s at
Perth Airport in the mid 1990s Boeing 737-700 operated for Virgin Australia Regional Airlines at
Perth Airport in August 2011
Early years Virgin Australia Regional was formed in 1963 as
Carnarvon Air Taxis flying charter flights with small
general aviation aircraft out of
Carnarvon, Western Australia. In 1979, it changed its name to Skywest Aviation and moved to
Perth's
Jandakot Airport. In 1980,
Skywest Airlines was formed (ICAO code OZW), based at
Perth Airport, and acquired
Stillwell Airlines and its routes; the combined fleet included 39 aircraft, making it the second largest commuter airline in Australia at the time. The Skywest Airlines fleet included a mix of general aviation types and small airliners including
GAF N-24 Nomads,
Embraer EMB 110 Bandeirantes,
Beechcraft King Air 200s and
Fairchild SA-227 Metro IIIs, as well as smaller types such as
Cessna 182 Skylanes and
Piper Aztecs. In 1982, the controlling companies merged Skywest Airlines with
Transwest Airlines. At the time Skywest operated 16 aircraft and TransWest 25. Then in 1983, it was proposed to merge Skywest with
East-West Airlines, both were owned by the Devereaux group. The merger did not eventuate, but east–west operated flights in Western Australia on Skywest's behalf. In 1987 Skywest lost the Government
Coastwatch contract, which severely weakened the business. The company was bought out by the
Perron Group and then on-sold shortly thereafter to
TNT/
News Limited and began operating under the
Ansett banner. The east–west aircraft were divested for operations in Queensland and were later absorbed into Ansett. At this time, Skywest was operating most of its services with five
BAe Jetstream 31s. In 1998, Ansett introduced
Fokker 50s into Skywest service.
Development since the 2000s The airline continued to be owned by Ansett Australia, and operated flights on behalf of Ansett until the parent's demise in 2002. Skywest was then successfully purchased by private investors. In 2004, it was the subject of a
hostile, but ultimately successful, takeover attempt by Singapore-based investment company CaptiveVision Capital. This takeover succeeded in gaining a majority stake. On 8 February 2007, news broke that the airline may be the target of a tie-up with Singapore-based
Tiger Airways, although no business arrangements were ever concluded. Between 2004 and 2012, Skywest Airlines was entirely owned by CaptiveVision Capital which in turn was a subsidiary of ASX and London Stock Exchange AIM market-quoted Skywest Airlines. Since 2004, under Skywest Airlines ownership, the fleet expanded from seven aircraft to 18 aircraft. Skywest's first
Airbus A320 was registered in April 2010. It was delivered Perth on 23 October 2010 and operated charter services between Perth and Cloudbreak for
Fortescue Metals Group. Skywest announced that it had optioned a second A320 on 12 May 2011. On 10 January 2011, it was announced that
Virgin Australia had established a 10-year alliance under which Skywest would operate up to 18 turboprops in the bigger carrier's colours. The alliance with the Perth-based airline was part of new push by Virgin Australia into regional Australia. The agreement saw the airlines codeshare on some of each other's flights. Virgin Australia and Skywest customers also could earn and redeem frequent flyer points on each other's networks. The aircraft were leased from plc () with the first four arriving in 2011. In April 2012,
Virgin Australia Holdings purchased 10% of Skywest Airlines, followed by a full takeover bid on 30 October 2012. It had received in principle support from the Board but the takeover would require shareholder and regulatory approval. On 11 April 2013, Virgin Australia Holdings completed its 100% acquisition of Skywest Airlines. From 7 May 2013, the use of the Skywest brand was discontinued and the airline became part of the Virgin Australia brand, however it continues to operate under its current Air Operator's Certificate and its own management team.
2022 Fleet changes In April 2022,
Virgin Australia announced its plans to phase out the
Fokker 100 aircraft, and replace it with 10 year old Boeing 737-700s leased from
KLM Royal Dutch Airlines. These will be operated by Virgin Australia's AOC for Virgin Australia Regional Airlines, leaving the Airbus A320 fleet solely operated by Virgin Australia Regional Airlines. The Group currently operated 10 x F100 aircraft at the time of the order across its operations in Western Australia, with the F100 fleet gradually transitioned out and partly replaced by 737-700s from first quarter 2023. ==Destinations==