Trade · Panama
Key Facts
—The number. Tocumen moved nearly nine and a half million passengers in the first five months of 2026.
—The growth. That is up about fifteen percent on the same months last year, roughly a million extra travellers.
—The model. More than three in four May passengers were just connecting, not visiting Panama.
—The reach. The airport now links Panama to ninety-one international destinations.
—The lead. It was Latin America’s busiest airport for international traffic in 2025.
—The plan. Operators are spending to expand, targeting thirty million passengers a year by 2030.
The Tocumen airport is the quiet engine of Panama’s economy, and its latest passenger numbers show the hub of the Americas pulling further ahead of its regional rivals.
Panama’s wealth has always come from being a place things pass through rather than a place things are made. The canal is the famous example, but there is a second crossroads in the sky.
That is Tocumen International Airport, on the edge of Panama City, and its newest figures show the connection business is booming.
What the Tocumen airport numbers show
According to the airport operator, Tocumen S.A., the terminal handled close to nine and a half million passengers between January and May. That is an increase of about fifteen percent on the same stretch of 2025.
In May alone almost two million people came through, a jump of nearly seventeen percent on the year. At that pace the airport will sail past ten million for the half-year.
The most telling figure is who these travellers are. More than three quarters of them in May were simply changing planes, never leaving the airport to enter Panama.
That is the hub model in a single statistic. The country earns from being the most convenient place in the Americas to switch flights.
The flow is now relentless. The airport averages more than sixty-three thousand passengers a day and over four hundred aircraft movements, with aircraft traffic up about twelve percent on last year.
Freight is rising too. Cargo through the terminal grew about ten percent in the five months, a reminder that the hub moves goods as well as people.
Why the hub matters to investors
For a foreign reader the airport is more than a travel convenience. It is a core piece of the case for Panama as a regional base for business.
The dollar is the local currency, the time zone lines up with the Americas, and Tocumen puts ninety-one cities within a direct flight. For a company running a regional headquarters or a logistics operation, that connectivity is the product.
The route map underlines the point. The busiest links so far this year are Bogotá, Miami, San José in Costa Rica, Punta Cana and Medellín, a spread that ties North and South America together through one terminal.
The airport was already the busiest in Latin America and the Caribbean for international passengers in 2025, ahead of larger economies like Mexico and Brazil. The 2026 numbers widen that lead.
The expansion bet
Growth this fast tests an airport’s walls, and Panama is spending to keep up. The operator has launched a tender of around two hundred and twenty million dollars to add ten new boarding gates and widen the taxiways.
A separate project worth nearly fifty-seven million dollars is rebuilding one of the runways, with the work timed so flights are not disrupted. Both are bets that the traffic will keep climbing.
The target is ambitious. Management wants the airport to handle thirty million passengers a year by 2030, up from about twenty-one million in 2025.
The risk is concentration. A hub that thrives on connections is exposed to the health of its main airline and to any wider slowdown in regional travel, so the run of records is a strength that is worth watching rather than a guarantee.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many passengers has Tocumen airport handled in 2026?
Close to nine and a half million between January and May, according to the airport operator. That is about fifteen percent more than the same five months of 2025, roughly a million extra travellers.
Why is Panama called the hub of the Americas?
Because Tocumen links ninety-one international destinations across North and South America, and most passengers use it only to change planes. More than three quarters of May travellers were connecting, not entering Panama.
Why does the Tocumen airport matter for investors?
Its connectivity underpins Panama’s appeal as a regional headquarters and logistics base, alongside the dollar economy and a convenient time zone. The airport was Latin America’s busiest for international traffic in 2025.
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By The Rio Times | Created at 2026-06-22 10:56:30 | Updated at 2026-06-22 22:18:03
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