Gone but not forgotten: Hungary saw 20 years of domestic flights

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For more than 20 years, daily domestic flights operated between Budapest and several regional cities. The service began in 1946, with the last scheduled MALÉV domestic flight taking off on 15 March 1969.

After World War II, air travel in Hungary nearly came to a halt. However, domestic flights resumed on 15 October 1946. The operator was Maszovlet, a Soviet-Hungarian joint venture that used 21-seat LI-2 aircraft. The Soviet side provided the planes, while Hungary supplied the crew and ground services, according to PestBuda.

Liszunov Li-2P aircraft 1946
Az Li-2P aircraft in 1946. Fortepan / Magyar Műszaki és Közlekedési Múzeum / Archívum / Negatívtár / Magyar Nemzeti Múzeum Történeti Képcsarnok gyűjteménye

The primary reason for launching domestic flights was to ease the burden on the railway system, and ticket prices were set to match first-class train fares for the same routes.

Developments in the 1950s

From 1950, domestic flights operated from Ferihegy Airport after its opening. By the late 1950s, Maszovlet had transitioned into Malév, which replaced the ageing LI-2 aircraft with the more modern IL-14. The first IL-14 flight on a domestic route served Budapest—Debrecen in 1961, cutting travel time to just 40 minutes.

Despite these advancements, the introduction of IL-14 aircraft led to a reduction in domestic destinations. Smaller airports, such as those in Miskolc, Nyíregyháza, and Szeged, could not accommodate the new planes, forcing the suspension of flights to these locations.

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