IATA notes stabilisation in African airlines' profits
HOPEFUL: An Airbus A350-941 aircraft of Ethiopian Airlines is pulled by a pushback tractor of air service provider DNATA at Zurich Airport near Ruemlang, Switzerland. IATA expects a strong 2026 for African airlines.

IATA notes stabilisation in African airlines' profits

The International Air Transport Association (IATA) released its latest financial outlook for the global airline industry showing a stabilisation of profitability even as supply chain issues persist.



Highlights included airlines expected to achieve a combined total net profit of $41 billion in 2026 (up from $39.5 billion in 2025).



While this would set a new record, the net profit margin is expected to be unchanged from 2025 at 3.9%. Net profit per passenger transported is expected to be $7.9 (below the 2023 high of $8.50, and unchanged from 2025).



Operating profit in 2026 is expected to be $72.8 billion (up from $67 billion in 2025) for a net operating margin of 6.9% (improved on the 6.6% expected for 2025). Return on invested capital (ROIC) is expected to be 6.8% (unchanged from 2025).



Despite deleveraging and improved operating profitability, ROIC is expected to remain below the weighted average cost of capital (WACC) estimated to be 8.2% in 2026. Total industry revenues are expected to reach $1.053 trillion in 2026 (up 4.5% on the $1 trillion expected revenues in 2025).



Load factors are forecast to continue to set record highs with airlines expected to fill 83.8% of all seats over the year 2026. Passenger numbers are expected to reach 5.2 billion in 2026 (up 4.4% on 2025). Cargo volumes are expected to reach 71.6 million tonnes in 2026 (up 2.4% on 2025).



“Airlines are expected to generate a 3.9% net margin and a $41 billion profit in 2026. That’s extremely welcome news considering the headwinds that the industry faces—rising costs from bottlenecks in the aerospace supply chain, geopolitical conflict, sluggish global trade, and growing regulatory burdens among them. Airlines have successfully built shock-absorbing resilience into their businesses that is delivering stable profitability,” said Willie Walsh, IATA’s Director General.

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