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List of the busiest airports
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The definition of world's busiest airport has been specified by the Airports Council International in Montreal, Canada.[1] The ACI defines and measures the following three types of airport traffic:
- Passenger traffic: total passengers embarked and disembarked, passengers in transit counted once[2]
- Cargo traffic: loaded and unloaded freight and mail, by mass[3]
- Traffic movements: landings and take-offs of aircraft[4]

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Busiest airports

The following airports make claims based on objective volume measures that are defined above (as per ACI):
- Most passengers annually (1998–2019, 2021–present)[5][6]
- Most aircraft movements annually (2015–present)[7]
- Most passengers annually (2020)[8]
- Most international passengers annually (2014–present)[9]
- Most cargo traffic by weight annually (2020–2021)[10]
- Most cargo traffic by weight annually (2022–present)
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Busiest airport by region

Below are the busiest airports for each continent by passenger traffic:
- Africa - Cairo International Airport, Egypt
- Asia - Dubai International Airport, United Arab Emirates
- Europe - Heathrow Airport, London, United Kingdom
- North America - Hartsfield–Jackson Atlanta International Airport, Georgia, United States
- Oceania - Sydney Airport, Australia
- South America - El Dorado International Airport, Bogotá, Colombia
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Busiest city destination
- Airports of London combined, London, United Kingdom
- Most passengers annually in all city airports combined (2010–present)[11]
Historical claims
- Midway International Airport, Chicago, Illinois, United States
- In the late 1940s, Chicago Midway was the busiest airport in the United States by total aircraft operations – i.e., including every training aircraft practicing take-offs and landings.[12] New York LaGuardia had the most airline operations and passengers until the early 1950s, when Chicago Midway became the busiest airport in the United States by any criterion. Before World War II, Chicago Midway was the origin or destination of one in four U.S. airline flights,[13] although a 1939 Official Aviation Guide shows more airline flights scheduled at Newark than at Chicago.[citation needed]
- Memphis International Airport, Memphis, Tennessee, United States
- As the home of FedEx Express, Memphis had the largest cargo operations worldwide from 1993 to 2009. It remains the busiest cargo airport in the United States and the Western Hemisphere.[14]
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See also
References
External links
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