Istanbul Airport busiest in Europe

World’s Busiest Airports in 2020 – 2021

Airports Council International (ACI) released its preliminary passenger statistics for 2020 and announced rankings for the world’s busiest airports. And ACI Europe reveals the busiest airports in Q1 2021.

Global passenger traffic at the world’s top 10 busiest airports decreased by -45.7% in 2020. Overall, passenger traffic at the world’s airports decreased by -64.6% which shows that the impact of the pandemic and the early stages of recovery in air travel has not been uniform around the world.

According to the preliminary data published, Guangzhou Bai Yun International Airport in China recorded the most passenger traffic in 2020, with Atlanta Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport in the United States just behind.

Seven of the top 10 airports for passenger traffic are in China with three in the United States. In most cases, domestic air travel is beginning a modest rebound while international air travel remains depressed because of on-going travel restrictions. For example, Hongqiao International Airport in China has moved from 46th position in 2019 to the 9th in 2020, illustrating the uneven nature of the impact of, and recovery from, the pandemic across the world.

PASSENGERS*
20202019AIRPORT20202019Percent change
111GUANGZHOU, CN (CAN)43 767 55873 394 810-40.4
21ATLANTA GA, US (ATL)42 918 685110 531 300-61.2
324CHENGDU, CN (CTU)40 741 50955 858 552-27.1
410DALLAS/FORT WORTH TX, US (DFW)39 364 99075 066 956-47.6
526SHENZHEN, CN (SZX)37 916 05452 931 925-28.4
62BEIJING, CN (PEK)34 513 827100 013 642-65.5
716DENVER CO, US (DEN)33 741 12969 015 703-51.1
837KUNMING, CN (KMG)32 990 80548 076 238-31.4
946SHANGHAI, CN (SHA)31 165 64145 637 882-31.7
1040XI’AN, CN (XIY)31 073 92447 220 745-34.2
  • Total passengers enplaned and deplaned, passengers in transit counted once
INTL PASSENGERS*
20202019AIRPORT20202019Percent change
11DUBAI, AE (DXB)25 831 36386 328 896-70.1
23AMSTERDAM, NL (AMS)20 880 99071 679 691-70.9
32LONDON, GB (LHR)20 650 47376 043 973-72.8
46PARIS, FR (CDG)19 057 85669 841 276-72.7
58FRANKFURT, DE (FRA)16 837 10463 067 739-73.3
614ISTANBUL, TR (IST)15 945 34039 580 735-59.7
715DOHA, QA (DOH)12 522 28838 786 566-67.7
85INCHEON, KR (ICN)11 955 75670 578 050-83.1
97SINGAPORE, SG (SIN)11 635 00067 601 000-82.8
1011MADRID, ES (MAD)11 052 15744 919 124-75.4
  • International passengers enplaned and deplaned
CARGO (METRIC TONNES)*
20202019AIRPORT20202019Percent change
12MEMPHIS TN, US (MEM)4 613 4314 322 7406.7
21HONG KONG SAR, HK (HKG)4 468 0894 809 485-7.1
33SHANGHAI, CN (PVG)3 686 6273 634 2301.4
46ANCHORAGE AK, US (ANC)3 157 6822 745 34815.0
54LOUISVILLE KY, US (SDF)2 917 2432 790 1094.6
65INCHEON, KR (ICN)2 822 3702 764 3692.1
79CHINESE TAIPEI (TPE)2 342 7142 182 3427.4
813LOS ANGELES CA, US (LAX)2 229 4762 092 0036.6
98DOHA, QA (DOH)2 175 2922 215 804-1.8
1012MIAMI FL, US (MIA)2 137 6992 092 4722.2
  • Cargo: loaded and unloaded freight and mail in metric tonnes
INTL FREIGHT (METRIC TONNES)*
20202019AIRPORT20202019Percent change
11HONG KONG SAR, HK (HKG)4 420 3124 703 589-6.0
22SHANGHAI, CN (PVG)2 952 6022 825 0094.5
33INCHEON, KR (ICN)2 759 4672 664 0053.6
46CHINESE TAIPEI (TPE)2 323 4122 165 2167.3
510ANCHORAGE AK, US (ANC)2 221 8041 942 55414.4
65DOHA, QA (DOH)2 145 0762 173 371-1.3
77TOKYO, JP (NRT)1 958 5052 039 905-4.0
84DUBAI, AE (DXB)1 932 0222 514 918-23.2
99FRANKFURT, DE (FRA)1 818 7481 961 460-7.3
1012MIAMI FL, US (MIA)1 730 8591 706 0641.5
  • International freight loaded and unloaded in metric tonnes
AIRCRAFT MOVEMENTS*
20202019AIRPORT20202019Percent change
12ATLANTA GA, US (ATL)  548 016  904 301-39.4
21CHICAGO IL, US (ORD)  538 211  919 704-41.5
33DALLAS/FORT WORTH TX, US (DFW)  514 702  720 007-28.5
45DENVER CO, US (DEN)  436 971  631 955-30.9
520PHOENIX AZ, US (DVT)  402 444  456 790-11.9
67CHARLOTTE NC, US (CLT)  397 983  578 263-31.2
74LOS ANGELES CA, US (LAX)  379 364  691 257-45.1
812GUANGZHOU, CN (CAN)  373 421  491 249-24.0
911SHANGHAI, CN (PVG)  325 678  511 846-36.4
108LAS VEGAS NV, US (LAS)  323 422  552 962-41.5
    

 

“The impact of the COVID-19 on global passenger traffic pandemic brought aviation to a virtual standstill in 2020 and we continue to face an existential threat,” ACI World Director General Luis Felipe de Oliveira said.

“The data published today reveals the challenge airports continue to face and it remains imperative that the industry is supported through direct support and sensible policy decisions from governments to ensure that aviation can endure, rebuild connectivity, and fuel a global economic recovery.

“The findings show that the impact remains uneven with different regions experiencing different challenges and requiring different policy decisions and support from governments to lay the foundation for recovery.

Passenger Traffic in Europe in 2021

Passenger traffic in Q1 slumped by -81.7% across the European airport network, compared to the same period pre-pandemic (Q1 2019). This marked a further decrease from the previous quarter (Q4 2020 at -79.2%), resulting in the loss of 395.5 million passengers.

A closer look at the data reveals that Europe has become a two-speed aviation market – with airports in the EU/EEA/Switzerland still sinking into the crisis caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. Other European airports led by those in Russia and Turkey are faring much better.

The top 5 European airports in Q1 all came from Russia and Turkey – with Istanbul Airport (-64%) the busiest European airport, followed by Moscow-Domodedovo (-18%), Moscow Sheremetyevo (-60%), Istanbul-Sabiha Gokcen (-48%) and Moscow-Vnukovo (-26%). While Paris-CDG -82%), Madrid (-81%), Frankfurt (-83%) and Amsterdam-Schiphol (-87%) still made it in the top 10 league, London-Heathrow (-91%) did not.

Remarkably, Sochi airport (+47%) welcomed more passengers than London-Heathrow as Russians flocked to the Black sea resort city – thus becoming the one and only airport in Europe to post an increase in passenger traffic in Q1.

The passenger traffic at airports in Turkey, Russia and other markets1 improved markedly from -59% in January to -49% in March, with Q1 closing at -54.8%. This is due in large part to airports in Russia and to a lesser extent Turkey and Ukraine, reflecting larger domestic markets combined with less severe lockdowns and travel restrictions.

First-look April data shows no improvement

Preliminary data for April shows no significant improvement, despite the timing of the Easter holidays at the beginning of the month. In the first 10 days of April, passenger traffic at Europe’s airports was down by -80%, with airports in the EU/EEA/Switzerland and the UK at -87% and others at -48.7%.

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