Passenger traffic through airports in Oman increased by 2.8 per cent in 2025, reaching 14.9 million travellers by the end of December, up from 14.5m passengers a year earlier, according to data released by the National Centre for Statistics and Information and reported by Oman News Agency.
Despite the rise in passenger volumes, total flight movements across the country’s airports declined by 2.8pc to 104,510 flights in 2025, compared with 107,546 flights during the same period in 2024, indicating higher load factors and network optimisation by airlines.
At Muscat International Airport, international flights fell by 4.5pc to 82,913 in 2025 from 86,797 a year earlier. Nevertheless, international passenger numbers rose by 1.3pc to 11.8m, compared with 11.6m in 2024. Domestic activity at Muscat showed stronger momentum, with flights increasing 6.6pc to 9,606 from 9,009, while domestic passenger numbers climbed 12pc to 1.3m, up from 1.1m.
At Salalah Airport, international flights declined 2.4pc to 4,886 in 2025, compared with 5,008 in 2024. International passenger numbers remained broadly stable at 678,591, slightly higher than 678,402 a year earlier. Domestic operations recorded robust growth, with flights rising 14.3pc to 6,227 from 5,450 and passenger numbers increasing 17.7pc to 1,023,529, up from 869,954.
Sohar Airport saw a sharp contraction in international traffic, as flights dropped 77.8pc to 110 in 2025 from 495 in 2024. International passenger numbers plunged 99.1pc to 390 travellers, compared with 44,897 a year earlier. Domestic flights at Sohar declined 9.1pc to 150 from 165, while passenger numbers fell 21.8pc to 18,247, down from 23,331.
At Duqm Airport, domestic flights edged down 0.6pc to 618 in 2025 from 622 in 2024. Passenger numbers slipped marginally by 0.4pc to 60,893, compared with 61,137 the previous year.
Overall, the figures reflect steady growth in passenger demand across Oman’s main airports, driven largely by domestic travel, even as airlines reduced flight frequencies during the year.