Lufthansa Q3 2025 results: record revenue, steady profits — and what it means for travelers

Lufthansa delivered €1.33bn Adjusted EBIT on record €11.2bn revenue and reaffirmed a stronger FY outlook. What this means for fares, reliability, and cabins.

Key takeaways

  • Biggest Q3 by revenue ever: Demand stayed strong enough to set a new revenue record, even as some yields cooled on Europe and North Atlantic routes.
  • Profitability held up: Operating profit (Adjusted EBIT) was essentially unchanged year-on-year at €1.33bn, with an 11.9% margin.
  • Operations ran smoother: Regularity ~99% and a ~10 pp punctuality improvement vs 2024 helped reduce disruption costs.
  • Cash strong: Adjusted free cash flow in Q3 jumped to €818m as capex timing and tax refunds helped. Net debt dipped to €5.1bn; liquidity €11.9bn.
  • Outlook steady-to-better: Q4 bookings point to stable load factors and yields; FY 2025 profit still seen well above 2024.

Fast facts (Q3 2025 vs Q3 2024)

Metric Q3 2025 YoY
Revenue €11.199bn +4%
Adjusted EBIT €1.331bn −1%
Adjusted EBIT margin 11.9% −0.6 pp
Net profit €966m −12%
Passengers ~42m +3%
Load factor 87.5% +0.4 pp
Adjusted free cash flow €818m +690m
Source: Lufthansa Q3 2025 presentation & press release.

What this means for travellers

  • More reliable trips: With regularity near 99% and markedly better punctuality, expect fewer last-minute cancellations and missed connections via major hubs (Frankfurt/Munich).
  • Price dynamics: Lufthansa reports a −2.2% RASK (revenue per available seat km) as short-haul Europe and the North Atlantic cooled. Translation: economy fares have stayed competitive on many routes, while premium cabins remain resilient.
  • Cabin upgrades rolling out: New long-haul products (e.g., Allegris on the 787-9; SWISS A350 “Senses”) keep creeping into the schedule, improving comfort and potentially boosting premium pricing power on flagship routes.

What’s driving the quarter?

  • Demand normalized: After post-pandemic peaks, yields cooled on Europe and the North Atlantic, but premium demand stayed firm.
  • Cost discipline: The Lufthansa Airlines Turnaround Program kept CASK ex fuel/ETS to +0.5% YoY, limiting the damage from inflation and fees.
  • Cargo steady, Technik softer: Lufthansa Cargo improved to €49m Adjusted EBIT; Technik slipped to €130m on tariff/FX headwinds.

Outlook: Q4 stable, 2026 product & fleet tailwinds

Management reaffirmed that 2025 Adjusted EBIT should be significantly above 2024, with capacity up about 4%. Into 2026, expect disciplined capacity growth (long-haul focus) and more new-cabin aircraft deliveries to support the premium mix.

Traveler tips

  • Hunt shoulder-season deals via Frankfurt/Munich if your dates are flexible; softer yields on short-haul Europe and some transatlantic city pairs can surface flash fares.
  • Watch for new-cabin rotations: If you value comfort, check aircraft type before booking; Allegris-equipped 787-9s are slowly expanding.
  • Consider premium-economy upsells: With premium demand steady but competitive pricing on some routes, PE can be a value sweet spot.

 

 

Source: Reuters / Lufthansa