
KLM’s weak margins threaten the group’s overall profitability and its ability to fund growth, making the upcoming transformation critical for investors and the European airline market.
Air France‑KLM’s FY25 results underline a stark divergence between its two flagship carriers. While Air France achieved a solid 6.7% operating margin, KLM’s 3.2% margin reflects lingering cost pressures from higher airport charges at Schiphol, rising Dutch inflation, and faster growth in non‑salary expenses. The group’s Back on Track initiative, originally designed to trim €450 million, succeeded in cutting office headcount and renegotiating Boeing 787 contracts, but the savings were insufficient to offset the structural cost imbalance.
The Dutch carrier’s challenges are prompting an accelerated transformation agenda. Management has pledged deeper organisational simplification, expanded long‑haul capacity, and further non‑performance cost cuts to reach an 8% operating margin by 2028. Executives stress that without decisive action, KLM’s margin trajectory could erode the group’s overall profitability and limit its ability to invest in fleet renewal, digital upgrades, and customer experience enhancements. Stakeholders are watching closely as the airline navigates union negotiations and upcoming regulatory caps on Schiphol movements.
Meanwhile, the group’s low‑cost subsidiaries, particularly Transavia, posted a €49 million loss despite a 12.3% revenue increase, highlighting the difficulty of scaling cost‑intensive operations in a high‑inflation environment. Capacity growth plans remain ambitious—4% for mainline long‑haul and 10% for Transavia—but cost discipline will be essential. For investors and industry analysts, the key question is whether KLM’s accelerated program can deliver the productivity gains needed to close the margin gap and sustain Air France‑KLM’s competitive position in a tightening European aviation market.
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