PassRadar

Is All You Can Fly worth it?

The pass costs €499/year plus a €9.99flat fee per one-way flight. Whether that beats paying cash depends entirely on how often you fly and what you'd pay otherwise — so do the math for your numbers, not the marketing's.

Note: Wizz has also sold the pass at €599 outside promo periods. 946 routes are listed today.

4

AYCF allows up to 3 per day — a weekend return is 2.

45

Remember: last-minute cash fares, not the €19.99 sale ones.

€979
AYCF per year
€499 pass + 48 × €9.99
€2160
cash fares per year
48 × €45
saves €1181/yr
verdict
vs paying cash
1.2 flights/mo
break-even at this fare
fly more than this and the pass wins

What the math doesn't show

The calculator assumes every flight you want exists and is bookable. In practice, these rules do most of the deciding.

  • Availability is limited and opaque

    AYCF seats are a separate, unpublished inventory — a route on the daily list can still show no bookable seats. In November 2025 the Italian antitrust authority fined Wizz Air €500,000 for marketing the pass as unlimited while omitting these limits.

  • Booking window: 72h to 3h before departure

    You can never book further than three days out — so you can't secure a return before you leave. Every trip carries some get-home risk.

  • Carry-on only

    The pass covers one small carry-on. Checked bags and larger cabin bags cost extra at regular prices, which erodes the savings fast.

  • Single passenger

    The pass is personal. A partner or family flies on normal fares — or needs a pass of their own with no guarantee of seats on the same flight.

  • Two no-shows end the pass

    Miss two booked flights without cancelling and the membership is terminated, with no refund. Max 3 flights per day.

Who it tends to work for

  • Flexible solo travelers who can decide today and fly tomorrow — students, remote workers, retirees.
  • People living near a Wizz base with many daily departures, so thin availability still leaves options.
  • Travelers who treat the destination as negotiable: "somewhere warm this weekend" rather than "Rome on the 14th".
  • Packing-light regulars who never check a bag anyway.

Who it tends not to work for

  • Planners who need fixed dates: weddings, meetings, anything with a deadline — the 72h window can't promise you'll get there.
  • Couples and families — every companion pays cash fares, and matching seats on the same flight isn't guaranteed.
  • Anyone traveling with checked luggage; the bag fees eat the savings.
  • Occasional flyers — below roughly one flight a month at typical fares, cash is simply cheaper.