[3] The Bosnia and Herzegovina Directorate of Civil Aviation (BHDCA) issued an Air Operator Certificate (AOC) to the airline on 11 January 2019.
[4] Flying a single Airbus A319, FlyBosnia based its growth strategy on religious tourism[citation needed] and announced services to European operations, mainly London, Paris and Rome.
[8] In October 2019, reports emerged that FlyBosnia owed Sarajevo Airport substantial amounts of money for handling services.
Its sole owned aircraft, an Airbus A319-100, was to be scrapped and replaced under a wet lease contract to establish a broader network of charter destinations in 2021.
[1] In December 2021, FlyBosnia announced that it would return to the market with flights from all airports in Bosnia and Herzegovina to Zürich and Geneva in Switzerland.