IATA Says Air Cargo Could Finally Turn a Corner in 2026

After several stop-and-go years, air cargo may have some breathing room ahead. The industry isn’t celebrating just yet, but the latest outlook points to a slow and steady rebound. IATA expects air-freight volumes to tick up by about 2.4% in 2026, which would put the total close to 71.6 million tonnes. Not a boom, far from it — more like a cautious step out of survival mode.
The momentum isn’t coming from a single sector. Pharma shipments, tech components, e-commerce parcels, and urgent industrial freight continue to rely on air when time is short or when uncertainty in other modes becomes too costly. Many companies learned the hard way during recent disruptions: having a dependable air option is part of risk planning now, not an afterthought.
Financially, the picture is nuanced. Cargo revenue could reach around USD 58 billion next year, rolled into a wider air-transport industry that might finally cross the one-trillion-dollar revenue threshold. On paper, it sounds strong. In reality, rising costs, cautious pricing, and fragile margins are still the everyday reality for most airlines. Even with better numbers, the return on capital remains squeezed, forcing carriers to keep pushing on digital tools, productivity, and smarter fleet deployment.
For shippers and forwarders, the outlook suggests something unusual: capacity should be available — but the advantage will go to those who know how to access it. The game is shifting toward booking intelligence, not just booking space. Hybrid strategies — a mix of air, sea, rail — are gaining ground, with routing decisions made week by week, not quarter by quarter.
If 2025 was about absorbing shocks and recalibrating expectations, 2026 looks like a year for rebuilding confidence — carefully. No fireworks, no frenzy, but a market that rewards preparation rather than improvisation.
The post IATA Says Air Cargo Could Finally Turn a Corner in 2026 appeared first on The Logistic News.
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