The one millionth flight in 2024 in the UK took place 6 days later than the year before the pandemic

The one millionth flight in 2024 in the UK took place 6 days later than the year before the pandemic
NATS Air Traffic Control Center at Swannick – Image: CAA-UK


NATS, the air traffic control service for flights in the UK and Shanwick Oceanic Control region, reports that the strong return to post-pandemic aviation continues, with the UK's one millionth flight in 2024 occurring six days later than this year. Before the epidemic.

The milestone was reached on June 8, according to figures from NATS, the UK's leading air transport service provider. The earliest date to reach this milestone was the last day of May 2019.

As a result, in the first half of the year, NATS managed 1,176,622 flights, an increase of 5.1% compared to the same period last year. In June, it handled a total of 231,519 flights, which is a 3.5% increase compared to June 2023.

The biggest year-over-year growth was in non-Atlantic arrivals and departures, up 4%. As the peak of summer approaches, routes between the UK and Spain, France and Italy are the busiest routes. UK domestic routes have shown the least growth.

According to Eurocontrol data, NATS handled 24% of European traffic in June, with only 1.4% of total European delays attributable to NATS. The average delay for a late flight is 9.7 minutes.

Kathryn Leahy, Director of Operations at NATS, said:

“We had our busiest day on June 14, when we handled more than 8,300 flights, which was busier than any day last year, so as we approach the peak of summer, we already know how much traffic is increasing.

In July we have the Farnborough Airshow, the Royal International Air Tattoo and the school holidays which are already going well for some. It all adds up to a very busy month, and now that England are in the Euro finals, I think we'll see a very busy road to Berlin this weekend!

NATS information


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