Winter 2026/27 is shaping up to be a strong season for the Nordics. Airlines are expanding their flight programs across key European markets, increasing frequencies, extending the season, and opening up more direct connections to northern destinations. At first glance, this looks like good news. And it is. But it also comes with a shift in expectations.
For years, limited flight connections were one of the main constraints in selling winter products in the Nordics. That is changing. With more direct flights from markets like DACH, travelers can reach destinations such as Finnish Lapland and Northern Norway more easily and more flexibly than before. Shorter stays become viable, travel dates more flexible, and product combinations easier to build.
© Eurowings
As accessibility improves, demand doesn’t just grow, it accelerates. Increased flight capacity leads to faster booking cycles, sharper peaks in demand, and growing pressure on availability. At the same time, buyers gain flexibility. If one option is not available, they move on quickly to the next.
This is where the real shift happens.
Improved access raises expectations across the board. Buyers are not just looking for interesting products, they are looking for products that are:
Because if flights are there, the product should be there too.
Destinations that are easy to reach attract more players, more products, and more attention. That makes visibility, positioning, and operational readiness more important than ever.
Winter demand will not only increase, it will also become more dynamic. The suppliers who benefit most will be those who actively manage their availability, respond quickly to requests, and present their products in a clear, bookable way.
The infrastructure is in place.
The demand is coming.