Nigeria’s aviation industry faced headwinds in December 2025, recording a notable contraction even as its position as Africa’s fifth-largest airline market remained intact, according to newly released data from OAG’s Monthly Airline Data Updates.
The West African nation saw its total scheduled passenger seat capacity decline by 3.7% year-on-year, falling from approximately 1.20 million seats in December 2024 to 1.16 million last month. This drop encompassed both domestic and international flights, marking Nigeria as the sole country among Africa’s top 10 aviation markets to experience a contraction during the period—a troubling distinction that raises questions about the health of the nation’s air transport sector.
While Nigeria struggled, the broader African aviation landscape painted a picture of robust expansion. Egypt maintained its position as the continent’s aviation powerhouse, with seat capacity climbing to around 2.98 million. South Africa followed closely with 2.60 million seats, while Morocco delivered one of the period’s most impressive performances, expanding capacity by over 13% to reach more than 2.03 million seats.
Ethiopia, which ranks fourth continentally, sustained steady growth at 1.38 million seats, comfortably ahead of Nigeria’s diminished capacity. The pattern of expansion extended throughout the top 10, with Algeria, Kenya, Tanzania, Tunisia, and Mauritius all reporting increases that underscored a continent-wide aviation revival—one that appears to have largely bypassed Nigeria.
Tanzania emerged as the breakout performer, posting the fastest year-on-year expansion at over 20%, signaling the East African nation’s growing importance as a regional aviation hub.
The challenges facing Nigerian aviation became even more pronounced when examining domestic flight capacity specifically. Nigeria’s domestic seat offerings plummeted 7.5% year-on-year, dropping from 919,400 seats in December 2024 to just 850,420 last month—one of the steepest declines recorded among major African domestic markets.
Despite this contraction, Nigeria retained its position as Africa’s second-largest domestic aviation market, trailing only South Africa, which grew from 1,686,956 seats to 1,803,097 seats over the same period.
Other African nations demonstrated the vitality Nigeria appears to be lacking. Kenya’s domestic capacity expanded from 420,534 to 456,500 seats. Tanzania’s domestic market surged from 326,990 to 415,130 seats. In North Africa, Egypt increased from 382,157 to 391,736 seats, while Algeria posted a substantial jump from 308,039 to 388,731 seats. Morocco grew from 215,149 to 240,499 seats.
Cape Verde recorded the most dramatic domestic growth rate, surging from 69,493 seats to 92,924 seats, though from a considerably smaller base.
Not all markets expanded. Ethiopia experienced a modest decline from 401,972 to 389,562 domestic seats, while the Democratic Republic of Congo saw a sharp drop from 142,201 to 101,598 seats.
Nigeria’s contraction comes at a time when many African nations are capitalizing on growing demand for air travel, driven by expanding middle classes, increased business activity, and tourism growth across the continent. The decline raises pressing questions about the factors constraining Nigeria’s aviation sector—from operational challenges and economic headwinds to infrastructure limitations and regulatory issues that may be hampering the industry’s ability to compete regionally.
For an economy of Nigeria’s size and regional importance, the inability to keep pace with continental peers in aviation capacity represents both a current weakness and a potential brake on future economic growth, given aviation’s critical role in facilitating trade, investment, and connectivity in an increasingly integrated African market.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
Nigeria stands alone among Africa’s top 10 aviation markets as the only one to shrink in December 2025, with total capacity down 3.7% and domestic flights plummeting 7.5%. While the rest of the continent experiences an aviation boom—led by Tanzania’s 20% surge and Morocco’s 13% expansion—Nigeria’s contraction signals deepening operational and economic challenges that risk isolating Africa’s most populous nation from the continent’s connectivity revolution at precisely the wrong moment.























