Air Arabia is resuming regular flights to Poland after a break of several months, bringing back services to Krakow and Warsaw. The Emirati carrier will restart its Sharjah-Krakow route on Saturday and its Warsaw service on Sunday.
The airline is also keeping its Modlin flights suspended until the end of October, meaning one Polish route remains on hold for now. The return of the two main services restores a key link between the Gulf carrier and the Polish market after the disruption.
Air Arabia had paused regular operations to Poland for months before the latest decision. The relaunch comes as carriers continue to adjust schedules across European and Middle Eastern networks in response to demand and operational planning.
Sharjah-Krakow is among the first routes to resume, with Warsaw following a day later. For travellers, the restart reopens direct access between southern Poland and the UAE-based airline’s hub in Sharjah, a route used by both leisure and visiting-friends-and-relatives passengers.
The continued suspension of Modlin flights until late October leaves some capacity missing from Air Arabia’s Polish schedule. However, the restoration of Krakow and Warsaw means the airline is back on two of its most important city pairs in the country.
Air Arabia has not given a wider public explanation in the material provided for the pause or the timing of the return. The immediate announcement focuses on the reactivation of services rather than on broader network changes.
Poland remains an important market for low-cost and hybrid carriers looking to connect Central Europe with destinations in the Middle East. Direct routes can be especially significant for travellers heading to the Gulf, where air links often support tourism, family visits and onward connections.
For passengers, the key change is simple: Krakow is back from Saturday, Warsaw from Sunday, and Modlin stays suspended until the end of October. That brings a partial but meaningful return of Air Arabia’s regular Polish operations.






