`Return to front page
navigation FBO Operator Interior Recruitment Training OEM MRO Support Rotor
FrenchGermanSpanishItalianPortugueseArabicChineseBlueSky App Search Twitter

WINGX Global Market Tracker:

 

US Winter storm drags global bizjet activity down 1%

 

After a strong start to 2026, global bizjet activity fell 1% year-over-year in Week 04 (19–25 Jan), with 67,339 departures operated globally. This 1% decline was only the fourth time in the last 52 weeks that global bizjet traffic saw a weekly year-over-year decline.

The decline was driven by a 3% drop in bizjet flights in North America and the Middle East -7%. Conversely, bizjet traffic in Europe increased by 3%. By operator type, Fractional Operators are continuing to drive growth, their sectors up 6% this week vs
W04 2025. In contrast, Private Flight Department activity fell by 11% this week. On a rolling four-week basis (W01 – W04 2026), global bizjets are still 2% up vs same period last year, with just over 263,00 departures.


Global Bizjet Departures: Regional Performance.

click image to enlarge

Global Bizjet Departures: Regional Performance.


Regional performance analysis

North America: California Surges 15% While Texas Down 2%

In Week 04 (19-25 Jan) the North American market recorded over 47,000 departures, down 3% vs Week 04 2025. The winter storm this past weekend greatly affected the United States (accounting for 68% of global departures) and drove the North American trend at -3% with roughly 46,000 flights. Bizav hubs Dallas, Atlanta, and Washington DC were hit particularly hard, down 13%, 40%, and 49% respectively.

Among key states, California led growth with a standout +15% YOY (5,073 flights), while Florida posted solid +7% expansion (8,087 flights). In contrast, Texas declined 2% with 4,476 departures.

Where did the 15% California growth come from?

What drove Florida’s solid single-digit 7% expansion?

Why did Texas slump 2%?

North America's rolling four-week performance sits now at +2% vs last year (263,000
departures). Among key states over this period, Florida leads at +7%, while California
and Texas both sit at +5%.

Europe: Italy Up 14%, France Contracts 15%

From 19-25 January, European business jets totaled 8,922 flights, up 3% vs Week 04 2025. On a country basis, bizjet departures from Italy rose +14% YOY (866 flights), while Germany also posted strong at +8% (1,204 flights). In contrast, bizjet traffic from France declined sharply at -15% YOY with 1,236 flights.

What’s fueling Italy’s 14% growth?

What caused France’s 15% contraction?

Europe's four-week bizjet activity (W01-W04 2026) amounted to nearly 30,000 flights, up 2% vs last year. Italy leads the four-week trend at +10% vs the comparable fourweek period last year, while Germany and France are both 3% below the comparable four-week period.

Rest of the World: South America Leads at +19%, Middle East Contracts 7%

Regions outside North America and Europe collectively posted 6% growth, though performance varied dramatically across sub-regions. South America delivered the strongest performance with over 2,400 flights, up 19% YOY. Africa followed with the second strongest growth, 12% YOY, with roughly 860 flights, with bizjet traffic in Asia market static, at only 1% growth YOY and 2,200 departures; the Middle East market also lagged YOY trend, flights -7% and 1,200 business jet sectors.

Where are the ROW emerging markets?

Nick Koscinski, WINGX analyst, comments: “Week 04 is only the fourth time in the last year that we’ve seen weekly year-over-year declines, largely driven by the winter storm that impacted the US over the weekend. Outside of the US, we continue to track the strong emerging markets, especially South America which saw 19% growth last week.

"The global four-week trend still sits up 2%, so it seems like the storm was just a temporary hit as US airports start to recover from the record amounts of snow this past weekend.”

 

WINGX - Request a Demo.

WINGX

 

 

 

“Week 04 is only the fourth time in the last year that we’ve seen weekly year-over-year declines, largely driven by the winter storm that impacted the US over the weekend.

"Outside of the US, we continue to track the strong emerging markets, especially South America which saw 19% growth last week.

"The global four-week trend still sits up 2%, so it seems like the storm was just a temporary hit as US airports start to recover from the record amounts of snow this past weekend.”

Nick Koscinski
WINGX analyst.

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

WINGX GmbH
Lilienstraße 11
20095 Hamburg
Germany
.

+49 40 23 96 85 05

 

BlueSky Business Aviation News | 29th January 2026 | Issue #828

 

Back to our front page Order your FREE weekly copy of BlueSky now!

© BlueSky Business Aviation News Ltd 2008-2026