Earlier this year, it secured £3bn in emergency funding, which it said would give it the space needed to complete a restructuring of its debts and attract a cash buyer.
Once booking fees, seat selection and luggage costs are added on, travellers will see costs climb, he says - particularly as multiple short-notice journeys will be required to break even on the original cost of the subscription."It is also ironic to see an airline which claims to be Europe's 'greenest' encouraging consumers to take unlimited flights," he adds.
The Hungarian airline has faced a number of hurdles in the last year, which it might be hoping to overcome with the new scheme.In June, the airline was named the worst for UK flight delays for the third year in a row,And in January, it had to pay an extra £1.2m to customers in compensation, after the industry regulator intervened
Wizz Air points out that it has been working on improvements, such as investing an extra £90m in its operations and customer service last year. And it says 1.8% of its UK flights were delayed for more than three hours in the first half of this year - a 50% reduction on last year.Talie Delemere, 34, is excited about the scheme and has already signed up. She lives near Luton airport and likes being able to travel whenever she likes.
"I travel a lot anyway, between eight and 12 times a year and I mostly travel with hand luggage," she tells the BBC.
"Wizz Air are a mixed bag but I don't find them any better or worse service-wise than any other low cost carriers and their aircraft are far nicer and more comfortable than Ryanair's.""In my nearly 15 years of federal service, I've never seen this," he said. "The morale has just completely crashed," he said.
The tenants of The Leadmill music venue in Sheffield have applied for permission to appeal against the decision to evict them.Last month a judge ruled that the venue's owners, Electric Group, should be allowed to take over the much-loved 900-capacity building and run it themselves.
The Leadmill Ltd said it was wrong for a landlord to profit from "the tenant's hard work" and the appeal was an "important test case" for all business tenants.A Court of Appeal spokesperson said: "We are processing the application and awaiting documents before it can be referred to a judge to consider the application."