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Must admit finger66 as soon as i saw the AI generated no1 point i thought im in for it here on f4a!@jason1-11 great post thank you but I have just 1 question please? Was it AI generated or @LBA4EVER generated![]()
The Economics of the Co-Dependent ModelLBA serves as the functional, operational, and corporate headquarters for Jet2 plc. This relationship yields significant structural advantages over regional competitors:The Jet2 Fortress Infrastructure Includes:
- Head Office, Corporate Leadership, & Training Facilities
- Primary Heavy Engineering Maintenance Bases
- High-Margin, Co-dependent Regional Strategy
| Regional Counterpart | Competitor Profile | LBA’s Structural Advantage / Strategic Differentiation |
|---|---|---|
| Manchester (MAN) | Tier-1 international gateway. Handles over 28M passengers annually with a comprehensive long-haul network. | Frictionless Transit & Speed Direct Contrast: MAN suffers from significant terminal congestion, complex slot constraints, and unpredictable ground delays. LBA positions itself as a rapid, agile alternative. For short-to-medium-haul European flights, LBA's streamlined layout allows passengers to completely avoid the unpredictable M62 trans-Pennine corridor, offering faster curb-to-gate transit times. |
| Liverpool John Lennon (LPL) | Tier-2 short-haul gateway heavily dominated by ultra-low-cost carriers. | Demographic Yield and Premium Mix Direct Contrast: LPL operates on thin margins, highly exposed to the pricing strategies of carriers like Ryanair and easyJet. LBA’s core catchment boasts a much higher concentration of high-disposable-income households and corporate accounts, allowing network airlines to maintain superior average ticket pricing and premium seat yields. |
| Newcastle (NCL) | Core regional hub for the North East of England. | Economic Catchment Density Direct Contrast: While NCL effectively monopolizes its immediate geographic area, it is bounded by a less populated and economically isolated region. LBA sits directly adjacent to the high-density, multi-city West/South Yorkshire industrial and financial hub, giving it a much deeper reservoir of potential passengers. |
| East Midlands (EMA) | Primary UK dedicated air-freight and express logistics hub. | Passenger-Centric Focus Direct Contrast: EMA's capital expenditure and night-time runway availability are heavily prioritized toward freight operators (e.g., DHL, UPS). LBA devotes 100% of its terminal design, slot allocations, and land-use infrastructure to optimizing passenger experience and high-street commercial retail revenue. |
ConclusionUltimately, combining LBA's native catchment density with a modernized terminal footprint, an integrated rail gateway, and a more flexible operational window would unlock the airport's true economic potential. It would transform LBA from a constrained, daytime-heavy regional gateway into a highly optimized, efficient, 24-hour short-haul base—positioning it as a powerful, autonomous counterweight to Manchester’s historical dominance across the North of England.References & Source MaterialThe Expansion Friction Matrix Includes:
[]Legal Challenges & Litigation: Environmental advocacy groups like the Group for Action on Leeds Bradford Airport (GALBA) maintain relentless scrutiny on night-time flight logging, utilizing formal legal letters and court challenges to challenge local authority rulings (Crystal Travel, 2026).- Acoustic Impacts on Communities: Even with modern, quieter engine tech, an increased cumulative volume of night flights sparks pushback regarding local sleep disruption and neighborhood air quality under the flight path (Yorkshire Bylines, 2026).
- National Carbon Budgets: The UK Climate Change Committee routinely advises against regional airport capacity expansion without established, scalable alternative fuel infrastructures, creating a policy conflict with local economic growth objectives (CrowdJustice, 2026).
I recall seeing what LBA makes per passenger compared with other airports and it is surprisingly small in comparison. Other airports are clearly better at hiding charges by stealth!I see the press are reporting that LBA is amongst the most expensive for a pint.
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The eye-watering price of a pre-flight pint at Leeds Bradford Airport is revealed
Leeds Bradford Airport has been named the second most expensive in the UK for a pint of lagerwww.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk
I try not to buy anything I consider to be overpriced, so airports rarely get any income from me. I just can't abide being ripped off! There is no excuse for overcharging and that is exactly what happens at LBA. I remember a previous CEO telling us that the aim was get about £10 spend from each passenger. They'd get more from me if they charged sensibly, at the moment they get zero.
The general public isn’t going to understand that though. What they see is £10 to drop off, £8 for Fast Track, £8 for a beer and £20 on a breakfast. All of which is of course a choice to passengers which they don’t have to spend.According the airport’s accounts for the year to March 2025, the had outlays of about £47m and passenger numbers were just short of 4.3m, so yes, £11 per passenger is needed to cover the outgoings. Before the low-cost revolution, a big chunk of that would have been in the flight ticket price. That’s not really an option today. If LBA tried to get that money from Ryanair through handling fees, they’d just walk away.
So personally I’d say we’re not being ripped off. But the pricing isn’t transparent. A pint in the airport is really £5 for the pint + £3 ‘airport service fee’. They could try that I suppose, but I still think people would moan. Back in the day Teesside (and I think Blackpool) tried to implement an entry fee. It was attempt to be transparent and say, look it costs a lot of money to run this thing, give us £5 to enter the terminal. Both of those died a death very quickly as, surprise surprise, people thought they were being ripped off.
Like most airports worldwide, the airport leases out its units. The food and beverages are leased out to SSP Group PLC and the airport takes a cut of around 20% of everything sold.does the airport operate the airside places serving drinks or do they merely lease the space to an operator(s)?
I agree. Now imagine if they could get all those meet and greeters into the terminal, parking for only a couple of quid for an hour and then charge them £10 for a coffee and a bun.When passengers in this day and age expect flights for 50p (a fantastic skit on FR by a group called Fascinating Aida if you haven't seen it) this still boils down to the locos driving down airport revenue which has to be recovered in other ways when the public have that perception that everything associated to their loco trip should be cheap
Like most airports worldwide, the airport leases out its units. The food and beverages are leased out to SSP Group PLC and the airport takes a cut of around 20% of everything sold.
so i am not seeing why the financial performance of the airport is being linked to the price of a pint, unless it is being argued that the lease costs and/or the percentage LBA charges the operator are significantly higher than other airports and are being passed on in the price. or of course they may not be and it might just be the price is down to the operator either having high costs or trying to get away with a higher price to make more money.
also LBA is far from the only airport to operate with a large proportion of low cost carriers. the point being made is that the price is still higher than those other ones, so why?
The financial performance of the airport is linked to the pint price because the 20% top-line cut forces SSP to mathematically over-inflate prices to maintain their own margin. Combined with LBA's heavy reliance on retail revenue to offset low airline fees, the pint ends up bearing the brunt of the airport's wider business model.
Bear in mind too that LBA has two nearby competitors for car parking which greatly diminishes their annual income. Were they not there, LBA would have a monopoly on car parking , higher resultant income and potentially charge the businesses within the terminal less.
Ultimately, LBA costs well north of £30m p a to operate and have to make money to not only offset that, but to fund developments in future, replace infrastructure and vehicles, and, make some profit.
WH doesn’t frame anything as treasonous, it’s your interpretation. If you want a pint, buy one - if you don’t because of the price, then don’t. Ultimately the airport operates to make money, the concessions may charge more for a pint, but that is down to them not the airport and who knows it may cost less for a bacon roll than other airports, but actually who really cares.
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