EX-YU airport race 2018


Airports across the former Yugoslavia handled a record 27 million passengers in 2018. For the first time, ten airports managed to welcome over one million travellers with Sarajevo joining the list. Split added the most new passengers for a second year running, while Skopje saw the biggest percentage growth among capital city airports, boosting its numbers by over 15% on the year before. For the first time, three airports handled over three million travellers in a single year and six over two million. Compared to 2017, Banja Luka overtook Brač, Mostar and Portorož, while Brač itself raced ahead of both Mostar and Portorož.

Airport Passengers 2018 Passengers 2017 Change (%) Difference
Belgrade 5.641.105 5.343.420  6.6 + 297.685
Zagreb 3.336.310 3.092.047  7.9 + 244.263
Split 3.124.067 2.818.176  10.9 + 305.891
Dubrovnik 2.539.412 2.323.065  9.3 + 216.347
Pristina 2.165.749 1.889.659  14.6 + 276.090
Skopje 2.158.258 1.868.272  15.5 + 289.986
Ljubljana 1.812.411 1.683.045  7.7 + 129.366
Tivat 1.245.999 1.129.720 10.3 + 116.279
Podgorica 1.208.525 1.055.142 14.5 + 153.383
Sarajevo 1.046.635 957.698  9.3 + 88.937

Belgrade Nikola Tesla Airport maintained its position as the busiest in the former Yugoslavia, welcoming over 5.6 million passengers. On the other hand, Croatia cemented its lead as the busiest overall market with over 10.5 million travellers handled at nine commercial airports. Zagreb registered over three million passengers for the second time, while Split added over 300.000 passengers when compared to the year before. In another first, Skopje Airport surpassed the two million mark. Furthermore, it inched closer to its traditionally busier counterpart in Pristina, with only 7.491 travellers setting the two apart, compared to 21.387 in 2017. Macedonia's busiest airport is expected to continue on its growth trajectory in 2019 with four new routes to be launched by its busiest carrier, Wizz Air, and a fifth aircraft to be based in the city.

Airport Passengers 2018 Passengers 2017 Change (%) Difference
Pula 718.187 595.812  20.5 + 122.375
Zadar 603.819 589.841  2.4 + 13.978
Tuzla 584.589 535.834  9.1 + 48.755
Niš 351.582 331.582  6.0 + 20.000
Ohrid 184.283 159.072  15.8 + 25.211
Rijeka 183.606 142.111  29.2 + 41.495
Osijek 67.235 43.373  55.0 + 23.862
Banja Luka 36.180 20.867  73.4 + 15.313
Brač 30.170 21.596  74.8 + 8.574
Mostar 28.463 43.118  34.0 - 14.655
Portorož 24.840 25.450  2.4 - 610
Mali Lošinj 6.939 6.042  14.8 + 897

Podgorica Airport continued to post strong figures, fuelled by the introduction of new routes from a mix of legacy and low cost airlines, while national carrier Montenegro Airlines also posted record numbers. In total, Podgorica Airport saw 594.292 arrivals and 614.233 departures. For the first time in its 49-year history, Sarajevo Airport managed to surpass the one million passenger mark in a single year. The figure represents overall growth of 9.3% on 2017, or an additional 88.937 travellers. Meanwhile, Banja Luka's strong growth was fuelled by Europe's largest airline, Ryanair, which introduced flights to the city during the fourth quarter. Despite having no commercial flights, Portorož Airport welcomed almost 25.000 primarily leisure travellers visiting the city and its surroundings.

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