825,000 passengers chose Brussels Airport in February, ​ half the number of passengers in February 2019

Freight volumes increased by 13% compared with 2019

This last February, Brussels Airport welcomed around 825,000 passengers, up by 400% compared to February 2021, but still down by 50% compared to the same period before the crisis (February 2019). A better month than January (-52%), despite being shorter by 3 days. In terms of freight, the volumes transported increased by 13% compared with February 2019, thanks to the significant growth in air cargo (+26%).

Passenger numbers up by 400% compared with 2021

In February, Brussels Airport welcomed 824,812 passengers, an increase of 398% compared with February 2021 (ban on non-essential travel) and a decrease of 50% compared with the same period before the crisis (January 2019). Despite the fact that February only has 28 days, it was a better month than the previous one, during which Brussels Airport counted a little over 800,000 passengers. February also welcomed more departing than arriving passengers due to the start of the Belgian carnival holidays.

The proportion of departing transfer passengers was 14%, which is 6% lower than in 2019, due to the stronger growth of local departing passengers and a reduction in transfers between European destinations.

The top 10 destination countries in February were respectively Spain, Italy, Germany, Portugal, Switzerland, Turkey, France, the United Arab Emirates, the United States and Morocco. The ten most popular destinations were Madrid, Barcelona, Lisbon, Geneva, Istanbul, Rome, Milan, Dubai, Malaga and Alicante. Istanbul, Dubai, Malaga and Alicante recorded comparable passenger numbers in 2019.

Freight: air freight volumes up by 26% compared with 2019

In February, the freight volume at Brussels Airport grew by 13% compared with February 2019, before the crisis. This result can be explained by the strong increase in air cargo volumes (+26%). Thus, the full cargo (+67%) and express services (+39%) segments remain the growth drivers, while passenger volumes remain understandably below 2019 volumes (-24%).

Compared with 2021, the full cargo segment recorded a slight decrease in volumes (-5%) due to temporary capacity constraints faced by some carriers. The downturn in freight caused by the Chinese New Year influenced freight volumes at the beginning of the month, in line with historical trends. Last year was an exception, however, as production was exceptionally strong in Asia due to the significant delay caused by transport restrictions. Express service volumes finished the month down (-15%) due to a reduction in DHL Express flights at Brussels Airport since the beginning of the year.

Asia remains the largest export region, but is only the third largest in terms of imports due to the effect of the Chinese New Year. As a result, Africa has become the largest import region in February, followed by North America.

Flights

The total number of flight movements in February 2022 increased by 114% compared with 2021 and amounted to 9,930 (compared to 15,517 in 2019). The number of passenger flights increased by 232% compared with 2021 but remains at 48% of the number of passenger flights in February 2019, before the crisis. The occupancy rate per flight in February was 119 passengers, against 123 passengers in 2019.

This last February, the number of cargo flights fell by 8% compared with 2021. Cargo flights on passenger aircraft accounted for 38% of full cargo flights, which is consistent with last month.

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About Brussels Airport

Brussels Airport is one of the most important airports in Europe. In 2024, Brussels Airport welcomed 23.6 million passengers and transported 733,000 tonnes of cargo through the airport. Brussels Airport caters for the specific needs of business travellers and holidaymakers alike, on both intra-European and long haul flights. In 2025, the airport offers direct connections between Belgium and 210 destinations worldwide, with flights operated by 80 airlines.   

The airport also offers a leading cargo platform, specialised in the transport of pharmaceutical products, perishable goods, e-commerce and live animals. Brussels Airport is the most important pharmaceutical hub in Europe with the largest area of temperature-controlled warehouses.  

With its SHIFT 2027 strategy, launched in 2022, Brussels Airport Company intends to strengthen its position as a major European hub, accelerate its ambitious sustainability goals, e.g. through the European Green Deal project Stargate, and continue to diversify its activities by focusing on innovation and cooperation.

Brussels Airport is the second most important economic engine in Belgium, good for 64,000 direct and indirect jobs and is owned and operated by Brussels Airport Company. The shareholders are a consortium of private investors (75%) and the Belgian State (25%).Follow Brussels Airport on TwitterLinkedinInstagramTikTok and Facebook.  

Contact

www.brusselsairport.be