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The definition of world's busiest airport has been specified by the Airports Council International in Montreal, Canada. [1] The ACI defines and measures the following three types of airport traffic: Passenger traffic: total passengers embarked and disembarked, passengers in transit counted once [ 2 ]
This is a list of the 100 busiest airports in Europe, ranked by total passengers per year, including both terminal and transit passengers.Data is for 2022 with a partial population of 2023 as statistics are released and is sourced individually for each airport and from a variety of sources, but normally the national aviation authority statistics, or those of the airport operator.
Alternatively, London has the world's busiest city airport system by passenger count. As of 2023, the United States has the most airports in the top 50 list, with 16, including five of the top 10. Four other countries have at least two airports in the top 50: China has 10, while India , Spain , and the United Kingdom each have two. [ 4 ]
Domestic airline routes were significantly busier than international ones. The busiest route overall is in South Korea, a roughly 280-mile journey between the island of Jeju and Seoul's Gimpo ...
If you think planes have got fuller and the skies busier over the past year, you’d be right. ... Jeju-Seoul has kept the crown of the world’s busiest domestic route, with 14.2 million seats ...
The airport was the 38th busiest in the country in terms of boardings last year, according to the USDOT data — an RDU record of nearly 7.3 million passengers.
The world's busiest city airport systems by passenger traffic are measured by total number of passengers from all airports within a city or metropolitan area combined. London, with six commercial airports serving its metropolitan area, is the busiest city airport system in the world, [1] although Hartsfield–Jackson Atlanta International Airport is the world's busiest individual airport.
The term "hub" is used by the FAA to identify busy commercial service airports. Large hubs are the airports that each account for at least one percent of total U.S. passenger enplanements. Medium hubs are defined as airports that each account for between 0.25 percent and 1 percent of the total passenger enplanements.