AirAsia adds more Bangkok-Siem Reap flights
Low cost carrier AirAsia is boosting capacity on the Bangkok-Siem Reap route to three times a day effective December 1.
Reservations for the additional flights are already open on www.airasia.com.
To celebrate the expanded service, AirAsia passengers can fly on the route for a discounted THB1,790 during a limited booking period until November 2.
"We hope that the extra flights will help meet increasing demand, provide guests with a greater choice of travel times and enable us to offer improved flight connections across our network and that of the AirAsia Group," said Santisuk Klongchaiya, Commercial Director of Thai AirAsia.
"Overall, the airline has carried passengers to and from its Siem Reap routes with an average of 80% passenger load since it began operations in Cambodia in 2013."
TravelMole Editorial Team
Editor for TravelMole North America and Asia pacific regions. Ray is a highly experienced (15+ years) skilled journalist and editor predominantly in travel, hospitality and lifestyle working with a huge number of major market-leading brands. He has also cover in-depth news, interviews and features in general business, finance, tech and geopolitical issues for a select few major news outlets and publishers.
Have your say Cancel reply
Subscribe/Login to Travel Mole Newsletter
Travel Mole Newsletter is a subscriber only travel trade news publication. If you are receiving this message, simply enter your email address to sign in or register if you are not. In order to display the B2B travel content that meets your business needs, we need to know who are and what are your business needs. ITR is free to our subscribers.

































France prepares for a massive strike across all transports on September 18
Turkish tourism stalls due to soaring prices for accommodation and food
CCS Insight: eSIMs ready to take the travel world by storm
Germany new European Entry/Exit System limited to a single airport on October 12, 2025
Airlines suspend Madagascar services following unrest and army revolt