International Airlines Group is to buy assets of the Austrian airline Niki, formerly part of the airberlin group.
The deal is worth €20 million and will provide liquidity to Niki of up to €16.5 million.
The transaction is being made by a newly formed subsidiary of Vueling which will be incorporated as an Austrian company and run initially as a separate operation.
It is subject to customary closing conditions such as the EC competition approval.
The assets include up to 15 A320 family aircraft and an attractive slot portfolio at various airports including Vienna, Dusseldorf, Munich, Palma and Zurich.
The new company plans to employ approximately 740 former NIKI employees to run the operation.
Willie Walsh, IAG chief executive, said: “Niki was the most financially viable part of airberlin and its focus on leisure travel means it’s a great fit with Vueling.
“This deal will enable Vueling to increase its presence in Austria, Germany and Switzerland and provide the region’s consumers with more choice of low cost air travel.”
airberlin ceased operations in October after equity investor Etihad withdrew financial support.
Niki itself was grounded earlier this month after filing for insolvency protection.
More details about the new subsidiary’s branding and route network will be provided in due course, when appropriate.
IAG also owns Iberia, Aer Lingus, and British Airways.