MANILA, Philippines - Budget airline Cebu Air Inc. (Cebu Pacific) is holding its first system-wide seat sale after the lifting of the fuel surcharge on all international and domestic passengers.
Cebu Pacific vice president for marketing and distribution Candice Iyog said the seat sale is part of the low cost carrier’s commitment to offer low fares to the travelling public.
“We remain committed to offering the traveling public low fares so more people can afford to fly, an extensive network for faster flights, and the newest aircraft fleet with the latest technology,” Iyog said.
The sale covers all 34 domestic and 28 international destinations for travel from July 1 to Nov. 30. The promo runs until Jan. 16.
Passengers could take advantage of P399 seats on all its domestic routes including popular island destinations such as Boracay (Caticlan), Palawan (Puerto Princesa), Cebu, and Davao.
The budget airline operates inter-island routes from its hubs in Manila, Clark, Cebu, Iloilo, Kalibo and Davao.
Likewise, international seat sale fares are also up for grabs with no fuel surcharges wherein guests could book P1,499 seats from Manila to Guangzhou, Kota Kinabalu, Taipei or Xiamen and from Clark to Hong Kong or Macau.
Furthermore, P2,499 seats are also available from Manila to Bangkok, Beijing, Brunei, Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh, Hong Kong, Jakarta, Kuala Lumpur, Macau, Nagoya, Osaka, Phuket, Shanghai, Siem Reap or Singapore.
The same P2,499 seats are also available for those traveling from Cebu and Iloilo to Hong Kong, or from Cebu, Clark and Iloilo to Singapore.
Meanwhile, P2,999 seats could also be booked for flights from Manila to Bali, Busan, Seoul (Incheon) or Tokyo (Narita), or from Cebu to Tokyo (Narita).
For its long haul destinations, passengers could take advantage of P4,999 seats from Manila to Dammam and Dubai as well as Manila to Sydney routes and the P5,999 seats from Manila to Kuwait and Riyadh.
Cebu Pacific vice president for corporate affairs Jorenz Tanada earlier said the budget airline has removed fuel surcharge in airline tickets last Jan. 9 in compliance with the directive of the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB).