Air Baltic has dropped its €5 airport check-in fee.
The Latvian airline used to charge the fee for airport check-ins, but waived it for members of the airline's loyalty programme BalticMiles, and passengers checking in online.
Tero Taskila, Air Baltic's chief commercial officer, said: "Making travel affordable for our customers and lowering prices is airBaltic's priority."
He encouraged people to check-in online, however: "If all airBaltic passengers checked-in online they cumulatively would save some 60 million minutes every year and could use this time to do things that have higher value in their lives."
In other news, Air Baltic has announced plans to start offering Apple iPads for inflight entertainment.
The iPads will feature movies, cartoons, music, games, or daily news from electronic newspapers.
The airline claims it will be the first airline in Europe to offer the service to its passengers.
Last week Air Baltic celebrated its 15th birthday.
Bertolt Flick, President and CEO of airBaltic, said a lot of things have changed during the last fifteen years.
"The Baltic States have gone through a period of uninhibited growth, followed by a recession without precedent. However, aviation in our home markets, the Baltics and Finland, has developed and the main beneficiary is the customer.
"When I looked at old timetables, prices and business reports, I saw how few flights were offered only a few years ago and how prices have changed."
The airline started off with two planes and five routes and now has 34 aircraft flying to 80 destinations. It expects to close the year having flown more than 3 million passengers.
www.airbaltic.com