When an African boards an intercontinental flight in 2026, the aircraft is increasingly likely to carry the colours of Turkish Airlines, Emirates, Qatar Airways or Etihad. These carriers have turned Africa into a core growth market. They also use Istanbul, Dubai, Doha and Abu Dhabi as powerful transfer points into Europe, Asia, North America and Australasia.
This is the central fact of Africa aviation competition. The continent’s air traffic is growing faster than almost any region on earth. The International Air Transport Association reported that African airlines posted strong traffic growth in 2025. However, African carriers still capture a limited share of long-haul value.
The demand is African, but much of the profit is not. Foreign carriers dominate many intercontinental routes. Meanwhile, most African flag carriers remain constrained by balance sheets, fleet limits, governance pressure and uneven airport infrastructure. Ethiopian Airlines remains the major exception, and its Bishoftu airport project may become the most important infrastructure bet in African aviation.
Four hubs now anchor Africa’s long-haul connection to the world. Cairo, Johannesburg O.R. Tambo, Addis Ababa Bole and Casablanca Mohammed V carry the bulk of intercontinental capacity. Nairobi remains a credible fifth hub, while Lagos continues to grow despite heavy foreign carrier dominance on international routes.
Recent market data from OAG shows that Cairo remains Africa’s largest airport by outbound seats. Addis Ababa is closing the gap with Johannesburg, supported by Ethiopian Airlines’ network depth. Casablanca also continues to gain structural relevance, helped by Royal Air Maroc’s Atlantic positioning.
| Hub airport | Apr 2026 outbound seats | YoY growth | Anchor carrier |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cairo (CAI) | 1,636,977 | +0.6% | EgyptAir |
| Johannesburg O.R. Tambo (JNB) | 1,160,252 | Modest | South African Airways |
| Addis Ababa Bole (ADD) | 1,148,241 | +8.5% | Ethiopian Airlines |
| Casablanca Mohammed V (CMN) | Top tier | +11.2% | Royal Air Maroc |
| Lagos Murtala Muhammed (LOS) | Top tier | +17.9% | Foreign carriers |
Source: OAG African aviation market data, April 2026, and African Airlines Association passenger figures.
Four foreign airline groups now shape Africa’s connection to the rest of the world. Turkish Airlines, Emirates, Qatar Airways and Etihad operate across more than 130 African gateways between them. Their expansion has outpaced most African carriers, both in route depth and capital deployment.
| Carrier | African gateways | Hub | Africa direction in 2026 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Turkish Airlines | 50 | Istanbul | Largest African network of any airline, with deeper sub-Saharan coverage |
| Qatar Airways | 29 | Doha | Alliance-led expansion, including wider Kenya Airways cooperation |
| Emirates and flydubai | 30 combined | Dubai | Higher frequency on Cairo, Cape Town, Nairobi and South Africa routes |
| Etihad Airways | 5 rising to 11 | Abu Dhabi | Six new African routes announced for 2026 and 2027 |
Source: airline route maps, OAG, AFRAA and carrier announcements.
Turkish Airlines operates the most extensive African network of any airline. Its reach extends across North Africa, West Africa, East Africa and Southern Africa. This gives Istanbul a powerful role in Africa aviation competition, especially as European carriers have reduced many secondary African connections.
Emirates remains the strongest Dubai-based operator in Africa. It serves key markets at high frequency, including Cairo, Johannesburg, Cape Town and Nairobi. In addition, the flydubai partnership gives the wider Emirates Group a broader network across secondary markets.
Qatar Airways uses a different model. Its strategy relies on alliance depth, codeshares and selective equity positioning. The expanded Kenya Airways codeshare strengthens Doha’s East African feed, while the RwandAir discussions highlight Qatar’s willingness to support African carriers while securing strategic connectivity.
Etihad has now re-entered the African race with force. On 17 April 2026, the Abu Dhabi carrier announced six new African destinations. The expansion covers Accra, Asmara, Lagos, Kinshasa, Lubumbashi and Harare. This move strengthens the Gulf region position in African aviation before Riyadh builds greater scale.
One African carrier operates on the same strategic plane as the Gulf and Turkish groups. Ethiopian Airlines reported revenue of about $7.6 billion in 2024/25 and carried roughly 19 million passengers. Its network now spans more than 160 destinations, supported by one of the continent’s strongest fleet strategies.
Ethiopian’s advantage is structural. The airline earns most of its revenue in foreign currency, which protects it from domestic currency pressure. It has also maintained profitability over a long period, including through the pandemic. This consistency separates it from most African flag carriers.
Fleet expansion continues to reinforce that position. Ethiopian has ordered additional Boeing 787-9 aircraft and continues to expand its Airbus and Boeing widebody base. Its new routes show a clear pattern. European diaspora markets, Asian growth corridors, African capital links and Gulf labour flows all form part of the same strategy.
The most important piece is Bishoftu International Airport. Ethiopian Airlines and the African Development Bank are positioning the project as Africa’s largest aviation infrastructure development. Phase One is valued at about $12.5 billion and targets capacity of 60 million passengers annually by 2030. Full development could raise that to 110 million passengers.
The technical logic is strong. Addis Ababa Bole sits at high altitude, which limits payload on long-haul departures. Bishoftu sits lower and can reduce that constraint. Bole also faces capacity pressure within the coming years. Therefore, Bishoftu is not only aspirational. It is operationally necessary.
EgyptAir remains important because Cairo is Africa’s busiest airport. The carrier benefits from geography, tourism flows and a strong north-south position. Its new aircraft deliveries, including A350 capacity, should help it monetise more African transit traffic over time.
Royal Air Maroc has one of the continent’s most interesting Atlantic strategies. Casablanca links Africa with Europe, North America and Brazil. The airline’s South Atlantic positioning gives Morocco a distinctive role. However, airport capacity constraints around Casablanca could become more visible as the 2030 World Cup approaches.
Kenya Airways has moved toward a more pragmatic model. Its return to profit in 2024 gave the carrier more credibility. Yet the expanded Qatar Airways codeshare also confirms a strategic shift. Nairobi can generate value as a regional and medium-haul platform, while Doha absorbs more intercontinental transfer traffic.
South African Airways now operates with a narrower footprint. Its codeshares with Turkish Airlines, Lufthansa and Emirates make commercial sense. However, they also redefine SAA as a domestic and regional carrier with foreign partners carrying much of the long-haul burden. That model may be defensible, but it is not a full restoration of South Africa’s former flag carrier ambitions.
RwandAir remains a boutique hub story. Kigali has built visibility through disciplined branding and strategic partnerships. The proposed Qatar Airways equity participation and the Bugesera airport project could support a larger role. Still, political and compliance risks may affect how institutions price future exposure.
The disruption of Middle Eastern airspace has added a new layer to Africa aviation competition. When Gulf and Iranian airspace faces disruption, Europe-Asia traffic must reroute. This can add hours to long-haul sectors and raise fuel burn on affected rotations.
The arbitrage for African aviation is real but limited. Cairo, Casablanca, Addis Ababa and Nairobi can benefit from some sixth-freedom traffic. The Cape route can also become more relevant for Asia-Europe flows. However, African carriers do not yet have enough spare capacity to absorb a large share of redirected traffic.
Turkish Airlines benefits most among foreign carriers because Istanbul-routed Africa traffic avoids some Gulf routing constraints. Among African operators, Ethiopian Airlines and Royal Air Maroc are best placed to capture marginal demand. Their challenge is not strategy. It is available seat capacity.
Three observations define the market at the end of April 2026. First, African demand growth is real and structural. It reflects population growth, urbanisation, diaspora travel, business links and rising intra-African mobility. Second, the profitability gap remains difficult. African carriers still face high taxes, fragmented airspace, weaker liberalisation and uneven safety outcomes.
Third, the hub competition is being decided now. Turkish Airlines, Emirates, Qatar Airways and Etihad have the capacity, capital and transfer infrastructure to shape Africa’s international access. No African carrier, except Ethiopian Airlines, can currently match that position at scale.
For institutional investors, direct exposure to African flag carriers remains difficult. It is concentrated, illiquid and often politically encumbered. The clearer opportunities may sit around infrastructure, maintenance, repair and overhaul, airport real estate and logistics services linked to major hubs.
The African Airlines Association has already highlighted the need for stronger regional maintenance capability. Africa exports substantial MRO work every year, which creates a practical investment case for consolidation. Bishoftu, Bugesera, Lagos terminal redevelopment and Casablanca capacity expansion also offer aviation-linked real estate opportunities.
The wider proposition is the one institutional capital should assess most carefully. African aviation is not principally a story about airlines. It is a story about hubs. Today, the most powerful hubs for African intercontinental travel sit in Istanbul, Dubai, Doha and Abu Dhabi. Whether Bishoftu, Cairo, Casablanca and Johannesburg can redraw that hierarchy remains one of the open questions of the decade.
For those seeking a more detailed and data-driven perspective, the full report can be accessed here.
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