Saudi Arabia’s airports handled a total of 140.9 million passengers in 2025, marking a 9.6 percent increase compared with 2024, according to the latest air transport statistics bulletin issued by the General Authority for Statistics (GASTAT).
The report showed that international flights accounted for 75.8 million arriving and departing passengers, reflecting a 9.4 percent year-on-year rise. Meanwhile, domestic flights served 65.1 million passengers, up 9.8 percent from the previous year.
Among the Kingdom’s airports, King Abdulaziz International Airport in Jeddah recorded the highest passenger volume at 53.5 million, followed by King Khalid International Airport in Riyadh with 40.8 million, and King Fahd International Airport in Dammam with 13.7 million.
Average daily passenger movement reached 178,600 on domestic flights and 207,700 on international routes, underscoring continued expansion in air travel demand.
The total number of arriving and departing flights across Saudi airports rose to 979,800 in 2025, an 8.3 percent increase compared with 2024. Of these, 506,300 were domestic flights, up 6.8 percent, while 473,500 were international flights, marking a stronger 9.9 percent annual growth.
At the airport level, King Abdulaziz International Airport also led in flight operations with 314,400 flights, followed by King Khalid International Airport with 296,800, and King Fahd International Airport with 108,500.
The report added that the average daily number of domestic flights reached 1,387, slightly higher than the 1,297 international flights operated per day.
Saudi Arabia also expanded its international aviation links in 2025. The number of countries connected to the Kingdom through international airports increased to 66, representing a 1.5 percent rise, while destinations served climbed to 176, up 2.3 percent from 2024.
In airline market share, Saudia Airlines ranked first among carriers operating in Saudi airspace with 25.5 percent, followed by flynas at 13.3 percent and Flyadeal at 8.6 percent.
Globally, Saudi Arabia ranked 18th in the 2025 air connectivity index, slipping one position from 17th place in 2024.
GASTAT said the bulletin was prepared using administrative data from public and private sector entities, with figures undergoing detailed statistical review and verification procedures to maintain accuracy, reliability and quality before publication.
Source: Saudi Gazette