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| Founded | 2016; 10 years ago (2016) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Commenced operations | 1 July 2017; 8 years ago (2017-07-01) | ||||||
| Operating bases | |||||||
| Fleet size | 5 | ||||||
| Destinations | 23 | ||||||
| Parent company | Schauinsland Reisen[2] | ||||||
| Headquarters | Stralsund, Germany | ||||||
| Key people | Marcos Rossello (CEO) | ||||||
| Website | www | ||||||
SundairGmbH is a Germancharter airline[1] headquartered inStralsund. It operates flights to leisure destinations from its bases inBerlin,Bremen andDresden.
In September 2017, the airline received itsair operator's certificate and commenced operations on 1 July 2017[1] with flights toHeraklion andHurghada.
After the demise ofGermania – an airline for which Sundair had previously operatedwet-leases – in early 2019, Sundair announced it would base aircraft atDresden Airport andBremen Airport and take over several of Germania's routes.[3][4]
In May 2023, German tour operatorSchauinsland Reisen acquired a majority ownership in Sundair and its Croatian sister companyFlyAir41, subsequently revising the airlines'corporate design.[2] In August 2023, Sundair's CEO bought thenaming rights of defunctAir Berlin.[5]
In 2024, Sundair announced it would withdraw the aircraft it had based atKassel Airport since 2017.[6]
In 2025, a flight apparently bound forPalma had to return to Bremen.[7]
Sundair operates flights from Germany to holiday destinations inthe Mediterranean andNorth Africa mainly fromBerlin Brandenburg Airport,Bremen Airport andDresden Airport. As of September 2021, the airline serves the following charter destinations:[8]

As of August 2025[update], Sundair operates the following aircraft:[9]
| Aircraft | In service | Orders | Passengers | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Airbus A319-100 | 2 | – | 150 | operated byFly Air41 Airways |
| Airbus A320-200 | 3 | – | 180 | |
| Total | 5 | – | 330 |
Media related toSundair at Wikimedia Commons