Air travel demand will more than double by 2050
- 3/23/2026
- 8 H
The International Air Transport
Association (IATA) released its Long‑Term Demand Projections (LTDP) for air
travel, showing that global air passenger demand is expected to more than
double by 2050.
Under the mid‑range scenario, demand is forecast to
reach 20.8 trillion revenue passenger kilometers (RPKs), based on a compound
annual growth rate (CAGR) of 3.1% (2024-2050) from the 9 trillion RPKs seen in
2024.
A higher growth scenario would see a 3.3% CAGR with
passenger demand reaching 21.9 trillion RPKs in 2050. A lower growth scenario
would see 2.9% CAGR with passenger demand reaching 19.5 trillion RPKs by 2050.
The different scenarios are driven by alternative
modeling of long-term economic growth, populations, aviation fuel price trends,
the global energy transition, and air transport supply-side capacity
development.
“The outlook for air travel is positive. People want
to travel and, under all our modeled scenarios, the demand to fly is expected
to more than double by mid-century. That is good news for global economic and
social development because aviation growth will catalyze opportunities,
including jobs, around the world. Our Long-Term Demand report gives
governments, industry, and energy suppliers a robust basis for long‑term
planning. It underscores the need for policy frameworks to support key success
enablers such as efficient infrastructure development, market access
facilitation, regulatory harmonization, and an effective clean energy transition,”
said Willie Walsh, IATA’s Director General.
Regional Outlook: Growth Concentrated in
Emerging Markets
The pace of growth will be uneven across regions,
reflecting differences in demographics, market maturity, economic development,
and connectivity potential. Under the mid‑range scenario, Asia‑Pacific and
Africa are expected to be the fastest‑growing regions over 2024-2050, with
CAGRs of 3.8% and 3.6% respectively. Europe and North America are projected to
grow more slowly, at 2.5% and 2.8%.
The LTDP identifies the fastest‑growing markets as
intra‑Africa (4.9%), Africa–Asia‑Pacific (4.5%), Asia‑Pacific–Middle East
(3.9%), intra‑Asia‑Pacific (3.9%), and Africa–North America (3.8%),
highlighting the importance of investment in aviation infrastructure and
regulatory frameworks in developing regions. By contrast, several
Europe‑centered markets are among the slowest growing.
Long Term Global Trends
Two long-term trends identified in the report are
worth noting:
· The
LTDP confirms that the COVID‑19 pandemic caused a permanent structural shift in
global aviation demand. Unlike previous crises, the unprecedented collapse in
RPK has created a persistent gap that is not expected to converge back to the
pre-pandemic GDP-aligned trend by 2050, even under the high‑growth scenario.
· While
long‑term demand remains robust, the growth rate is moderating gradually.
Historical analysis shows that average annual growth slowed from 6.1% CAGR
between 1972 and 1998, to 4.5% CAGR between 1998 and 2024. The central scenario
for 2024-2050 projects a further slowing to 3.1% CAGR. This gradual moderation
reflects market maturity rather than weakening demand, as absolute passenger
numbers continue to rise significantly.







