Dubai further cemented its position as the UAE’s primary aviation hub in 2024, handling the majority of passenger traffic and aircraft movements across the country, according to fresh data released by the Federal Competitiveness and Statistics Centre. Dubai International and Al Maktoum International airports collectively accounted for an impressive 65 to 68 percent of all passenger and civil aircraft activity nationwide.
Passenger numbers in Dubai surged to 101 million last year, a 6.6 percent increase from 94.75 million in 2023, underscoring the city’s vital role as a leading global transit gateway. Across the entire UAE, total passenger traffic climbed 11.5 percent year-on-year to 148 million an addition of 15.3 million travelers compared to the previous year.
Passenger flows showed a nearly balanced split across arrivals (41.67 million, 28 percent) and departures (41.76 million, 28.5 percent), while transit passengers made up the largest portion at 44.5 percent, or 64.4 million. Within Dubai’s total, arrivals accounted for 28.5 million, departures for 28.8 million, and transit passengers reached 43.66 million.
Abu Dhabi International Airport ranked second nationally with 30.9 million passengers—21 percent of the UAE total marking a strong 31 percent jump from 2023. The capital’s figures included 7.94 million arrivals, 7.7 million departures, and 15.26 million transit passengers.
Sharjah International Airport came third, handling 15.3 million passengers (10.3 percent share), up 11 percent year-on-year. Notably, Ras Al Khaimah experienced the steepest growth with an 88 percent increase, serving 640,000 passengers. Fujairah also doubled its traffic, managing 61,120 passengers compared to just under 30,000 the previous year. Meanwhile, smaller local airports processed only 1,380 passengers, down 20 percent.
Aircraft movements across the UAE mirrored this growth, rising sharply to 771,800 civil aircraft operations in 2024—an 11.2 percent increase over 694,050 movements in 2023. Dubai accounted for nearly 64 percent of these operations, with 488,520 flights divided almost evenly between 244,200 arrivals and 244,300 departures, representing an 8.5 percent increase.
Abu Dhabi followed with 168,100 aircraft movements (22 percent of the total), up 21 percent year-on-year. Sharjah logged 108,110 movements, marking a 9.3 percent rise, while Ras Al Khaimah and Fujairah also saw double-digit growth in flight operations, with 5,620 (up 21 percent) and 1,450 (up 18 percent) movements respectively.
These robust figures highlight Dubai’s continuing dominance in the UAE aviation sector and reflect the nation’s broader success in becoming a major global air travel and transit hub, attracting record passenger volumes and expanding its operational capacity.