Wizz Air has appointed Brian H. Franke as a non-independent non-executive director, bringing an Indigo Partners airline specialist onto the board as Andrew S. Broderick steps down after approximately seven years. The London-listed carrier said Franke’s appointment takes effect on 16 June 2026, one day after Broderick’s resignation becomes effective.
The change gives Wizz Air another director with direct exposure to several low-cost airline models at a time when the sector is dealing with aircraft delivery delays, fuel volatility, airport constraints and consumer price sensitivity. Franke has been a principal at Indigo Partners since 2004 and has served on the board of Frontier since 2013. His airline governance record also includes Volaris, JetSMART, Cebu Air and earlier roles at Tiger Aviation and Tiger Airways Australia.
Wizz Air is not presenting the move as a CEO change, but board composition becomes significant when a company is trying to protect cost discipline while continuing to grow. The group operates 269 Airbus A320 and A321 aircraft and carried 69.7 million passengers in the 2026 financial year. At that scale, board-level aviation experience affects oversight of fleet planning, route economics, customer pricing, emissions strategy and operational resilience. The timing is especially relevant as airlines balance growth ambitions against capital discipline and passenger demand.
Broderick’s departure removes an experienced non-independent director from the board. He joined Wizz Air in 2019 and had served as chair of the Financial Performance Committee, giving his exit a governance dimension beyond ordinary board rotation. His departure also places more attention on how William A. Franke, Wizz Air’s chairman, shapes oversight during the next phase of the airline’s development.
The appointment reinforces the value of board experience across ultra-low-cost aviation. Through Franke’s current and past roles, Wizz Air is connecting its governance bench with Frontier, Volaris, JetSMART and Cebu Air, carriers operating across North America, Latin America and Asia. Bringing Brian H. Franke into Wizz Air’s boardroom gives the company another director familiar with that operating template.
Senior executives watching aviation should treat this as a governance and strategy signal, not a routine board notice. Airlines are heading into a tougher cycle, and boards are being tested on the hard stuff — capital allocation, fleet decisions, costs and brand. For Wizz Air, the question is whether deeper aviation expertise at board level actually translates into growth that doesn’t come at the expense of operational discipline.
More From CEO Today: Europe GPS Disruption Fears Push Airlines Into Navigation Contingency Planning


