WINGX Global Market Tracker:
From the Alps to the Runway: Business jets make their mark at
Milan-Cortina 2026
The Milan-Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics (6-22 Feb) generated a notable surge in business jet activity across Northern Italy, with a total of 884 departures recorded during the Olympic period, nearly a 40% increase compared to the typical average flights for any given comparable timeframe.
This places the 2026 Winter Games ahead of the surge seen in Paris and Tokyo, though still below the exceptional Beijing 2022 surge of 50%.
Business Jet Departure Surge* During Olympics
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*Surge is event traffic compared to typical traffic levels
Zooming out to the year-to-date picture, global bizjet traffic has reached 536,000 flights, 3.8% ahead of the same period in 2025, a slight acceleration from the 3.4% growth reported through 22 February in 2025 vs 2024. The 1-22 February window tells an even stronger story, with global flights up 5.6% over the comparable period last year.
Regionally, North America continues to anchor global growth, 382,000 flights up 3.4% YTD and an encouraging 5.6% in the February month-to-date period, while Europe is tracking modestly at 3.0% YTD with more than 64,000 sectors flown.
The emerging market story remains relatively strong with some weak spots in the most recent 7-day period from the Middle East and Africa. South America is the standout emerging market, up 9.5% YTD with 50,000 departures, and up 11.6% in the first three weeks of February, while Africa at 6,200 flights is holding firm at 6.5% YTD. Overall, the first weeks of 2026 paint a picture of resilient, broad-based growth with marquee events and emerging market momentum offsetting pockets of weakness.
Global Bizjet Departures Trends YTD (1 Jan-22 Feb) by Region.
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Global Bizjet Departures Trends YTD (1 Jan-22 Feb) by Operator Type.
*Global trends are inclusive of “Other” operator types which include
Historical Comparison: How Does Milan-Cortina Compare?
Across the most recent four Olympics in WINGX's records, a consistent pattern emerges: the Games reliably produce a meaningful uplift in business aviation demand at host city airports, regardless of whether the event is Summer or Winter.
Tokyo 2020 (held 2021): The pandemic-delayed Summer Games generated a modest 27% surge with Olympic-period bizjet flights, even with an absence of public spectators and strict entry restrictions imposed by Japanese authorities. The surge was the lowest in the dataset, but remarkable given the extraordinary circumstances due to the pandemic.
Beijing 2022 (Winter): The 50% surge ratio, the highest in the dataset, was driven by tight regulatory controls that suppressed baseline traffic, making the small absolute number of Olympic-window flights appear more dramatic relative to an even smaller background level.
Paris 2024 (Summer): The most commercially comparable benchmark for future host cities. Paris generated a significant number of Olympic-period flights at a 34% surge, a large absolute increase built on a very high baseline of average daily departures.
Milan-Cortina 2026 (Winter): With a 39% surge, Milan sits comfortably between the extremes, a genuine, commercially driven demand spike, not inflated by pandemic distortions. It is the strongest organic Winter Olympic surge since the pandemic,
reflecting Italy's well-developed bizjet infrastructure and the high affluence of winter sports culture among UHNW travelers.
Nick Koscinski, WINGX analyst comments, “The Milan-Cortina Olympics delivered a clear and measurable boost to Italian bizjet traffic, continuing a pattern we see at almost every marquee sporting event.
"With global flights up 3.8% year-to-date and highprofile events consistently elevating traffic levels, 2026 is meeting our expectations of modest single-digit growth.”

“The Milan-Cortina Olympics delivered a clear and measurable boost to Italian bizjet traffic, continuing a pattern we see at almost every marquee sporting event.
"With global flights up 3.8% year-to-date and highprofile events consistently elevating traffic levels, 2026 is meeting our expectations of modest single-digit growth.”
Nick Koscinski
WINGX analyst.
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BlueSky Business Aviation News | 26th February 2026 | Issue #832
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