Lufthansa Group consists of the three segments Passenger Airlines, Logistics, and MRO, as well as Additional Businesses and Group Functions.
Passenger airlines at Frankfurt Airport In addition to its namesake carrier, Lufthansa Group has several airline subsidiaries, including: — the flag carrier of Germany based in Frankfurt and Munich. •
Austrian Airlines – the flag carrier of
Austria based at
Vienna International Airport •
Swiss International Air Lines – the flag carrier of
Switzerland based at
Zurich Airport •
Brussels Airlines – the flag carrier of
Belgium based at
Brussels Airport •
ITA Airways – the flag carrier of Italy based at
Rome Fiumicino Airport, successor of
Alitalia, owned by
Italian government (59%) and Lufthansa Group (41%), with options for full ownership in the future
Feeder airlines •
Lufthansa City Airlines – Regional airline based in
Munich started operations branded as Lufthansa City in June 2024. •
Air Dolomiti – Italian regional airline headquartered in
Villafranca di Verona and based in
Munich and
Frankfurt.
Low-cost airlines •
Eurowings – German low-cost point to point airline headquartered in
Düsseldorf. •
Eurowings Europe Ltd. – Maltese-registered low-cost airline, subsidiary of Eurowings Group, formerly
Eurowings Europe GmbH (2016–2023), an Austrian-registered low-cost airline.
Leisure airlines •
Discover Airlines — German long- and medium-haul leisure airline, doing business as
EW Discover GmbH, originally known as
Eurowings Discover. •
Edelweiss Air – Swiss leisure airline, subsidiary of
Swiss International Air Lines. •
SunExpress – Turkish leisure airline, jointly owned by Lufthansa Group (50%) and
Turkish Airlines (50%)
Former •
British Midland International (wholly owned 2009–2011, stake owned since 1999) – British airline subsidiary sold to
International Airlines Group and merged into
British Airways in 2012 •
Condor Flugdienst (1959–2004, stakes owned from 1955 until 2006) – former leisure subsidiary, shares gradually acquired by
Thomas Cook AG, later owned by
Thomas Cook Group •
Luftfahrtgesellschaft Walter – German low-cost regional airline integrated into Eurowings in October 2017, sold to Zeitfracht in 2019 •
Lufthansa CityLine – (1958–2026) German regional airline headquartered in
Munich, shut down by Lufthansa in 2026. •
Lufthansa Italia (2009–2011) – Italian airline subsidiary established, sharing IATA, ICAO, and callsigns with the main Lufthansa •
SunExpress Deutschland (2011–2020) – German subsidiary of
SunExpress •
Team Lufthansa (1996–2004) – An
alliance of
regional airlines from four countries (
Germany,
Denmark,
Austria, and
France), which flew niche routes on behalf of Lufthansa. It was replaced by
Lufthansa Regional in 2004 Some Lufthansa Group members are also members of the
Star Alliance. The Lufthansa Group is the second-largest airline group in Europe by passengers, carrying 93 million in 2022.
Investment history Lufthansa bought a 19% stake in
JetBlue Airways in December 2007 and entered a code-sharing agreement with the airline. It was the first major investment by a European carrier in an American carrier since the
EU–U.S. Open Skies Agreement came into effect in 2008. Lufthansa sold its stake in JetBlue in March 2015. On 28 October 2008, Lufthansa exercised its option to purchase a further 60% share in
BMI (in addition to the 20% Lufthansa already owned), this resulted in a dispute with the former owner
Sir Michael Bishop. Both parties reached an agreement at the end of June 2009, and the acquisition took place with effect from 1 July 2009. Lufthansa acquired the remaining 20% from Scandinavian Airlines on 1 November 2009, taking complete control of BMI. On 25 May 2023, Lufthansa announced it would pay €325 million to acquire 41% of
ITA Airways. Lufthansa also has an option to buy the rest of ITA at a later date, with the purchase price depending on ITA's business performance. In January 2025, Lufthansa took a 10% stake in the Latvian flag carrier
AirBaltic. On 20 November 2025, Lufthansa Group announced its intention to bid in the privatization of
Portugal’s national carrier —
TAP Air Portugal, with an initial intention to acquire a minority stake.
Joint ventures Lufthasa Group has four strategically and commercially important joint ventures: • The Atlantic Joint Venture of Air Canada, United Airlines, Austrian Airlines, Lufthansa, SWISS, Brussels Airlines and Eurowings. • The Europe Japan Joint Venture of All Nippon Airways, Austrian Airlines, Lufthansa and SWISS. • The Europe Singapore Joint Venture of Austrian Airlines, Brussels Airlines, Lufthansa, SWISS and Singapore Airlines. • The Europe China Joint Venture of Air China, Shenzhen Airlines, Austrian Airlines, Lufthansa, and SWISS.
Logistics Lufthansa Group's Logistics business segment includes
Lufthansa Cargo, as well as the airfreight container management specialist Jettainer group, the time:matters group, which specialises in particularly urgent shipments, the subsidiary Heyworld, which specialises in tailored solutions for the e-commerce sector, and CB Customs Broker, the customs and customs clearance specialist. This business segment also encompasses the Lufthansa Group’s 50% stake in the cargo airline
AeroLogic. Lufthansa Cargo also has equity investments in various handling companies and smaller companies involved in various aspects of the sector’s digitalisation.
MRO Lufthansa Group's MRO segment consists of
Lufthansa Technik, the world’s leading manufacturer-independent provider of maintenance, repair and overhaul services (MRO) for civilian commercial aircraft. In 2008, Lufthansa Technik restored a
Junkers Ju 52/3m built in 1936 to
airworthiness; this aircraft was in use on the 10-hour Berlin to Rome route, across the
Alps, in the 1930s. Lufthansa is now restoring a
Lockheed Super Constellation, using parts from three such aircraft bought at auctions. Lufthansa's Super Constellations and L1649 "Starliners" served routes such as
Hamburg–
Madrid–
Dakar–
Caracas–
Santiago. Lufthansa Technik recruits retired employees and volunteers for skilled labour.
Additional businesses and group functions The Additional Businesses and Group Functions segment include the Lufthansa Group's service companies, including
Lufthansa Aviation Training and
Lufthansa Systems, as well as the Group Functions for the Lufthansa Group. Until April 2009, Lufthansa inventory and departure control systems, based on
Unisys, were managed by
LH Systems. Lufthansa reservations systems were outsourced to Amadeus in the early 1990s. Following a decision to outsource all components of the
Passenger Service System, the functions were outsourced to the Altéa platform managed by
Amadeus. Since 2007
Lufthansa Systems, the IT services provider branch of the group relies on solutions by
Actian, such as
Ingres database and the
OpenROAD platform, to power its Lido/FlightPlanning solution, which is used by around 300 commercial airlines across the world for flight planning.
Lufthansa Cargo, the cargo airline subsidiary of Lufthansa, uses Zeenea Data Discovery Platform as their data catalog solution. Zeenea is a French metadata management startup founded in Paris in 2017. On August 8, 2024,
HCLSoftware announced intent to acquire Zeenea for 24 million euros, which is expected to continue operating as an independent unit under
Actian, their data & analytics division.
Ownership Lufthansa was a
state-owned enterprise until 1994. Deutsche Lufthansa AG shares have been publicly traded on all German stock exchanges since 1966. In addition to floor trading, it is also traded electronically using the
Xetra system. It is a
DAX index share and is listed in the
Frankfurt Stock Exchange's
Prime Standard. At the end of 2019, the shareholders' register showed that German investors held 67.3% of the shares (previous year: 72.1%). The second-largest group, with 10.4%, was shareholders from Luxembourg. Investors from the US accounted for 8.1%, followed by Ireland and the United Kingdom, each with 3.6%. This ensures compliance with the provisions of the German Aviation Compliance Documentation Act (LuftNaSiG). As of the reporting date, 58% of the shares were held by institutional investors (previous year: 53%), and 42% were held by private individuals (previous year: 47%).
Lansdowne Partners International Ltd. and BlackRock, Inc. were the largest shareholders in the Lufthansa Group at year-end, with 4.9% and 3.1% respectively. All the transactions requiring disclosure and published during the financial year 2019, as well as the quarterly updates on the shareholder structure, are available online. During the 2020 COVID crisis
Heinz Hermann Thiele increased his stake to more than 12%; he died a few months later. The
free float for Lufthansa shares was 67% in 2020, as per the definition of the
Deutsche Börse.
Business trends Key business and operating results of the
Lufthansa Group for recent years are shown below (as at year ending 31 December): The key trends for
Lufthansa Airlines are (as at year ending 31 December): In 1986,
left-wing terrorists bombed the building. No one was injured. In 2006, builders laid the first stone of the new Lufthansa headquarters in
Deutz, Cologne. By the end of 2007, Lufthansa planned to move 800 employees, including the company's finance department, to the new building. However, in early 2013, Lufthansa revealed plans to relocate its head office from Cologne to Frankfurt by 2017. Several Lufthansa departments are not at the headquarters; instead, they are in the Lufthansa Aviation Center at Frankfurt Airport. These departments include Corporate Communications and Investor Relations. The innovative high-tech and low-energy Aviation Center with a transparent facade and several indoor gardens was designed by
Christoph Ingenhoven.
Employment relations Relations between Lufthansa and their pilots have been very tense in the past years, with many strikes occurring, causing many flights to be cancelled, as well as major losses to the company. A major dispute between Lufthansa and the pilot's union has been settled after nearly five years and overall 14 strikes in December 2017. Without taking into account the €9 billion bailout from the German government, Lufthansa cut 31,000 jobs in the COVID-19 years. During the 2022 collective bargaining, verdi said that Lufthansa's wage offer meant real wage losses for employees and called on around 20,000 ground workers in Germany to go on warning strikes.
Branding -200 in the old livery used since 1988 in the livery adapted since 2018 The Lufthansa logo, an encircled stylised
crane in flight, was first created in 1918 by Otto Firle. It was part of the livery of the first German airline,
Deutsche Luft-Reederei (abbreviated DLR), which began air service on 5 February 1919. In 1926,
Deutsche Luft Hansa adopted this symbol, and in 1954, Lufthansa expressed continuity by adopting it and later in 1963 – a variant thereof as redesigned by
Robert Lisovskyi. The original creator of the name Lufthansa is believed to be F.A. Fischer von Puturzyn. In 1925, he published a book entitled "Luft-Hansa" which examined the options open to aviation policymakers at the time. Luft Hansa was the name given to the new airline, which resulted from the merger of
Junkers' airline (
Luftverkehr AG) and
Deutscher Aero Lloyd. After World War II, the company kept blue and yellow as its main colours and the crane logo. Since the beginning of the 1960s,
Helvetica was used for the company name in the livery. The 1970s retro livery featured the top half of the fuselage painted in all-white on top and the lower fuselage (bottom half, including the engines) was gray/silver aluminium, below a blue cheatline window band and a black painted nose. The crane logo was painted blue on the engines, on the bottom half of the fuselage just below the cockpit windows, and a yellow circle inside a blue band on the tail. German designer
Otl Aicher created a comprehensive corporate design for the airline in 1967. The crane logo was now always displayed in a circle which, on the livery, was yellow on an otherwise blue tailfin. Helvetica was used as the main typeface for both the livery and publications. The blue band and general paint scheme of the aircraft were retained from the previous livery. Aicher's concept was retained in the 1988 design. The window band was removed, and the fuselage was painted in grey. In 2018, Lufthansa changed their livery. The encircled crane was retained, and the background changed from yellow to dark blue. The vertical stabilizer and the rear fuselage were painted in dark blue, and the tail cone remained white. The main fuselage was painted in all white, and the brand name "Lufthansa" was painted above the windows, also in dark blue. The company slogan is 'Say yes to the world.' ==Destinations==