The countdown is on: The financing of Leipzig/Halle and Dresden Airports is secured until the end of 2026, after which a new chapter begins - with an open outcome. From 2027, Saxony-Anhalt no longer wants to participate in the subsidies for the losses of Dresden Airport. What sounds technical is politically and economically explosive. The decision touches on the fundamental question of what role the two airports should play in the future - and who is prepared to pay for it.
Restructuring under time pressure
At the same time, the operator, Mitteldeutsche Flughafen AG (MFAG), is under economic pressure. In 2024, the Group recorded the highest loss in its history at 53.5 million euros. An acute financial crisis could only be averted with new bank loans and additional subsidies from the shareholders. A financing gap of around 145 million euros was closed, securing operations until the end of 2026.
MFAG is now focusing on a strict restructuring and consolidation course. The aim is to achieve a positive operating result for the first time by 2026. Plans include cost reductions, job cuts and a stronger focus on core tasks. In the view of the Chamber of Industry and Commerce, the transition to profitability by 2026 with unchanged capacities and flight offerings is "very ambitious".
Why Saxony-Anhalt wants to exit
From 2027, new uncertainty looms, especially for Dresden. The background to this is the ownership structure of MFAG. The main owners are the Free State of Saxony with around 77.3 percent of the shares and the state of Saxony-Anhalt with around 18.5 percent. Further shares are held by the cities of Leipzig, Dresden and Halle.
Saxony-Anhalt is sticking to its policy of no longer participating in state subsidies for Dresden Airport in future. The Ministry of Finance in Magdeburg cites different state interests as the reason for this.
"While the Free State of Saxony has a direct state interest in both airport locations, the state of Saxony-Anhalt only has a direct regional economic interest in the Leipzig/Halle location due to its proximity to the state border," says the ministry. The state expressly rules out any further financing of Dresden Airport.