Airports Council International (ACI) World revealed the 2025 rankings of the world’s busiest airports, highlighting
the industry’s leading hubs across total passengers, international
passengers, air cargo, and aircraft movements.
These airports play a
critical role in the global air transport system, anchoring connectivity and
enabling the efficient movement of people and goods worldwide.
Hartsfield-Jackson
Atlanta International Airport remains the world’s busiest
airport for passenger traffic, followed by Dubai International
Airport and Tokyo Haneda Airport. At the same time, Chicago
O’Hare International Airport ranks first for aircraft movements.
ACI World Director
General Justin Erbacci said:
“We congratulate the world’s busiest airports for managing growing air travel
demand amid increasing operational complexity. These hubs keep people and goods
moving, supporting global trade, tourism, and economic growth in their
communities and regions. To help keep pace with rising demand, governments must
prioritise sustained investment in airports and the broader aviation
ecosystem.”
Total passengers
highlights
In 2025, global total
passengers are estimated to have reached 9.8 billion,
representing an increase of 3.6% from 2024 or a gain of 7.3% from 2019
results.
The top 10 busiest airports for total
passenger traffic represent 9% of global passenger traffic.
Hartsfield-Jackson
Atlanta remains 1st with 106.3 million passengers.
Dubai remains 2nd with 95.2
million passengers.
Tokyo Haneda rises
to 3rd with 91.7 million passengers.
Asia-Pacific airports are rebounding
strongly, driving changes in global airport rankings.
Shanghai Pudong records
the biggest jump in the top 10, rising from 10th to
5th.This growth was supported by international traffic recovery, visa
policy easing, and expanded connectivity.
Guangzhou Baiyun rebounds
to 9th position, up from 57th in 2022.
4 airports in the top 10 are in the United
States, reflecting continued market strength. They all have significant
domestic passenger shares (80–95% domestic traffic).
Global aviation
context in 2025
Resilient but fragile global economy: Global GDP grew ~3.0–3.2% in 2025,
above expectations but below historical norms, with ongoing risks from
trade tensions, protectionism, and policy uncertainty affecting air travel
demand.
Lower fuel prices and easing inflation
supported demand: Jet
fuel prices fell (~-13% YoY) and inflation eased, boosting purchasing
power and sustaining strong passenger demand despite volatility.
Global recovery led by international
traffic: Global
airport traffic rose 3.6% in 2025, driven by international demand and
Asia-Pacific recovery, while North American and European hubs neared
saturation.
Capacity becoming a key constraint: Growth was increasingly limited by
infrastructure and slot constraints in some regions, aircraft delivery
backlogs, and air navigation limitations.
Geopolitics reshaping traffic flows: Airspace closures and conflicts
increased flight times and costs, prompting rerouting and shifting traffic
toward alternative hubs.
China’s reopening boosting global hubs: The return of Chinese travel
accelerated growth across Asia-Pacific and major hubs, strengthening
global connectivity.
Cargo trends and supply chain shifts: Air cargo volumes stabilised near
record levels, supported by e-commerce and faster, restructured global
supply chains.
International
passengers
International passenger
traffic reached 4.0 billion in 2025, representing a gain of
5.9% vs 2024 and 8.3% vs 2019.
The top 10 busiest airports for
international passenger traffic represent 17% of total
international traffic.
Dubai remains 1st, while London
Heathrow and Incheon hold
onto 2nd and 3rd respectively.
Air cargo
Air cargo volumes are estimated to
have increased by 2.9% year-over-year (almost +8.8% versus 2019), to
almost 128.9 million metric tonnes in 2025.
Air cargo traffic is more concentrated
amongst the main airports. Air cargo volumes in the top 10
airports represent close to 26% of global air cargo
traffic.
The increase is driven by strong
e-commerce demand and supply chain adjustments.
Hong Kong and Shanghai
Pudong remain in 1st and 2nd rank
respectively, and Anchorage gains 3rd rank.
Aircraft movements
Global aircraft movements are
estimated to be around 101.5 million in 2025, representing a
gain of 2.3% from 2024 results or +0.2% vs 2019.
The top 10 airports for aircraft
movement represent 6.4% of global aircraft movements.
Chicago
O’Hare ranks 1st, followed by Atlanta, and Dallas/Fort
Worth. -TradeArabia News Service