Incheon Airport Hits Record 74M Passengers in 2025 on China, Japan Travel Boom

Incheon International Airport set a new annual passenger record in 2025, handling over 74 million travelers. The surge was primarily fueled by increased demand for flights to Japan and China, aided by long holidays, a Chinese visa waiver, and a weak Korean won. While Southeast Asia remained the largest regional market, its share declined partly due to safety concerns following a South Korean student's death in Cambodia. The airport operator forecasts continued growth of 2-6% for passenger traffic in 2026.

Key Points: Incheon Airport Passenger Traffic Hits Record High in 2025

  • Record 74.07 million passengers in 2025
  • Surge in Japan and China routes
  • Boost from holidays, visa waivers, weak won
  • Freight volume also increased
  • 2026 traffic growth forecast at 2-6%
2 min read

Passenger traffic at Incheon airport reaches record high in 2025

Incheon International Airport served over 74 million passengers in 2025, a record high driven by increased travel to Japan and China.

"travel demand to Northeast Asian countries surged on the back of unusually long Lunar New Year and Chuseok holidays - Incheon International Airport Corp."

Seoul, Jan 25

Passenger traffic at Incheon International Airport exceeded 74 million in 2025, driven by increased flights to and from Japan and China, the airport's operator said on Sunday.

A total of 74.07 million passengers traveled through South Korea's main gateway last year, marking the highest annual figure since the airport opened in 2001, according to Incheon International Airport Corp. (IIAC), reports Yonhap news agency.

The 2025 total was up 4.1 percent from 71.15 million passengers recorded a year earlier.

"In particular, travel demand to Northeast Asian countries surged on the back of unusually long Lunar New Year and Chuseok holidays, China's temporary visa waiver program, and the weakness of the won, which boosted demand for alternative destinations such as Japan and China," the IIAC said.

On international routes, Southeast Asia accounted for 26.7 percent of passenger traffic last year, followed by Japan at 25.1 percent and China at 16.7 percent, with the remainder on other routes.

The share of Southeast Asian routes declined from 29.6 percent a year earlier, amid rising safety concerns following the death of a South Korean college student in Cambodia last August in a suspected employment scam.

Overall freight volumes rose 0.3 percent on-year to 2.95 million tons last year, supported by increased belly cargo, which uses excess space on passenger aircraft to transport freight.

The IIAC said it expects passenger traffic this year to grow 2 to 6 percent on-year to between 75.54 million and 78.55 million.

Meanwhile, the remains of a late South Korean university student allegedly tortured to death by a criminal organisation in Cambodia returned home Tuesday, 74 days after he was found dead in the Southeast Asian country.

A Korean Air flight carrying the cremated remains of the 20-something student, surnamed Park, arrived at Incheon International Airport, west of Seoul, a day after South Korean and Cambodian authorities conducted a joint autopsy on his body in Phnom Penh.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
The part about the student's death in Cambodia is so tragic and a stark reminder. 😔 While we celebrate travel growth, safety for young people traveling for work or study abroad must be the top priority. Southeast Asian routes declining makes sense.
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Rohit P
China's visa waiver program really moves the needle, doesn't it? If only we had more such agreements from our side to boost tourism both ways. Our airports need to step up their game to handle this kind of volume smoothly.
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Sarah B
Interesting to see the data on belly cargo increasing. It's a smart, efficient use of resources. The overall growth is good for the regional economy, though the human cost mentioned at the end is a sobering counterpoint.
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Vikram M
Japan at 25%! No surprise there, it's a top destination for everyone. The weak Korean Won making it an alternative destination is a classic economic factor. Hope more direct flights open from India to Incheon, it's a great hub.
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Nikhil C
A respectful criticism: The article jumps from pure statistics to a very sensitive tragedy somewhat abruptly. While both are news, the framing could be more thoughtful. The record traffic is impressive, but the loss of a life puts things in perspective.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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