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IATA Says African Airlines Record 2.8% Passenger Demand Growth In July 2025

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The International Air Transport Association (IATA)  has disclosed in its latest data that African airlines recorded 2.8% increase in passenger demand in July 2025, with their load factor rising to 74.9%, up 0.4 percentage points compared to July 2024.

The data for July 2025 global passenger demand highlighted this growth, just as it also provided insights into regional air traffic trends.

According to the data, the increase was driven by a notable surge in traffic on routes between Africa and Asia, reflecting growing international travel demand from the continent.

The data also revealed that capacity on African carriers also grew 2.3% year-on-year, indicating airlines expanded seat availability to meet rising passenger numbers.

“African airlines saw a 2.8% year-on-year increase in demand. Capacity was up 2.3% year-on-year. The load factor was 74.9% (up 0.4 ppt compared to July 2024). Traffic on routes between Africa and Asia had a notable surge,” the IATA report read in part.

IATA’s Director General, Willie Walsh, said the July results highlighted strong momentum during the northern summer peak travel season.

“That trend appears across all regions and is particularly evident for international travel,” Walsh stated, adding that airlines are well-positioned to carry the momentum into the coming months.

IATA’s data showed that while most global regions experienced slight declines in load factor, African airlines bucked the trend, demonstrating improved efficiency in seat utilization.

Given more insights, the data noted that Beyond Africa, other regions also showed solid growth in July 2025. Latin America led globally with a 9.3% year-on-year demand increase, but its load factor slipped to 85.8% as capacity growth of 11.3% outpaced traffic.

The data disclosed that Asia-Pacific airlines posted an 8.7% increase in demand, reflecting strong recovery in long-haul routes, especially on the trans-Pacific and Europe–Asia corridors. Capacity in the region rose 9.0%, keeping the load factor nearly steady at 83.8%.

On a global scale, passenger demand rose 4.0% compared to July 2024, while capacity increased by 4.4%. This left the industry-wide average load factor at 85.5%. International markets continued to outperform domestic ones, with cross-border travel driving much of the growth.

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