The International Air Transport Association (IATA) has announced that the strong post-pandemic passenger traffic trend continued in September.
According to IATA, total traffic in September 2023 (measured in revenue passenger kilometers or RPKs)
rose 30.1% compared to September 2022. Globally, traffic is now at 97.3% of pre-COVID levels.
Domestic traffic hit a new high for the month of September, as traffic rose 28.3% versus September 2022 and exceeded the September 2019 level by 5.0%.
International traffic climbed 31.2% compared to the same month a year ago. All markets saw double-digit percentage gains year on year. International RPKs also reached
93.1% of September 2019 levels.
In his remarks, IATA’s Director General, Willie Walsh said:“The third quarter of 2023 ended on a high note, with record domestic passenger demand for the month of September and continued strong international traffic.”
Air passenger market in detail – September 2023:
(% year-on-year) World share1 RPK ASK PLF (%-pt)2 PLF (level)3
Total Market 100.0% 30.1% 28.8% 0.8% 82.6%
Africa 2.1% 24.6% 27.2% -1.5% 73.1%
Asia Pacific 22.1% 87.9% 75.5% 5.3% 80.0%
Europe 30.8% 13.8% 12.8% 0.8% 86.0%
Latin America 6.4% 15.7% 14.3% 1.1% 83.9%
Middle East 9.8% 26.1% 22.8% 2.2% 81.6%
North America 28.8% 9.7% 12.5% -2.1% 83.0%
1% of industry RPKs in 2022 2Change in load factor 3Load factor level
At the International Passenger Markets,Asia-Pacific airlines had a 92.6% increase in September 2023 traffic compared to September 2022, continuing to lead the regions in terms of annual improvement. Capacity climbed 82.1% and the load factor increased by 4.5 percentage points to 82.5%.
European carriers’ September traffic climbed 15.7% versus September 2022. Capacity increased 14.9%, and load factor edged up 0.6 percentage points to 85.5%.
Middle Eastern airlines saw a 26.6% increase in September traffic compared to a year ago. Capacity rose 23.7% and load factor climbed 1.9 percentage points to 81.8%.
North American carriers had an 18.9% traffic rise in September 2023 versus the 2022 period. Capacity increased 18.0%, and load factor improved 0.6 percentage points to 85.6%.
Latin American airlines’ traffic rose 26.8% compared to the same month in 2022. September capacity climbed 24.7% and load factor rose 1.4 percentage points to 85.8%.
African airlines posted a 28.1% traffic increase in September 2023 versus a year ago. Capacity was up 29.9% and load factor slipped 1.0 percentage points to 72.6%.
Domestic Air passenger market in detail – September 2023:
(% year-on-year) World share1 RPK ASK PLF (%-pt)2 PLF (level)3
Domestic 41.9% 28.3% 28.2% 0.1% 80.7%
Dom. Australia4 1.0% 7.2% 11.7% -3.6% 84.7%
Dom. Brazil4 1.5% 5.0% 3.9% 0.8% 81.4%
Dom. China P.R.4 6.4% 168.7% 135.2% 9.6% 76.7%
Dom. India4 2.0% 17.2% 13.0% 3.1% 84.7%
Dom. Japan4 1.2% 19.9% 4.3% 9.7% 74.9%
Dom. US4 19.2% 5.5% 10.4% -3.8% 81.3%
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 market continued to perform, with demand up 168.7% year over year. This growth however is measured from a low base in September 2022, when domestic travel restrictions were reintroduced in some Chinese provinces.
Japan’s domestic traffic rebounded strongly from the impact of typhoons in August, as RPKs rose 19.9% compared to September 2022.
Air passenger market in detail in September 2023:
(% ch vs the same month in 2019) World share1 RPK ASK PLF (%-pt)2 PLF (level)3
Total Market 100% -2.7% -3.5% 0.7% 82.6%
International 58.1% -6.9% -9.2% 2.1% 83.8%
Domestic 41.9% 5.0% 7.1% -1.6% 80.7%
1% of industry RPKs in 2022 2Change in load factor 3Load factor level
The Bottom Line
“With the end of 2023 fast approaching, we can look back on a year of strong recovery in demand as passengers took full advantage of their freedom to travel. There is every reason to believe that this momentum can be maintained in the New Year, despite economic and political uncertainties in parts of the world. But we need the whole value chain to be ready.
“Supply chain issues in the aircraft manufacturing sector are unacceptable. They have held back the recovery and solutions must be found. The same holds true for infrastructure providers, particularly air navigation service providers. Equipment failures, staffing shortages and labor unrest made it impossible to deliver the flying experience our customers expect. A successful 2024 needs the whole value chain to be fully prepared to handle the demand that is coming,” said Walsh.