Lufthansa vs Ryanair 2026: Is Lufthansa Worth It Over Ryanair?
Lufthansa Group stripped carry-on from Economy Basic in May 2026. The cheapest-fare gap collapsed. Bags, on-time, hubs, and total cost compared.
On this page
- Quick verdict
- Side-by-side specs
- What I weighed for this comparison
- The 2026 fee convergence that changes th...
- Carry-on enforcement is brutal on both, ...
- When the Lufthansa fare actually beats t...
- Is Lufthansa or Ryanair more reliable in...
- Is Lufthansa Allegris worth it for the l...
- Loyalty: Star Alliance miles vs Ryanair’...
- Who should pick Lufthansa
- Who should pick Ryanair
- The Bottom Line
- FAQ
- Go deeper
- Related
Quick verdict
Ryanair wins on a true sticker-fare basis even after add-ons, on intra-Europe on-time performance (82.7 percent in 2025 vs Lufthansa's roughly 79 percent), and on weight allowance for the overhead bag (10 kg vs Lufthansa's strict 8 kg). Lufthansa wins on airport choice (primary city airports vs Ryanair's secondary airports an hour out of town), long-haul service (Ryanair does not fly long-haul at all), Star Alliance miles, and the Allegris business and First Plus rollout on the A350 fleet starting October 26, 2026 with Munich to Singapore.
| Spec | Lufthansa | Ryanair |
|---|---|---|
| Carry-on (in) | 21.7 x 15.7 x 9.1" | 21.6 x 15.7 x 7.9" |
| Carry-on (cm) | 55 x 40 x 23 cm | 55 x 40 x 20 cm |
| Carry-on weight | 8 kg (17.6 lb) | 10 kg (22 lb) |
| Carry-on fee | Free | From $40 |
| Personal item | 15.7 x 11.8 x 5.9" | 15.7 x 9.8 x 7.9" |
| 1st checked bag | $0 | Not published |
| 2nd checked bag | Not published | Not published |
| Basic economy | Economy Light | Basic (default) |
| Gate-check risk | Medium | High |
Berlin to Milan on Ryanair for a long weekend costs about 80 euros each way at sticker. The same trip on Lufthansa starts around 320 euros. After you pay 12 euros for Ryanair Priority Boarding (so your roller actually flies overhead) and 25 euros for a checked bag if you need one, and after Lufthansa’s May 2026 change strips carry-on from the cheapest Economy Basic fare and you pay 30 to 50 euros per leg to add it back, the gap narrows to roughly 150 euros for the weekend. Then Ryanair lands at Milan Bergamo (Orio al Serio), 50 km from central Milan, and Lufthansa lands at Milan Malpensa or Linate with a 30-minute Malpensa Express into Cadorna. The Bergamo bus to Milano Centrale runs 10 to 12 euros and 50 to 60 minutes per direction. That ground-transit math costs another 20 to 30 euros and 60 to 90 minutes per direction. The price gap moves again.
Short version: Ryanair is cheaper on a like-for-like trip even after add-ons, has marginally better on-time performance, and is the right call for a single short-haul leg where the airport choice does not matter or where you live near a Ryanair base. Lufthansa is worth the premium when the primary city airport is the actual destination, when you want a checked bag with predictable rules, when you collect Star Alliance miles, or when the trip involves a connection. Neither airline is a wrong choice on intra-Europe in 2026, but the 2026 fee convergence (Lufthansa Group stripped carry-on from Economy Basic in May 2026) means the comparison runs much closer on the sticker than it used to.
What I weighed for this comparison
Different airlines, different traps. The criteria need to discriminate, not generalize:
- True total cost of a typical short-haul trip, sticker fare plus the actual add-ons most travelers buy
- Lufthansa’s May 2026 Economy Basic carry-on strip, which is the single biggest 2026 development for this pair
- Carry-on and personal item rules, where both airlines are strict but in different ways
- On-time performance and cancellation rates at intra-Europe scale
- Primary vs secondary airport landing, and the real cost of the ground transit
- The Allegris angle, which matters only because Lufthansa flies long-haul and Ryanair does not
- Loyalty and status, which Ryanair does not really offer in a meaningful sense
The 2026 fee convergence that changes the comparison
Lufthansa Group removed the full-size carry-on from Economy Basic fares on short and medium-haul routes for bookings from April 28, 2026 and travel from May 19, 2026. The Economy Basic fare now includes only the personal item (roughly 40 by 30 by 10 cm under-seat bag). Adding the 55 by 40 by 23 cm overhead carry-on costs an estimated 20 to 50 euros per leg depending on route.
This narrows the sticker-fare gap with Ryanair on the cheapest possible booking. The Lufthansa Economy Basic that previously included a generous-feeling 8 kg overhead bag now strips it to match Ryanair’s posture on Basic fares. The difference is not zero (Lufthansa still lands at primary city airports, Ryanair does not), but the cost-per-leg gap on the lowest fare is materially smaller in 2026 than it was in 2025.
Ryanair charges a separate Priority and 2 Cabin Bags add-on for the overhead 10 kg bag, priced at 6 to 36 euros at the time of initial booking, jumping to 20 to 45 euros after booking and 30 plus euros day-of-travel. The 10 kg cap is more generous than Lufthansa’s 8 kg cap and the bag dimensions are nearly identical (55 by 40 by 20 cm for Ryanair vs 55 by 40 by 23 cm for Lufthansa).
For a 2026 budget traveler, the practical effect is that Lufthansa Group is asking the same question Ryanair has been asking for a decade: how cheaply can the airline price the seat alone, and how much of the trip is left for separate add-ons?
- Winner: lowest-possible-fare carry-on cost
- Lufthansa, marginally / fees now bundled and labeled clearly vs Ryanair's higher day-of-travel price creep
- Winner: weight allowance on the overhead bag
- Ryanair / 10 kg vs Lufthansa's strict 8 kg
- Winner: carry-on depth tolerance
- Lufthansa / 23 cm depth vs Ryanair's 20 cm; a deeper bag fits Lufthansa and not Ryanair
- Winner: personal item dimensions
- Lufthansa / 40 by 30 by 15 cm vs Ryanair's stricter 40 by 25 by 20 cm
Carry-on enforcement is brutal on both, but the failure modes differ
Lufthansa’s failure mode is weight. The published cap is 8 kg, and German station agents do weigh at the gate. A packed laptop bag plus a 7 kg roller can total 10 kg and get tagged for the hold. Lufthansa’s gate process uses sizers and the scale is not ceremonial.
Ryanair’s failure mode is size on the personal item. The free under-seat bag is 40 by 25 by 20 cm, which is a noticeably smaller envelope than what most travelers picture. A typical small backpack at 30 by 20 by 15 cm fits. A typical airline-sized 16-liter daypack at 42 by 20 by 28 cm does not. The gate sizer is a hard box; if the bag does not drop in, you pay roughly 46 to 60 euros for the bag to fly in the hold. Bringing a 55 by 40 by 20 cm wheelie without Priority and presenting it at the gate is the most common gotcha and costs 70 to 75 euros plus VAT on the spot.
The practical effect: pack to 7 kg on Lufthansa, and pack to a precise 40 by 25 by 20 cm shape on Ryanair Basic. If you cannot do either, buy Priority on Ryanair or upgrade to Economy Classic on Lufthansa. The base fare math should not be calculated assuming the cheapest fare always works.
- Winner: weight enforcement strictness
- Ryanair / 10 kg cap is more forgiving than Lufthansa's 8 kg
- Winner: size enforcement strictness
- Lufthansa / Ryanair's 40 by 25 by 20 cm under-seat is the tighter rule by far
- Winner: gate fee on non-compliant bag
- Lufthansa / Ryanair's 46 to 75 euro gate fees outpace Lufthansa's roughly 30 to 50 euro charges
When the Lufthansa fare actually beats the Ryanair fare
Three scenarios where the sticker math reverses:
The first is when secondary-airport ground transit costs more than the fare gap. Ryanair to Frankfurt-Hahn is 130 km from the actual city of Frankfurt; the train transfer runs 14 to 25 euros each way and takes 1 hour 45 minutes. Ryanair to Munich-Memmingen is 110 km from Munich; the bus runs 19 euros each way and takes about 90 minutes. If the fare gap is 60 euros and the ground transit costs 50 euros and 3 hours round-trip per traveler, Lufthansa to the primary airport may be the net better deal for a couple traveling together.
The second is when the trip involves an onward connection. Lufthansa’s Frankfurt and Munich hubs are integrated with rail, with onward Star Alliance flights, and with international long-haul. Ryanair’s secondary airports do not connect to anything meaningful and require a separate booking for the next leg, with no protection if the Ryanair flight runs late.
The third is when the trip ends at a major business destination where the primary airport’s transit network actually matters: Geneva, Zurich, Vienna, Frankfurt, Munich, Brussels, Madrid (Ryanair does fly to Madrid Barajas main airport, but many secondary destinations route differently). For business travel where time and predictability matter more than 80 euros, Lufthansa’s primary-airport landing is the practical default.
- Winner: ground transit cost from arrival airport
- Lufthansa / primary city airports vs Ryanair's secondary airports often 50 to 100 km out
- Winner: onward connection protection
- Lufthansa / Star Alliance integration vs Ryanair's no-protection model
- Winner: outright cheapest sticker fare
- Ryanair / this is the table-stakes Ryanair advantage
Is Lufthansa or Ryanair more reliable in 2026?
Ryanair posted 82.7 percent on-time performance and a 0.9 percent cancellation rate across 2025 (per the airline’s own punctuality reports). Lufthansa posted 79.37 percent on-time in January 2025 per Cirium tracking, finishing 10th among European carriers. For the full 2025 European ranking, Iberia Express won at 88 percent; Lufthansa did not reach the top five.
This is the counter-intuitive part of the comparison: the ultra-low-cost carrier outperforms the legacy on the most-cited operational metric. The reasons are structural. Ryanair runs point-to-point on a 737-only fleet at secondary airports with low congestion, fast turnarounds, and tight schedules. Lufthansa runs hub-and-spoke through Frankfurt and Munich, both of which are congested. A late Lufthansa connection ripples through the network in a way Ryanair’s schedule does not.
The asymmetry shows up on cancellations. When Lufthansa cancels, the Star Alliance rebooking matrix usually finds you a same-day alternative. When Ryanair cancels (rarely), the rebooking is limited to the next Ryanair flight on the same route, which can be the next day. Cancellation rates are low for both, but the failure mode is different.
- Winner: 2025 on-time performance
- Ryanair / 82.7% vs Lufthansa's roughly 79%
- Winner: 2025 cancellation rate
- Ryanair / 0.9% published rate
- Winner: recovery from a cancellation
- Lufthansa / Star Alliance rebooking is materially better than Ryanair's same-route-only options
Is Lufthansa Allegris worth it for the long-haul slice?
Allegris is the only category where the airlines do not actually compete, because Ryanair does not fly long-haul. The comparison only exists when a traveler is choosing between a Ryanair leg and a Lufthansa connection that involves a Lufthansa long-haul segment. In that context, the Allegris status matters.
Lufthansa has 31 A350s. Of those, 10 are delivered since early 2024 with Allegris cabins already installed. 17 still operate the older 2-2-2 business class layout without direct aisle access. 4 are ex-Philippine Airlines aircraft with a modified product. The retrofit of the existing 17 A350s begins in 2027.
Allegris business class introduces direct aisle access for every passenger, four seat sub-types (Standard, Extra Space, Privacy, and Suite Plus), and sliding privacy doors on Suite Plus. Allegris First Plus is the new flagship First Class, also rolling out aircraft-by-aircraft. The Singapore to Munich route transitions to Allegris on October 26, 2026, the most material 2026 deployment.
For most short-haul Lufthansa flights, Allegris is irrelevant because the new product is only on long-haul A350s. The intra-Europe Lufthansa cabin is a standard 3-3 economy with optional Eurowings-style buy-up to Business class (which is the same seat with the middle blocked).
- Winner: long-haul cabin product
- Lufthansa Allegris (aircraft-dependent) / Ryanair does not fly long-haul
- Winner: intra-Europe cabin product
- Tie / Lufthansa short-haul economy is unremarkable; same 3-3 layout as Ryanair
- Winner: First Class option
- Lufthansa Allegris First Plus / rolling out 2026-2027; Ryanair has nothing comparable
Loyalty: Star Alliance miles vs Ryanair’s nothing-in-particular
Lufthansa Miles and More is a Star Alliance program, which means miles earned on a Lufthansa intra-Europe leg credit toward status and award redemptions across 26 partner airlines. The same Lufthansa flight that costs 50 euros more than Ryanair also earns you 250 to 800 base miles that compound across a year of travel.
Ryanair has no meaningful loyalty program. The Ryanair Club is a 15 euro-per-year subscription that gives early seat selection and small discounts on extras, but it does not earn miles, status, or anything that survives the trip. For a one-off Ryanair flight, this is irrelevant. For a frequent intra-Europe traveler, the cumulative Star Alliance earn on Lufthansa can be worth 100 to 300 euros per year in award redemptions, which is a separate line item in the total-cost comparison.
The catch on Lufthansa: Miles and More has historically charged significant fuel surcharges on award redemptions, particularly on Lufthansa’s own metal. The published rules can attach 200 to 800 euros in cash co-pays to a business class redemption, which often makes the redemption a worse value than buying a discounted revenue ticket. KrisFlyer-via-AMEX and Avianca LifeMiles are both better partner-redemption routes for Lufthansa-operated flights, which is a quirk of the alliance landscape but a real one.
- Winner: loyalty program existence
- Lufthansa / Star Alliance vs Ryanair's nothing-in-particular
- Winner: cumulative earning value
- Lufthansa / 100-300 euros per year for a frequent intra-Europe traveler
- Winner: Miles and More award redemption value
- Subjective / fuel surcharges on own-metal awards complicate the math; partner programs route around it
Who should pick Lufthansa
- You are flying to a primary city airport that matters (Frankfurt, Munich, Vienna, Zurich, Madrid main) and the ground-transit math from a secondary airport eats the fare gap
- You are connecting onward, especially via Frankfurt or Munich to long-haul or to a Star Alliance partner
- You travel frequently and the Star Alliance miles earn is a real line item in your annual travel budget
- You want a checked bag included on the fare and predictable rules around it (long-haul Economy Light retains a checked bag; intra-Europe Light does not)
- You are flying long-haul where Allegris is rolling out and you want to bet on the new cabin (verify the aircraft type for your flight)
- You value cabin service consistency, a known fleet, and integration with rail and onward bookings
- You are traveling with status (Senator, HON Circle, or Star Alliance Gold from a partner) and the lounge and priority benefits materially improve the trip
Who should pick Ryanair
- The sticker fare savings are large enough to absorb 30 to 60 euros and 60 to 90 minutes of ground transit per direction
- You live near a Ryanair base (Stansted, Dublin, Bergamo, Barcelona, Charleroi, or one of the dozens of secondary bases) and the secondary airport is the closer airport for you, not a workaround
- You travel light enough that the 40 by 25 by 20 cm under-seat bag is sufficient, and Priority is a one-line add-on you accept up front rather than at the gate
- You do not need the trip to interlock with another flight, train, or appointment that depends on a primary airport arrival
- You are flying intra-Europe only and have no use for a global airline alliance
- You can plan add-ons at the time of booking (Priority, checked bag, seat selection) at the lowest tier of the dynamic pricing
- You value Ryanair’s stronger 2025 on-time performance and accept its weaker recovery options if something goes wrong
The Bottom Line
In 2026, Lufthansa and Ryanair are closer than they used to be on the cheapest-fare comparison, because Lufthansa Group stripped carry-on from Economy Basic in May. The Ryanair sticker is still cheaper after the add-ons, but not by the multiple it was two years ago.
For a typical weekend trip where the destination airport choice matters, Lufthansa to the primary city airport often beats Ryanair to a secondary airport once the ground transit is priced in. For a typical weekend trip where the secondary airport is close to home or close to the actual destination, Ryanair wins outright on cost. For business travel, frequent travel, or onward connections, Lufthansa is the default. For one-off leisure trips where the only metric is total spend, Ryanair is the default.
The on-time performance edge belongs to Ryanair in 2025, which surprises travelers who expect the legacy carrier to be more reliable. The structural reasons (single fleet, low congestion at secondary airports, point-to-point operations) explain it. The recovery options when something goes wrong belong to Lufthansa, which matters when something does.
Pick Lufthansa for the airport, the connection, and the alliance. Pick Ryanair for the price, the punctuality, and the absence of decisions. The 2026 framing is not about which carrier is better in the abstract; it is about which trip you are actually taking.
For more European-cohort context, see Lufthansa vs British Airways for the legacy-on-legacy comparison, or Ryanair vs Wizzair for the ULCC-on-ULCC matchup. For the full per-airline baggage policies, see Lufthansa carry-on size and Ryanair carry-on size.
Frequently asked questions
Is Lufthansa or Ryanair better for intra-Europe in 2026?
Did Lufthansa strip carry-on from Economy Basic in 2026?
Is Lufthansa Allegris worth booking in 2026?
Why does Ryanair use secondary airports and does it matter?
What is the real cancellation and on-time picture for Ryanair vs Lufthansa in 2026?
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Last verified 2026-05-21 against official Lufthansa and Ryanair policy pages. Airlines change rules without notice, so confirm with your carrier before flying. See our research methodology.