Skip to main contentSkip to navigationSkip to navigation
A plane lands on the southern runway at London Heathrow airport.
The rapid spread of the Omicron variant means the outlook for the airline industry in 2022 remains uncertain. Photograph: Steve Parsons/PA
The rapid spread of the Omicron variant means the outlook for the airline industry in 2022 remains uncertain. Photograph: Steve Parsons/PA

Air travel in and out of UK slumps by 71% in 2021 amid pandemic

This article is more than 2 years old

Report from aviation analytics firm Cirium shows domestic flights were down by almost 60%

Air travel in and out of the UK slumped by 71% in 2021 as the second year of the Covid-19 crisis took its toll on international flying, according to a report.

Just over 406,000 international flights operated from the UK up to 22 December this year compared with almost 1.4m in 2019 before the pandemic struck and travel restrictions were imposed, the aviation analytics firm Cirium said. UK domestic flights were found to have declined by almost 60%.

International travel has been slow to recover because of testing and quarantine requirements, which have changed throughout the year, and fears of countries being added to the UK’s red list which involve mandatory hotel quarantine for 10 days.

The budget carrier Ryanair remained the largest airline in the UK, Cirium said, operating more than 100,000 UK flights in 2021, followed by easyJet, with more than 82,000 flights, while British Airways was third with 77,460 flights.

The busiest international route was between London’s Heathrow and New York’s JFK, even though the US only reopened its borders to UK travellers in November. Travellers from the US had been able to fly to the UK since 28 July. BA, Virgin Atlantic, American Airlines, Delta Air Lines and JetBlue operated a total of 2,410 flights on the route.

Short-haul flights were the most popular, though, with eight out of the 10 busiest routes to mainland Europe. They included London Heathrow to Amsterdam, Paris Charles de Gaulle and Frankfurt.

The UK’s busiest domestic route was the 31-mile flight between Land’s End in Cornwall to St Mary’s on the Isles of Scilly, with 2,330 flights recorded this year.

With new Covid infections soaring across Europe and the US, and hitting record highs in the UK amid the rapid spread of the Omicron variant, the outlook for next year remains uncertain.

Thousands of flights have been cancelled over the past few days because of staff testing positive for Covid-19, and bad weather in parts of the US. By Wednesday morning, a further 2,100 flights had been cancelled globally, after 3,000 cancellations on Tuesday, including 1,300 into or out of the US, according to the tracking website FlightAware. Globally, airlines cancelled more than 6,000 flights between Christmas Eve and Boxing Day, normally the busiest time of the year.

One in eight UK travel and tourism jobs – 205,000 roles – will be unfilled at the beginning of 2022, according to the London-based World Travel and Tourism Council. The staff shortage could have an “enormous impact” on the UK’s economic recovery from the coronavirus pandemic, the WTTC said.

Sign up to the daily Business Today email or follow Guardian Business on Twitter at @BusinessDesk

It called for a series of measures to tackle the issue, such as more support for remote working, reskilling workers and increasing the number of apprenticeships. “If we cannot fill these vacancies, it could threaten the survival of travel and tourism businesses up and down the UK,” said the council’s chief executive, Julia Simpson.

Separately, Indonesia has lifted the ban on the Boeing 737 Max, more than three years after a Lion Air plane flying from Jakarta crashed in October 2018, killing 189 people. In March 2019, there was a second disaster involving the 737 Max model when an Ethiopian Airlines plane crashed soon after takeoff from Addis Ababa, killing 157 people. Boeing’s bestselling aircraft was then grounded globally.

On Monday, Ethiopian Airlines said it would resume 737 Max flights in February.

More on this story

More on this story

  • Economically inactive Britons with long Covid have ‘doubled’ in a year

  • Taxpayers left with £421m bill after one in 12 firms default on Covid loans

  • Rise of Omicron subvariants sends UK staff absence soaring

  • Wimbledon receives most support under Covid events insurance scheme

  • British taxpayers take stake in sex party planning firm Killing Kittens

  • ‘Challenge’ for banks that used taxpayer cash to cover fraudulent Covid loan losses

  • Fraud in Covid bounceback loan scheme not being addressed, say MPs

  • Closer inspection of UK jobs market reveals economic scars of Covid

  • What is behind the disruption at UK airports?

  • UK economy bounces back from Omicron as more people dine out

Most viewed

Most viewed