For many travellers, especially those living abroad, finding affordable flights can make all the difference between a spontaneous visit home and an unaffordable journey. Whether you’re a family managing school holidays, a retiree planning a quiet getaway, or a remote worker squeezing in a long weekend, knowing when to fly can be just as important as where.
New travel data has confirmed what seasoned flyers have long suspected: Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays are typically the cheapest days to fly, particularly on European routes. Flying mid-week, rather than during the traditional Friday-to-Sunday rush, can result in savings of up to 20% or more depending on the destination, company and season.
Why Mid-Week is Cheaper
There are a few reasons behind this pricing pattern. Weekend flights are in high demand due to both leisure and business travel. Airlines know this and adjust prices accordingly. Conversely, the middle of the week is often less busy, and carriers are more likely to offer competitive fares to fill unsold seats. This not only applies to short-haul flights within Europe but also to many transatlantic and long-haul routes.
For expats living in Spain, where travel to and from the UK, Germany, France, and Scandinavia is common, this trend is particularly valuable. A flight from Málaga to London, for example, could cost €180 on a Sunday, but only €140 on a Wednesday. Over the course of a year, or for families booking multiple tickets, these differences can add up to hundreds of euros in savings.
When to Book Matters Too
Timing isn’t just about when you fly — it’s also about when you book. Travel analysts recommend making your bookings between Monday and Wednesday, avoiding the weekend surge when casual browsers (and sometimes inflated demand) can drive prices up.
While there’s no longer a “magic day” for lowest fares — once thought to be Tuesday — current data shows that booking early in the week remains slightly cheaper overall. And flexibility remains key: the more adaptable you are with your dates, the better your chance of snapping up a deal.
Tips for Getting the Best Deals
Here are a few quick tips to help expats and travellers cut costs:
Use flexible date tools on flight search engines to compare prices across a week.
Clear your browser cache or use incognito mode to avoid potential price increases based on repeated searches.
Avoid peak travel periods, such as national holidays, school breaks, and major festivals.
Set price alerts for your preferred routes to be notified when fares drop.
Book directly with airlines when possible — third-party sites can add hidden fees.
Living abroad often means travelling more to visit family, return home for special occasions, for work, or simply escape to another corner of Europe. Being strategic about flight timing can make travel more accessible, less stressful, and easier on the wallet.
For many in Spain’s vibrant expat community, these kinds of savings are more than just a bonus they’re a necessity. Whether you’re in Andalucía, Valencia, or the Balearic Islands, having this knowledge in your travel toolkit can help you stay connected without overspending.
So next time you’re planning a trip, consider a quieter, mid-week departure. Not only might you save money, but you’ll also likely enjoy a less crowded airport and a more relaxed start to your journey.
Mayor Lara not looking very happy about the situation. Credit: Ayuntamiento de Benalmadena
Residents in Benalmadena be warned. There will be cuts to the supply on Tuesday, July 8, as essential works have been left to the busiest and hottest time of year.
Between the times of 8am and 3pm, expect a likely drying up of the taps as council contractors attempt to plug the holes in the water pipes in the following areas:
Camino de Amocafre
Camino a la Estación
Camino de la Viñuela
It seems that around 80 metres of pipework has more holes than a teabag and is long overdue some repairs. The recommendation is to get some bottled water in while you still can and still enough for afterwards, as there may be some sediment left in the pipes in the afternoon.
The troublesome area? Do you remember that massive pipe burst next to the Los Patos hotel that pumped a geyser of clean drinking water into the air? That’s the area that has the problem.
The council apologises for the inconvenience that this measure may cause and thanks the citizens of Benalmadena, and its hotels for understanding while the works, aimed at improving the quality of the water supply, are carried out.
Warning from Benalmadena council and the water company.
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Israel attacks three Houthi ports and a power plant in Yemen Sunday night, Monday morning, July 7th | Credit: @sabio69 on X
Israeli Defence Forces carried out their first strikes against the Iran-backed Houthis in Yemen since the Tel Aviv-Tehran ceasefire. The Israeli military attacked three Yemeni ports and a power plant around midnight on local time Sunday night and into Monday morning, CNN reported.
The attacks come shortly after the Israeli military issued evacuation orders for civilians in the areas, warning of imminent air strikes, the BBC said.
The Israeli Air Force said these strikes on Yemen’s three ports were in response to “repeated attacks” by the Houthis on Israel and its citizens. It added that the targeted ports were being used to “transfer weapons from the Iranian regime to carry out terror plans” against Israel and its allies.
Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz confirmed on social media the strikes on the Houthi-controlled sites, including a power station and a ship that was hijacked by the group two years ago.
Houthis will pay ‘a heavy price’
Katz said the strikes were part of “Operation Black Flag” and warned that the Houthis “will continue to pay a heavy price for their actions”.
“The fate of Yemen is the same as the fate of Tehran. Anyone who tries to harm Israel will be harmed, and anyone who raises a hand against Israel will have their hand cut off,” he said in a post on X.
“Houthi forces installed a radar system on the ship and have been using it to track vessels in the international maritime arena to facilitate further terrorist activities,” the IDF said in a statement following the strikes.
Following the strikes, Houthi forces said they “effectively repelled” the Israeli attacks, according to a post from a Houthi spokesperson on X, according to ABC News.
Enrique Iglesias delights 25,000 fans upon his return to Spain after a long absence | Credit: @Enriqueiglesias/Instagram
It had been six years since Enrique Iglesias last sang on Spanish soil, but on Saturday night in Gran Canaria, he didn’t just return—he reclaimed it. And nobody expected it because, as reported by Euro Weekly News in mid-2022, the son of Julio Iglesias had announced his retirement from the music business.
Under the warm island sky and in front of 25,000 roaring fans, the Madrid-born global star brought his entire world back to where it began. And what unfolded wasn’t just a concert. It was a reckoning—intimate, explosive, and unapologetically his.
The stadium was vibrant, filled with energy even before Iglesias sounded off his first note. There was a hum in the air and a roaring vibration on the ground as if something unprecedented or surreal was about to happen. And then, it did. The opening bars of “Súbeme la radio” streamed through the air and into the night, and just like that, time collapsed.
No filler, no gimmicks
Thousands of LED bracelets lit up the stands, and thousands of Iglesias’s fans danced to his rhythm, as if the crowd itself had become a living, breathing constellation.
For two hours, Enrique delivered what his fans expected. He gave them all he is and all he has, which is more than enough.
No filler, no gimmicks—just music, memory, and connection. From “Bailando” to “El perdón” to “Duele el corazón,” each track hit like a homecoming anthem. The hits weren’t dusted off for nostalgia—they were alive, pulsing with new urgency, sung not just by him but by a crowd that knew every word and had waited too damn long to shout them back.
But the night’s real magic came not with the bangers, but with the stillness. Mid-set, Enrique dimmed the lights and brought out Argentine artist Emilia. The two performed “Héroe,” a song that’s now old enough to vote, yet still holds the emotional weight of a fresh scar. Emilia, fresh off her own fiery set, met Enrique note for note—raw, exposed, and unafraid. Their duet was less a performance, more shared memory. And in that moment, every love lost and held onto in that crowd rose with them.
Later, Emilia posted simply, “Gracias de corazón, Enrique.” She didn’t need to say more. The moment had spoken for itself.
Enrique on stage with Emilia | Credit: @emiliamernes/Instagram
“Héroe” has never left the Spanish bloodstream. Even pop royalty like Dua Lipa paid tribute to it earlier this year, performing it in Spanish during her Madrid tour stop. That song, like Enrique himself, doesn’t age—it transforms.
There was a gravity to this night, and not just because it marked Enrique’s first show in Spain since 2019. He turns 50 this year. It’s also the 30th anniversary of his debut album—three decades that saw him break from Julio Iglesias’s long shadow and build his throne on the global stage.
He’s no longer just the heartthrob from the ’90s. He’s one of the best-selling Latin artists of all time, with over 180 million albums sold and more than 19 billion streams in the digital ether.
They sang like he’d never left
But here’s the truth Enrique proved on Saturday: statistics don’t sing back. People do. And the people of Spain? They sang like he never left.
The Gran Canaria performance was also one of only five shows on his 2025 tour—a list that includes cities as far-flung as Sofia, Abu Dhabi, and Mumbai. Spain got the only hometown date. And the fans knew it. They treated every note like a gift.
Earlier in the day, festival-goers were treated to vibrant sets by Rawayana, Ca7riel and Paco Amoroso, and the electric Picoco’s, but once Enrique Iglesias took the stage, time just seemed to freeze and stand still in awe. The music, the light, the voices—it became something tribal—a collective release.
When it ended, there was no encore. Just Enrique, hand on his heart, eyes full of something unsaid. Maybe gratitude. Maybe relief. Maybe both.
What’s certain is this: Spain didn’t just witness a concert. It welcomed home a son.
Enrique showing his best on-stage moves | Credit: @nabscab/Instagram