
easyJet has launched its annual Big Orange Sale, with over 730,000 reduced seats across more than 140 destinations. Flights start from £14.99 one-way, with up to 20% off selected routes for travel through to December 2026.
The sale also covers easyJet holidays packages, where code BIGSALE unlocks tiered savings of up to £400. Unlike a one-day flash sale, this one runs until 5 May, giving you time to check availability without pressure-booking the wrong dates.
Seats at the lowest fares are limited. The £14.99 headline applies to selected routes and dates only. Availability changes quickly during a sale period.
easyJet’s Big Orange Sale is one of its largest annual fare events, and the prices are measurably lower than standard rates. A return to Barcelona in July typically costs £120-£180 at normal pricing. A return to Marrakech from £60 is significantly below what you’d pay outside a sale window. The 20% discount on thousands of flights is real, not a cosmetic reduction off an inflated base fare.
For holiday packages, the BIGSALE code delivers straightforward savings. A couple spending £1,500 saves £200. A family at £3,000 saves £300. easyJet holidays prices are generally competitive to begin with, so this is a saving on already reasonable pricing rather than a discount off an inflated rack rate.
The key caveat: all easyJet fares are seat-only. Checked baggage, speedy boarding and allocated seating are extras that will add to the headline price. Factor those in before comparing against a package deal from Jet2 or TUI where bags are usually included.
This is a legitimate sale worth acting on. easyJet has one of the widest short-haul networks from UK airports, and the Big Orange Sale covers the full range, from European city breaks to longer beach routes in Egypt, Morocco and the Canary Islands. If you have a summer trip in mind, or you’re eyeing winter sun, check dates before 5 May.
Sale ends 5 May 2026.
Go to easyjet.com and search your preferred dates. Use the Low Fare Finder for the most flexible pricing view across the month.

Kate Acaster is Chief Editor at Flight Tribe. She writes about practical travel planning, budget airlines, baggage rules, city breaks, beach holidays and good hotels that do not cost daft money.
Kate has travelled through Europe, South America and beyond, usually with a notebook, a half-formed plan and a strong opinion on airport snacks. At Flight Tribe, her work focuses on helping UK travellers understand what is included, what costs extra, and whether a trip is worth booking at the price shown.
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