TUI shareholders have been handed two clear policy wins in as many weeks – a German air-travel tax reduction worth up to €11.40 per passenger and a Dutch government offer that could save €100 million in public spending – yet the shares remain trapped below the €8 mark, struggling to shake off a bearish technical overlay.
The stock closed the latest session at €7.03, down 1.93% from the previous day’s €7.17, after a brief recovery above the 50-day moving average failed to translate into sustained buying. Year-to-date, the equity has shed over 21% of its value, while on a 12-month view the decline stands at 19.70%. The 200-day moving average at €7.65 continues to cap upside, and the relative strength index at 47 paints a picture of neutral momentum with no clear trigger in either direction.
The most headline-grabbing recent development comes from The Hague. KLM is phasing out its Boeing fleet in favor of Airbus, which means the eight-year-old Boeing Business Jet (registration PH-GOV) used for Dutch state and royal travel will lose its current maintenance provider. Rather than spending well over €100 million on a new Airbus-based replacement, TUI’s Dutch unit and budget carrier Corendon have jointly offered to take over operation of the existing aircraft, leveraging their own large Boeing 737 fleets to keep the jet flying and save around €100 million in taxpayer money. Corendon founder Atilay Uslu has pushed back against government claims that only KLM can meet the required safety standards, insisting the task can be transferred without compromising security. The Dutch transport ministry remains skeptical, and a cabinet decision is pending. For TUI, the proposal remains a low-probability opportunity; no contract has been awarded, and the stock barely reacted.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying TUI?
Meanwhile, German fiscal policy has delivered a more concrete lift. The federal government slashed the air travel tax effective July 1, 2026, bringing levies back to pre-May 2024 levels. Short-haul passengers will cost airlines around €13 each, long-haul around €59, saving carriers up to €11.40 per ticket. The measure will reduce state revenue by €330 million next year. Industry association DRV welcomed the move as a boost for affordable holidays, while calling for further relief on air traffic control charges from 2026. Whether TUI passes the saving to consumers or uses it to improve margins remains an open question. A second cost reduction is expected in November, when fees for the travel security fund – in which TUI is one of the largest contributors – are set to fall, providing an additional tailwind for the upcoming financial year.
Yet these tailwinds are being drowned out by headwinds that investors find harder to ignore. Record levels of customer complaints, persistently high jet fuel prices, and broader geopolitical uncertainties have kept risk appetite in check. The psychologically important €8 level has repeatedly rejected advances, and a clean breakout likely requires fresh fundamental catalysts such as concrete summer booking data. Until then, neither the Dutch jet-saving pitch nor the German tax cut is enough to pull the shares out of their technical rut.
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