Air Macau will be resuming the Macau-Philippines route starting 1 July, alongside increased frequencies on Southeast Asian routes.
The carrier had suspended the flights to the Philippines' Ninoy Aquino International Airport since August 2024, citing adjustments in response to market needs. Other airlines such as Cebu Pacific and AirAsia had continued operating services between Manila and Macau.
Air Macau will also restore the Macau-Fukuoka (Japan) route for July and August, and the Macau‑Taiyuan (China) route on a long-term basis to the capital of Shanxi province.
The route resumptions join a larger summer-fall network expansion for Air Macau, which will also increase frequencies on core routes.
For China, the Macau-Shanghai Hongqiao route will increase from weekly 14 round-trip flights to 18, and the Macau-Chengdu Tianfu route from 10 weekly round-trip flights to 14.
Harbin, the capital of Heilongjiang province, is expected to join the network in the near future.
For Southeast Asia, there will be an increase of one, two and three flights for Kuala Lumpur, Hanoi and Bangkok respectively. Taiwan is also a key destination with an increase of four daily flights to Taipei, three for Kaohsiung and two for Taichung.
The expanded schedule will kick in starting 29 March.
Meanwhile, the airline has also announced a fuel surcharge on 19 March, which it says “will be adjusted in accordance with fuel price on a monthly basis”.