Ryanair Faces Fuel Cost Pressures, CEO Contract Extension Amidst Uncertain Profit Outlook

May 18, 2026
Ryanair Faces Fuel Cost Pressures, CEO Contract Extension Amidst Uncertain Profit Outlook
  • Ryanair warns rising fuel costs and consumer uncertainty from the Iran conflict are weighing on air fares, with expected mid-single-digit declines in Q1 and flat pricing for the July–September 2026 quarter.

  • Analysts had projected roughly €2.2 billion in profit, and the results narrowly beat those expectations.

  • The airline has hedged about 80% of its jet fuel needs through April 2027 at roughly $67 per barrel, but unit fuel costs could still rise if market prices stay elevated.

  • The board and CEO are nearing a four-year extension of the CEO’s contract from 2028 to 2032, potentially including a grant of up to 10 million share awards tied to ambitious profit or share-price targets, with engagement of major institutional shareholders planned.

  • Ancillary revenues now account for about a quarter of total revenue, rising 6% to €4.99 billion as services such as priority boarding and onboard sales gain traction.

  • Ryanair excludes an €85 million provision related to an Italian antitrust fine from the figures, which is being appealed in court.

  • CEO noted robust demand despite regional conflicts, highlighting 130 new summer 2026 routes and a shift toward lower-tax markets with new bases in Rabat, Tirana, and Trapani.

  • Fuel costs fell 4% to €5.42 billion this year, benefiting from hedging and other factors.

  • Full-year profits were strong, with underlying after-tax profits up about 40% to €2.26 billion and pre-tax profits up about 36% to €2.42 billion, while the outlook for the new financial year remains uncertain.

  • Ryanair expects around 216 million passengers in the year to March 2027, up about 4%, mirroring 2025–26 growth, with demand described as robust though increasingly late bookings.

  • Shares fell in early trading on the earnings outlook, with the stock down roughly 3–4% and peers also retreating as investors reassess outlook amid volatility.

  • Airlines are diversifying fuel sourcing amid geopolitics, with Europe largely fuel-sufficient but prices elevated, pressuring ticket pricing and costs.

Summary based on 23 sources


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