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Dublin Airport’s 11-Month Growth Run Comes to an End, but Daa Still Counts 37.7 Million Passengers in Dublin and Cork During 2024

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A total of 37.7 million air passengers travelled through Dublin and Cork airports during 2024, end-of-year figures from airport operator daa show.

The newly-published data shows that December rounded off a strong year for the two airports – with more than 2.5 million passengers, combined, counted through their terminals.

However, Dublin Airport’s 11-month growth run ground to a half in December, with a 1% year-on-year decline to 2.29 million passengers for the festive month.

Overall, 2024 was a year of growth, at Dublin Airport, despite daa’s effort to dampen demand, with a total of 33.3m passengers through the terminals, a 4% increase on 2023 numbers.

On 171 days of 2024, the airport managed more than 100,000 passengers a day, demonstrating its operational capacity to manage 36 million passengers a year. Given the strong demand for travel in and out of Dublin Airport, daa estimates that overall numbers would have been even higher had it not been for the terminals passenger cap and daa’s initiatives to dampen demand to comply with planning.

Cork Airport had a record-breaking December, welcoming 211,000 passengers, a 7% increase on December 2023. The busiest day was Saturday, December 28, when 10,000 passengers passed through the airport, up 15.6% versus the same day in 2023.

Another significant milestone was achieved on Friday, December 20, when Cork welcomed its three millionth passenger, the first time Cork surpassed this yearly milestone since 2008. Furthermore, 2024 was also the busiest year for international passenger traffic in the airport’s 63-year history, and Cork Airport was Ireland’s fastest-growing airport in 2024.

Cork is set for further growth in 2025, with the airport offering direct services to 14 countries, with 56 routes operated by nine scheduled airlines.

Cork Airport is also finalising a new Capital Development Plan, which will deliver key infrastructure projects to enable the airport to handle significantly more passengers in line with population growth and demand for travel. Details of this will be revealed in the first quarter of 2025.

Kenny Jacobs, daa CEO, said:2024 was a strong year for both Dublin and Cork airports, and I’d like to thank all the hardworking staff at both airports who sent more than 37 million passengers on their way with a smile throughout the year. Demand for travel was huge throughout the year at both airports, and it was great to see Cork hit the three million passenger milestone for the first time since 2008. We have big plans for Cork’s ongoing growth and look forward to revealing the details of our new masterplan soon, which will continue to support Cork as Ireland’s fastest growing airport. 

“Dublin’s numbers tell a different story; we had both a year of growth with very strong airline and passenger demand, while we were making every effort to dampen demand because of the terminals passenger cap. daa’s job on behalf of the Irish state is to ensure our island nation’s connectivity for the benefit of our economy and everyone in Ireland, but we cannot do that effectively while the cap remains in place. There is widespread agreement that a pragmatic and constructive approach is needed to resolve this critical national issue impacting Ireland’s main transport hub. The main government parties recognised the importance of lifting the cap in their election manifestos and we look forward to seeing how this issue will be addressed in the programme for government. In the meantime, daa continues to concentrate on resolving the issue through the planning system, including lodging a ‘no build’ operational application in December to lift the cap to 36 million.”

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