЛайн" с 15 декабря возобновляет рейс Ярославль- Санкт-Петербург // АвиаПорт.Новости www.aviaport.ru, 22 November 2023, retrieved 22 November 2023^
  15. Direct flights from Moscow to Abkhazia www.rusline.aero, retrieved 2025-11-15^
  16. Global Airline Guide 2025 - RusLine Airliner World, September 2025^
  17. AviaPort digest (in Russian)^
  18. Harro Ranter. ASN Aircraft accident Tupolev 134A-3 RA-65691 Petrozavodsk Airport (PES) aviation-safety.net, retrieved 23 April 2018^
  19. Crash: Rusair T134 at Petrozavodsk on Jun 20th 2011, impacted road short of runway The Aviation Herald, 20 June 2011, retrieved 21 June 2011^