Thailand aims for 1.2m annual flights in 2025

The Civil Aviation Authority of Thailand (CAAT) has announced a plan - part of the government's Ignite Thailand program - to become the region’s aviation hub, boosting air traveller capacity to 270 million people a year by 2037 and to be a top five air logistics country in the Asia-Pacific.


It wants to make the country a hub for tourism, medical treatment, food, aviation, logistics, electric vehicles, digital economy and finance by 2030.

Under the three-stage plan, the CAAT will increase Thailand’s airport capacity to 1.2 million flights and 180 million passengers a year by 2025 and a connecting time (MCT) for international flight connections at a maximum 75 minutes.

The second stage will take airport capacity to 1.4 million flights and 210 million passengers a year by 2028 and the MCT to 60 minutes.
In the third stage – from 2029 to 2037 – the CAAT seeks 2.1 million flights and 270 million passengers, and to reduce the MCT to less than 45 minutes.

Thailand aims for 1.2m annual flights in 2025

The Civil Aviation Authority of Thailand (CAAT) has announced a plan - part of the government's Ignite Thailand program - to become the region’s aviation hub, boosting air traveller capacity to 270 million people a year by 2037 and to be a top five air logistics country in the Asia-Pacific.


It wants to make the country a hub for tourism, medical treatment, food, aviation, logistics, electric vehicles, digital economy and finance by 2030.

Under the three-stage plan, the CAAT will increase Thailand’s airport capacity to 1.2 million flights and 180 million passengers a year by 2025 and a connecting time (MCT) for international flight connections at a maximum 75 minutes.

The second stage will take airport capacity to 1.4 million flights and 210 million passengers a year by 2028 and the MCT to 60 minutes.
In the third stage – from 2029 to 2037 – the CAAT seeks 2.1 million flights and 270 million passengers, and to reduce the MCT to less than 45 minutes.