Strong passenger demand continues in July

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The International Air Transport Association (IATA) announced that the post-COVID recovery momentum continued in July for passenger markets.

Total trafficin July 2023 (measured in revenue passenger kilometers or RPKs) rose 26.2% compared to July 2022. Globally, traffic is now at 95.6% of pre-COVID levels.
Domestic trafficfor July rose 21.5% versus July 2022 and was 8.3% above the July 2019 results. July RPKs are the highest ever recorded, strongly supported by surging demand in the China domestic market.
International trafficclimbed 29.6% compared to the same month a year ago with all markets showing robust growth. International RPKs reached 88.7% of July 2019 levels. The passenger load factor (PLF) for the industry reached 85.7% which is the highest monthly international PLF ever recorded.

“Planes were full during July as people continue to travel in ever greater numbers. Importantly, forward ticket sales indicate that traveler confidence remains high. And there is every reason to be optimistic about the continuing recovery,” said Willie Walsh, IATA’s Director General.

Air passenger market in detail – July 2023
 
 
 

 
World
 
July 2023 (% year-on-year)

 
share1
 
RPK
ASK
PLF (%-pt)2
PLF (level)3

TOTAL MARKET
100.0%
 
26.2%
23.7%
1.7%
85.2%

   Africa
2.1%
 
25.0%
26.3%
-0.8%
74.6%

   Asia Pacific
22.1%
 
67.1%
53.4%
6.7%
81.6%

   Europe
30.8%
 
11.7%
11.5%
0.2%
87.7%

   Latin America
6.4%
 
15.5%
11.4%
3.1%
86.7%

   Middle East
9.8%
 
21.9%
21.0%
0.6%
82.1%

   North America
28.8%
 
13.2%
11.9%
1.0%
89.7%

1% of industry RPKs in 2022
 
2Change in load factor
 
3Load factor level

International Passenger Markets 

Asia-Pacific airlines saw a 105.8% increase in July 2023 traffic compared to July 2022, continuing to lead the regions. Capacity climbed 96.2% and the load factor increased by 3.9 percentage points to 84.5%. 

European carriers’ July traffic rose 13.8% versus July 2022. Capacity increased 13.6%, and load factor edged up 0.1 percentage points to 87.0%. 

Middle Eastern airlines posted a 22.6% increase in July traffic compared to a year ago. Capacity rose 22.1% and load factor climbed 0.3 percentage points to 82.6%. 

North American carriers had a 17.7% traffic rise in July 2023 versus the 2022 period. Capacity increased 17.2%, and load factor improved 0.3 percentage points to 90.3%, which was the highest among the regions for a second consecutive month. 

Latin American airlines’ traffic rose 25.3% compared to the same month in 2022. July capacity climbed 21.2% and load factor rose 2.9 percentage points to 89.1%. 

African airlines saw a 25.6% traffic increase in July 2023 versus a year ago, the second highest percentage gain among the regions. July capacity was up 27.4% and load factor fell 1.0 percentage point to 73.9%, the lowest among the regions. For a second month in a row, Africa was the only region to see capacity growth outrun traffic demand.

Air passenger market in detail – July 2023
 
 
 
 

 
World
 
July 2023 (% year-on-year)
 

 
share1
 
RPK
ASK
PLF (%-pt)2
PLF (level)3
 

   Domestic
41.9%
 
21.5%
16.7%
3.3%
84.5%
 

   Dom. Australia4
1.0%
 
3.5%
8.5%
-4.1%
83.2%
 

   Domestic Brazil4
1.5%
 
3.6%
-0.1%
3.0%
83.4%
 

   Dom. China P.R.4
6.4%
 
71.9%
49.1%
10.5%
79.2%
 

   Domestic India4
2.0%
 
21.1%
13.3%
5.3%
83.3%
 

   Domestic Japan4
1.2%
 
13.4%
1.3%
7.8%
72.7%
 

   Domestic US4
19.2%
 
11.1%
9.5%
1.3%
89.2%
 

1% of industry RPKs in 2022
 
2Change in load factor
 
3Load factor level
 

4 Note: the six domestic passenger markets for which broken-down data are available account for approximately 31.3% of global total RPKs and 74.6% of total domestic RPKs
 

 

China’s domestic traffic jumped 71.9% in July compared to a year ago and is now 22.5% above July 2019 levels, which was the strongest gain against pre-pandemic levels among the domestic markets.

 US airlines’ domestic demand climbed 11.1% in July and was 3.0% above the July 2019 level.

The Bottom Line

“The Northern Hemisphere summer is living up to expectations for very strong traffic demand. While the industry was largely prepared to accommodate a return to pre-pandemic levels of operations, unfortunately, the same cannot be said for our infrastructure providers. Performance of some of the key air navigations services providers, for example, has been deeply disappointing for many reasons from insufficient staffing to the failure fiasco of NATS in the UK. These must be promptly corrected. Even more worrying, however, are political decisions by some governments—among them Mexico and the Netherlands—to impose capacity cuts at their major hubs that will most certainly destroy jobs and damage local and national economies. The numbers continue to tell us that people want and need air connectivity. That’s why governments should be working with us so that people can travel safely, sustainably and efficiently,” said Walsh.

 

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