Tailwind Airlines
Tailwind Airlines is a Turkish charter airline based in Istanbul which operates flights from its bases at Antalya Airport.
![]()  | |||||||
  | |||||||
| Founded | 2006 | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hubs | |||||||
| Fleet size | 7 | ||||||
| Destinations | 40+ | ||||||
| Parent company | Tailwind Havayolları | ||||||
| Headquarters | Istanbul, Turkey | ||||||
| Key people | 
  | ||||||
| Website | tailwind.com.tr | ||||||
History
    
The airline was founded as a joint Turkish-British project, with the first commercial flight taking place in May 2009. Founded by Kadri Muhiddin, Safi Ergin and Mehmet Demir Uz in 2006, the low-cost airline operated five Boeing 737-400 as of August 2013. In early September 2016, a Boeing 737-800 with aircraft registration TC-TLH was banned from Lebanon for landing at Ben Gurion Airport in Israel. After a technical check, Tailwind Airlines briefly operated the aircraft, which had previously been leased to Wings of Lebanon and painted in its colors, on its own routes.[1]
Destinations
    
As of August 2013, Tailwind Airlines flies to various destinations in Europe and Asia:[2]
- Moldova-Chisinau/KIV International Airport
 
- Belgium
 - Bosnia and Herzegovina
 - Croatia
 - Czech Republic
 - Germany
- Berlin – Schönefeld Airport
 - Bremen – Bremen Airport
 - Cologne – Cologne/Bonn Airport
 - Dortmund – Dortmund Airport
 - Düsseldorf – Düsseldorf Airport
 - Dresden – Dresden Airport
 - Erfurt/Weimar – Erfurt-Weimar Airport
 - Hahn – Frankfurt-Hahn Airport
 - Hamburg – Hamburg Airport
 - Hannover – Hannover Airport
 - Kassel – Kassel Airport
 - Leipzig – Leipzig/Halle Airport
 - Munich – Munich Airport
 - Nuremberg – Nuremberg Airport
 - Stuttgart – Stuttgart Airport
 
 - Hungary
 - Iraq
 - Israel
 - Italy
 - Jordan
 - North Cyprus
 - Norway
 - Slovakia
 - Sweden
 - Switzerland
 - Turkey
 
Fleet
    

The Tailwind Airlines fleet comprises the following aircraft (as of November 2017):[3]
| Aircraft | In service | Orders | Passengers | 
|---|---|---|---|
| Boeing 737-400 | 5 | — | 168 | 
| Boeing 737-800 | 2 | — | 189 | 
| Total | 7 | 
References
    
- Eiselin, Stefan (2016-09-02). "Jet von Wings of Lebanon darf nie mehr in den Libanon". aeroTELEGRAPH (in Swiss High German). Retrieved 2022-11-14.
 - Tailwind Airlines Destinations Archived 2013-08-18 at the Wayback Machine
 - "Login required".
 
