Starting next month, Air China will launch two new routes:
* Beginning March 24, a daily nonstop service between Beijing Capital and Brussels;
* Beginning March 26, a three-times-weekly service between Chengdu Tianfu and Brussels.
In July 2006, Hainan Airlines launched the ShanghaiโBeijingโBrussels route, the first direct service between mainland China and Brussels, and at the time the only nonstop air link between China and Belgium.
Targeting the Southwest China market, Hainan Airlines opened the ChongqingโBrussels route on November 22, 2025. This marked another BelgiumโChina service following its existing Brussels routes to Beijing, Shenzhen, and Shanghai.
With four routes spanning North China, East China, South China, and Southwest Chinaโthe countryโs four major economic regionsโHainan Airlines has, after two decades of sustained expansion, established itself as the long-standing dominant carrier on the Brussels route.
Other competitors soon followed. In addition to Air China and Hainan Airlines, Juneyao Air also launched its ShanghaiโBrussels service in 2024.
Why has Brussels become such a strategic battleground for airlines?
As the headquarters of both the European Union and NATO, Brussels is widely regarded as the โcapital of Europeโ and serves as a central node for political, economic, and cultural exchanges between China and Europe.
Brussels Airport is also one of Star Allianceโs key secondary hubs in Europe. On one side, it offers dense, high-frequency connections to major cities across the European continent.
On the other, it serves as a โgolden gatewayโ to Africa, with frequent services to West African cities such as Dakar and Abidjan, as well as strong onward connectivity to major North American destinations including New York and Chicagoโmaking it an efficient transfer hub linking Europe, Africa, and North America.
According to Aviation Flow data, the load factor on the ShanghaiโBrussels route reached nearly 90% on return flights in July 2025.