Marketed under the slogan "Your boss will approve," the new ticket reverses some of the airline's more reviled policies for fee-dazzled travelers. The Dublin-based company, long Europe's fastest-growing airline with a sell-it-cheap, stack-'em-high philosophy, says it hopes to capture three-fourths of all business travel between Britain and Ireland, its two biggest markets.
The move reflects not just the airline's desire to leverage its huge presence in Europe, but also a growing interest for low-cost executive travel.
Most European governments are still cutting down on debt while many companies remain wary of spending as the eurozone recovery has stalled. Ryanair says more than a quarter of its passengers already are business travelers.
The latter policy seeks to solve one of the great headaches of travel that made Ryanair off-limits for many business travelers: the risk of eating tickets and punitive penalties for altering anything.
Allied to the new approach, Ryanair increasingly is cutting deals to open services at Europe's business airports, most notably the European Union hub of Brussels' Zaventum.
Ryanair's product looks extremely competitive versus Aer Lingus, British Airways and continental carriers that typically charge more than 150 euros (USD 200) each way for flexible economy-class tickets. Ryanair says its business tickets will cost as little as 69 euros (USD 91).
Today's announcement sent Ryanair shares 2.8 percent higher to 7.13 euros (USD 9.40) on the Irish Stock Exchange.
