By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Travel Radar - Aviation NewsTravel Radar - Aviation News
  • Breaking News
  • Aviation
    • Aircraft
    • Airlines
    • Airshow & Events
    • Careers
    • Manufacturing
  • Travel
    • Airports
    • Points & Loyalty
    • Technology
    • Trip Reviews
  • Newsletters
Reading: UK Airlines Get Coronavirus Bailouts
Share
Sign In
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
Font ResizerAa
Travel Radar - Aviation NewsTravel Radar - Aviation News
  • Breaking News
  • Aviation
    • Aircraft
    • Airlines
    • Airshow & Events
    • Careers
    • Manufacturing
  • Travel
    • Airports
    • Points & Loyalty
    • Technology
    • Trip Reviews
  • Newsletters
Signin Sign In
Follow US
Copyright © Travel Radar Media Ltd. 2025 | All Rights Reserved
Travel Radar - Aviation News > News > UK Airlines Get Coronavirus Bailouts

UK Airlines Get Coronavirus Bailouts

Travel Radar
Last updated: 8 June 2020 08:04
By Travel Radar Staff
2 Min Read
Share
© Peter Burka
SHARE

We’ve previously reported on airlines that have received—or are receiving–many millions of state funds in bailouts, including KLM/Air France, Lufthansa, and Norwegian.

Bank Of England © Flickr Commons

Airlines, transport, travel companies, and car manufacturers are the largest recipients of emergency funding from the Bank of England (BoE) in the UK. These short-term loans are disbursed through the Bank’s Coronavirus Corporate Financing Facility and are typically repaid at rates between 0.2 and 0.6%.

Several well-known UK brands have taken loans from the BoE including Rolls-Royce (for £300 million), Marks & Spencer (£260 million), and even football club Tottenham Hotspur’s stadium company (£175 million).

In its report on Thursday, the BoE reported that while the biggest single borrower has been the chemicals giant BASF, with the maximum £1 billion, the airlines are indebted for some hefty sums.  British Airways and Wizz Air each borrowed £300 million and Ryan Air and EasyJet received double £600 million.

The ‘Old Lady of Threadneedle Street’ (as the Bank is nicknamed) isn’t going to loan to just anybody. Criteria for the loans include sound financial health before the crisis; the company must make a material contribution to the UK economy and has to be investment-grade rated.

Wizz-Air
© buying business travel

Given the scale of the coronavirus crisis, the Bank isn’t attaching many unusual conditions to the loans. However, the recipients are expected not to award large increases in executive pay and the payment of dividends.

Still, the Old Lady has some spare cash remaining: £16 billion has been paid thus far, and the Bank can lend a further £70 billion if needed.

You Might Also Like

Major Airlines that Declared Bankruptcy Due to Covid19
The World’s Biggest Airlines Unveiled
Lufthansa Group appoints Kevin Markette as Senior Director of Regional Sales across South Asia
Ethiopian to Restructure Entire U.S. Network
Lufthansa Set to Hire 10,000 New Employees in 2025
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Email Copy Link
What’s your thoughts?
Love0
Sad0
Happy0
Angry0
Travel Radar
ByTravel Radar Staff
Follow:
Articles from guest contributors wishing to remain anonymous are credited to this account. Want to contribute to Travel Radar either in-name, or anonymously? Get in touch: [email protected]
Previous Article Initial Findings Point to Pilot Error as likely cause of PIA Airbus A320 Crash
Next Article Singapore Airlines Bags S$10 Billion to Deal with Challenges Posed By Covid-19
Subscribe
Login
Notify of
guest

guest

2 Comments
Oldest
Newest Upvoted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Stay Connected

FacebookLike
TwitterFollow
InstagramFollow
YoutubeSubscribe

Trending News

IATA global media day
IATA 2026 Events Calendar Signals Industry’s Strategic Priorities
Airlines Aviation Travel
An Airbus A380 flying against a clear blue sky.
Qantas Airbus A380 grounded after First Flight Due to Wing Damage
Aircraft Incidents & Accidents Manufacturing
Aerosucre Boeing 727-200 registered HK_5216 © Aerosucre
Aerosucre Boeing 727’s Landing Gear Fails Upon Emergency Landing
Aircraft Airports Incidents & Accidents
IndiGo hired external aviation experts to probe recent flight disruptions
Indigo Brings In External Aviation Expert to Probe Recent Flight Disruptions
Airlines Airports Aviation Incidents & Accidents
TUI aircraft on the runway
TUI to Move Their Last Aircraft at Luton Airport to London Gatwick
Airlines Airports Aviation Travel
//

Travel Radar is the leading digital hub for all things aviation and air-travel. Discover our latest aviation news, aviation data, insight and analysis.

Discover

  • Latest News
  • Subscribe
  • Weekly Digest
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • About Us
  • Advertising
  • Media Coverage
  • Press & Events
  • Join Our Team
  • Our Brands

Signup to our Newsletter!

And get the latest aviation news via our weekly news digest!

© Travel Radar Media Ltd. 2015-2025 | ISSN #2635-0696 | Trademark #UK00003579704
wpDiscuz
adbanner
Welcome to the TR Community!

Sign in to your account

Not a member? Sign Up