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Wizz Air Cabin Crew Requirements 2026

If you have been refreshing the Wizz Air careers page, waiting for a recruitment day near you, you are not alone. Wizz Air is one of Europe’s fastest-growing low-cost carriers. In 2026, it is still expanding aggressively — flying more than 800 routes across over 50 countries and running cabin crew recruitment days in close to 30 locations across more than a dozen countries. That growth is exactly why so many first-time candidates have a real chance this year, including people with no aviation background at all. Not having prior experience in aviation has never been a problem when it comes to making your dream come true!

Three Wizz Air cabin crew members posing in front of a Wizz Air aircraft
Wizz Air cabin crew — the energy and warmth recruiters look for

What You Really Need to Know

I spent years as cabin crew before I started helping candidates prepare, and there is one pattern I see again and again. Aspiring cabin crew members memorize the requirements list, walk into the assessment day, and are completely blindsided by what actually gets them shortlisted. Remember that the requirements are the easy part. They are written down, they are public, and almost everyone in the room meets them. However, there is something else entirely that separates the candidates who get offers from those who don’t.

So, in this full Wizz Air guide, I am going to give you both halves of the picture. First, the hard facts for 2026 — age, arm reach, tattoos, English, salary, the full recruitment timeline — drawn from Wizz Air’s current criteria. Then the part that matters more for you right now – what recruiters are looking for from the moment you walk through the door, and how I would prepare if I were applying today.

Let’s start with the numbers, because they are an important part of your decision.

Quick Wizz Air Requirements

Requirement Details
Minimum Age18 at the time of application; no official upper limit
Minimum HeightNo fixed height — assessed by arm reach instead
Arm Reach210 cm on tiptoes, barefoot
English LevelFluent, spoken and written (whole process is in English)
EducationSecondary school diploma / GCSE level or equivalent
Swimming AbilityMust swim unaided
TattoosNone visible while in uniform
Passport / Right to WorkValid passport (min. 6 months); legal right to work at the base — Wizz Air does not sponsor visas
Customer Service ExperienceNot required, but strongly valued

Wizz Air Cabin Crew Requirements 2026 (Full List)

Here is everything Wizz Air expects from a cabin crew candidate in 2026, with a little context on why each one exists — because understanding the reasoning behind a requirement is the first sign to a recruiter that you actually understand the job. You should know all of these by heart, so you are not caught by surprise at the moment of your application.

One of the biggest mistakes I saw candidates make — and I made versions of it myself early on, when I started my own adventure — is assuming airlines mostly evaluate how you look. It matters, of course, because you are the face of the company. But appearance only gets you in the door. Communication and customer-service orientation are what actually carry you through the day. A recruiter can teach you the uniform standard in an afternoon, but they cannot teach you to be warm and calm under pressure. So that is what they are really screening for.

Age, Passport & Right to Work

You must be at least 18 on the day you apply. There is no published upper age limit, and I will come back to this later, because it matters more than people think.

You also need a valid passport with at least six months’ validity and no limitations, plus the legal right to live and work at your chosen base. This is non-negotiable, and Wizz Air does not sponsor work visas, so your eligibility has to already be in place before you apply.

English & Languages

Fluency in both speech and writing is essential. The entire recruitment process — every conversation, every exercise, every form — is conducted in English, so this is assessed continuously, not just in a formal test. As a rule of thumb in aviation, a solid B2 level is enough to write, understand, and memorize everything you will need during the training course. I learned this the hard way, because without my B2 in place, the door to my cabin crew dream stayed shut until I earned it.

A second European language can be an advantage at certain bases, but it is not mandatory.

Communication, Flexibility & Grooming

Wizz Air openly looks for cheerful, energetic, positive candidates who like working with people — and this may be the single most observed quality on the assessment day.

You also need to be flexible and willing to relocate. You should be able to live within commuting distance of your base, be ready to move there, and be available for early starts, late finishes, and irregular rosters. If you are not willing to relocate, your application can be stopped right there.

Finally, grooming. Professional, polished, in line with company guidelines. Neat is the standard — nothing more complicated than that. You must also be able to swim unaided for 25 meters, which catches some people out. Still, it is a mandatory safety requirement because water evacuation is part of the job, regardless of where you fly.

Wizz Air Height and Arm Reach Requirements

Wizz Air does not publish a fixed minimum height, which surprises many applicants. Instead, it uses an arm reach test in which you must reach 210 cm while standing on tiptoes, barefoot.

This is not about height for its own sake. Cabin crew have to access safety equipment and close overhead lockers across the whole cabin, often quickly and in awkward conditions. The reach test is simply a practical check to ensure you can perform the physical parts of the job safely. It is measured on the assessment day, usually against a marked wall.

A quick, honest tip from my personal and coaching experience – posture matters here, and in a way candidates don’t expect. Standing tall, shoulders back, reaching with confidence — it sends a very good signal. Honestly, I think good posture is the number one requirement for almost any job. Recruiters watch how you carry yourself all day, and, as I wrote in one of my first books in the Cabin Crew series, you are being judged from the moment you step out of your car in the car park.

Wizz Air Tattoo Policy

No tattoos visible while wearing the uniform. Wizz Air’s rule is straightforward, and it covers the arms, hands, neck, and lower legs — anywhere the standard uniform does not reach. And for everyone who asks me this all the time: piercings are treated the same way.

Tattoos in areas the uniform fully covers are generally not a problem. The deciding factor is visibility in uniform, not whether you have ink at all. If you are unsure how your tattoo sits relative to the uniform cut, check the current uniform style before assuming you are fine, and know that policies can be interpreted slightly differently depending on the recruiter and the exact placement. Don’t rely only on what friends tell you they heard about Wizz Air’s tattoo policy.

Overall, grooming follows the same logic as everything else on this list: neat, professional, and consistent with company guidelines. Nothing that pulls focus from the safety-and-service professional you are there to be.

Wizz Air Cabin Crew Salary 2026

Like with any job in the world, salary is one of the most important things when you are deciding whether to work for a company. Wizz Air uses a performance-based pay model with a fixed base salary, plus sector pay for each flight you operate, plus commission on onboard sales.

A good thing to know is that what you actually take home depends on your base country, how many hours you fly, and how well you sell, which means two crew on the same contract can earn noticeably different amounts. I know that can feel unfair at first. Wizz Air’s own published target annual figures for the UK base give a useful anchor (based on an average of 18–28 flights per month):

Position Estimated Annual Target (UK base)
Junior Cabin Attendant~£23,450
Cabin Attendant~£26,450
Senior Cabin Attendant~£33,850

Across the wider European network in 2026, the picture looks roughly like this:

Component Typical 2026 range
Base salary — Central & Eastern Europe~€900–€1,300 gross / month
Base salary — Western Europe~€1,200–€1,600 gross / month
Sector pay~€5–€12 per operated flight
Onboard sales commission~€150–€400 / month (strong performers €500+)
Senior responsibility allowance~€150–€300 / month
Total monthly gross (typical)~€1,400–€2,400 depending on base & performance

Two honest notes on the money. First, the commission element is real, and it rewards people who enjoy interacting with passengers — the same warmth that gets you hired tends to be the thing that boosts your earnings later. Second, training is free of charge, removing one of the upfront barriers that other career paths put in your way. When I started my career, almost every low-cost airline required you to pay for the training course yourself. Today, it is far easier to join the team without going broke before you have even started flying.

Can You Become Cabin Crew Without Experience?

Yes — and this is one of the most encouraging things about Wizz Air for first-time candidates. As I mentioned, previous cabin crew experience is not required. Wizz Air hires new people to the aviation industry all the time, and the training does the technical heavy lifting once you are in.

What it really wants is evidence that you already know how to look after people and work as part of a team. That evidence rarely comes from a flying background — it usually comes from the jobs you may be underselling on your CV. I tell my students to always pay attention to these when they write theirs:

  • Hospitality — restaurants, bars, hotels: pace, pressure, reading a room, recovering when something goes wrong.
  • Retail and customer service — handling complaints, staying friendly when you are exhausted or frustrated, and hitting targets while staying personable.
  • Care, teaching, reception, events — anything where your calm directly affected someone else’s experience.
  • Languages — even conversational ability in a second European language can set you apart at the right base.

What if you're a career changer

If you are a career-changer or coming straight out of school, your job is not to invent experience you don’t have. Many older candidates looking to change careers have told me they were so worried about having nothing to do with aviation that they almost gave up on the dream entirely. But you can literally translate the experience you do have into the language of the cabin. The candidates who do this well almost always prepare concrete examples in advance, rather than hoping the right story will surface under pressure on the day. And believe me, that preparation is visible to a recruiter within the first few minutes.

Wizz Air aircraft and passengers on the tarmac at a European airport
Wizz Air aircraft and passengers on the tarmac at a European airport

The Wizz Air Recruitment Process, Step by Step

Wizz Air’s process is sequential and elimination-based, as are most airlines’ selection processes. So, candidates are progressively shortlisted throughout the day, and not everyone who starts the morning is still there by mid-afternoon. Here is the full path:

  1. Online application. Through the Wizz Air careers page. You can register for a recruitment day at any location, regardless of the base you ultimately want.
  2. Online video interview (in some cases). Depending on the country and the hiring campaign, you may be asked to record a short video interview before being invited to a recruitment day — answering set questions on camera, with no recruiter present. It is not part of every application, but it does happen. If you receive one, treat it seriously — it is a real filter and very reusable. If you want to walk into that video interview already knowing what to expect, I put everything I know into my Cabin Crew Video Interview Guide.
  3. Recruitment day registration. You book a specific event and bring an updated English CV, an ID photo, and your documents.
  4. Document verification. The day opens here, and punctuality is critical — latecomers may not be allowed to take part at all.
  5. Company presentation. Wizz Air representatives explain the role, the salary, the lifestyle, and the benefits.
  6. Group exercises and role-play. This is the heart of the assessment, and where most eliminations happen. More on this below.
  7. One-to-one interview. If you progress, you sit down with a recruiter for roughly 30 minutes of questions about your suitability for the role.
  8. Background and medical checks. Before any offer, Wizz Air follows up on references. It verifies your work history (typically the last five years, including any gaps), runs a criminal record check, reviews financial history, and asks you to complete a medical examination to EASA or UK CAA standards.
  9. Job offer and training. Once checks clear, you receive an offer and a start date. Training typically lasts 4–6 weeks, is free, and takes place at one of Wizz Air’s main bases.

Is There a Video Interview for Wizz Air?

There is a common belief that Wizz Air only ever assesses candidates face-to-face on its recruitment days. That is largely true, but it is not the whole picture — and getting this wrong has caught people out.

Wizz Air’s process is generally built around in-person recruitment days. The airline notes that recruitment can evolve and may vary by country, hiring campaign, or operational needs. Candidates should always carefully read the instructions they receive after applying. I have personally coached a candidate who, after applying to Wizz Air, was asked to complete an online video interview before anything else — recording answers to set questions alone in front of a webcam, with no recruiter to respond to and no second take once she submitted.

The video stage is the one candidates are least ready for, because talking to a camera feels nothing like talking to a person. It is also, ironically, the most trainable stage of the whole process. The questions are predictable enough to rehearse, and your delivery — pace, eye contact, structure, energy — improves dramatically with practice. Recording yourself answering real questions beforehand is the single highest-return thing you can do if a video stage appears in your application. That is exactly the focus of my Cabin Crew Video Interview Guide, which walks you through the kinds of questions asked at the online video stage and shows you how to deliver your answers to the camera with confidence, rather than freezing up the moment the recording light comes on.

What Really Happens During the Assessment Day

This is the part I wish someone had told me before my first assessment day, so that I could be direct with you.

The exercises — the group discussion, the role-plays, the short interview — are not really separate tests. They are one long, continuous observation, and that observation does not stop when an exercise ends. As a former crew member, what stayed with me was how closely recruiters watch candidates between the official stages – in the waiting area, during the coffee break, and in the small talk before things formally begin. The candidate who is charming during the role-play but cold and dismissive to the person next to them in the queue is sending a far louder signal than they realize. This is the first thing I ask about when a student tells me they failed the assessment day — and nine times out of ten, this is where it went wrong.

So here is what is actually being measured, all day long:

Communication — warmth, and the ability to listen as well as speak.

Teamwork — do you lift the group, or do you compete with it?

Problem-solving under mild-to-high pressure.

Energy and presence — Wizz Air says it openly: cheerful, energetic, positive. It cannot be a performance you switch on for the recruiter and off in the corridor.

Self-awareness — knowing when to step forward and when to make space for someone else.

The group stage is where I see the most capable candidates eliminate themselves, almost always by getting teamwork wrong — either disappearing into silence or steamrolling everyone else to look like a leader. Both read as a risk. The role-play scenarios, similarly, are less about finding the correct answer and more about how you handle a difficult passenger. Knowing in advance exactly how recruiters score these two stages, and rehearsing realistic versions of them before the day, is the difference between reacting on instinct and walking in with a plan. That is precisely the gap my full guide, The Cabin Crew Group Interview & Role-Play, was written to close — it breaks down how teamwork and communication are actually evaluated in the group stage. It gives you realistic scenarios to practice, so the room feels familiar before you ever arrive.

Common Mistakes Cabin Crew Candidates Make

From my experience, these are the patterns that quietly end strong applications:

  • Memorized, robotic answers. Recruiters hear the same rehearsed lines all day.
  • Inconsistent energy. Warm in the interview, flat in the group exercise, dismissive on the break. Consistency is the test.
  • Weak teamwork. Dominating the group, or vanishing inside it — both are red flags.
  • No airline research. Not knowing that Wizz Air is a low-cost carrier with a sales-driven onboard model suggests the basics haven’t been covered.
  • Talking too little — you give them nothing to assess.
  • Talking too much — you take up the oxygen others need, which is itself a failure of teamwork.
  • Grooming that misses the mark on neatness and professionalism.

Final Interview to become a cabin crew
Final Interview to become a cabin crew

How I Would Prepare for a Wizz Air Interview

If I were walking into a Wizz Air assessment day next week, this is exactly what I would do — in this order:

Research the airline properly. Understand the low-cost model, the onboard sales culture, the bases, and the lifestyle. Be able to say why Wizz Air in a way that isn’t generic.

Prepare real STAR examples. Situation, Task, Action, Result — a handful of genuine stories about teamwork, handling a difficult customer, staying calm under pressure. The STAR method is powerful, but your mantra should always be “prepared, not memorized.”

Practice customer-service role-play out loud. Don’t just think the scenarios through — rehearse them with another person until empathy and composure feel automatic.

Sort grooming the night before. Lay everything out so the morning is calm. Nothing is scarier than a pair of trousers that split as you put them on, or a shirt you suddenly can’t find in your wardrobe.

Sleep. It sounds trivial, but it isn’t. Energy and presence are scored all day, and you cannot fake them on no sleep.

You Don't Have to Do This Alone

Let me be honest with you, the way I would with someone sitting right across from me.

You can absolutely do this on your own — and many wonderful crew members did exactly that. But here is what I see again and again. When a candidate doesn’t make it through the assessment day, it is rarely about talent. It is usually one specific, fixable thing – an English level that wasn’t quite ready, nerves that took over during the group exercise, or simply walking in without knowing what the day would actually look like. And the hard part is what comes next — in this industry, a no often means waiting around six months before you can even apply again.

If you would prefer not to lose that time, this is why I built my coaching path. It is designed to get you ready for the day that matters. We work through real interview simulations, group and role-play exercises, your English, your STAR examples — everything, rehearsed until it feels familiar. I take each of my students by the hand from the very first session right up to the day before their assessment, so they walk in calm, prepared, and sure of themselves.

Now it could be your turn. Discover the coaching path and book a free first chat.

Wizz Air Cabin Crew — Key Takeaways

  • Wizz Air is actively recruiting cabin crew across Europe in 2026 and is still expanding.
  • Previous experience is not required — transferable customer-service and hospitality skills matter most.
  • You must be at least 18, with no published upper age limit.
  • There is no fixed height; you must reach 210 cm on tiptoes, barefoot.
  • Fluent English (spoken and written) is essential and is assessed all day.
  • Tattoos must not be visible in uniform; grooming must be neat and professional.
  • Pay is performance-based — base salary plus sector pay plus onboard commission.
  • The selection day is eliminatory, and recruiters observe you even between exercises.
  • Training is free and lasts about 4–6 weeks.
  • The candidates who succeed prepare real examples and rehearse the group and interview stages in advance.

FAQ

Can I apply to Wizz Air without experience?

Yes. Previous cabin crew experience is not required. Wizz Air regularly hires first-time candidates and trains them from scratch. Transferable skills from hospitality, retail, or customer service matter far more than a flying background.

Is there a video interview for Wizz Air?

Usually not — Wizz Air’s recruitment is generally focused on in-person recruitment days and face-to-face assessments. However, the process can evolve and may vary by country, hiring campaign, or operational need, and some candidates have been asked to complete an online video interview after applying. Always read the instructions Wizz Air sends you after your application carefully, and be ready for a video stage in case it applies to you.

Is Wizz Air hiring cabin crew in 2026?

Yes. Wizz Air recruits cabin crew continuously throughout the year as it continues to expand across Europe, holding in-person recruitment days in close to 30 locations across 14 countries. New dates are added regularly and fill up fast, so the best move is to check the Recruitment Days section of the official Wizz Air careers page and register for the event nearest you as soon as it opens.

Are tattoos allowed to work in Wizz Air??

Only if they are not visible while you are wearing the uniform, tattoos on the arms, hands, neck, or lower legs that can’t be covered are not accepted. Covered tattoos are generally fine, though borderline placements can depend on the recruiter.

What level of English do I need?

Fluent English, spoken and written. The entire recruitment process is conducted in English, and it is assessed throughout the day, not only in a formal test. A solid B2 level is a good benchmark.

Can I apply at 40?

There is no published upper age limit, so yes. Wizz Air assesses fitness, attitude, and customer-service ability rather than birth year. Maturity and life experience can really work in your favor.

Do I need an EU passport?

You need a valid passport (at least six months’ validity) and the legal right to work at your chosen base. Wizz Air does not sponsor work visas, so your right to work must already be in place.

What is the height / arm reach requirement?

There is no fixed minimum height. Instead, you must reach 210 cm on tiptoes, barefoot. This is tested on the day of the assessment.

Do I need to be able to swim?

Yes. You must be able to swim unaided. It is a genuine safety requirement tied to water-evacuation training.

How long is Wizz Air cabin crew training?

Typically, 4 to 6 weeks. It is free of charge and takes place at one of Wizz Air’s main bases.

How much do Wizz Air cabin crew earn in 2026?

Pay combines a fixed base, sector pay per flight and onboard sales commission. Total monthly gross typically lands around €1,400–€2,400 depending on base and performance. Wizz Air’s UK target figures run from roughly £23,450 (junior) to £33,850 (senior) per year.

Is the Wizz Air interview difficult?

It is competitive rather than academically hard. The stages are eliminatory, so the challenge is sustaining genuine warmth, teamwork, and energy across the whole day — including the informal moments.

Does Wizz Air provide accommodation?

Wizz Air does not generally provide accommodation. You are expected to live within commuting distance of your base or relocate there, so factor local living costs into your decision.

How long does the recruitment process take?

The assessment day itself usually runs until late afternoon. After that, background, reference and medical checks take additional time before an offer and a training start date are confirmed.

What documents should I bring to the recruitment day?

An updated English CV with an ID photo, your passport, and any relevant certifications. Arrive early — latecomers may not be admitted at all. consequatur.

Can I attend a recruitment day for a base I'm not applying to?

Yes. You can join any recruitment event regardless of which base you ultimately want to be based at.

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