Executive Summary
Copenhagen Airport has shattered multiple records in 2025, positioning itself as the Nordic region’s preeminent aviation hub. With 24.5 million passengers in the first nine months and a robust profit of DKK 1.26 billion, the airport’s performance signals a fundamental shift in Nordic travel patterns. However, this success story extends beyond Denmark, revealing a complex competitive landscape where Stockholm and Oslo present formidable challenges, while Helsinki and Reykjavik carve out specialized niche roles.
Copenhagen Airport: A Centenary Marked by Unprecedented Growth
Record-Breaking Traffic Volumes
Copenhagen Airport (CPH) celebrated its 100th anniversary by delivering its strongest operational performance in history. During the summer months of June, July, and August, the airport processed 9.7 million passengers, setting a new benchmark for peak season traffic. September proved even more remarkable with 3.1 million passengers, representing a 9% year-on-year increase and marking the busiest September in the airport’s century-long history.
The cumulative result for January-September reached 24.5 million passengers, an 8% increase compared to the same period in 2024. This trajectory positions CPH to meet its full-year forecast of 32 million passengers, which would represent an all-time annual record.
Financial Strength and Operational Excellence
The passenger surge translated directly to financial performance. In the first half of 2025 alone, Copenhagen Airports A/S reported a pre-tax profit of DKK 595 million (US$92.8m) on revenues of DKK 2,541 million—an 8% year-over-year improvement. The third quarter accelerated this trend, bringing the nine-month profit to approximately DKK 1.26 billion, a 19% increase year-on-year.
Key performance indicators underscore the airport’s operational efficiency:
- Load factor: Reached 80% in September, the highest ever recorded for an autumn month
- Transfer traffic: Increased 35% in September, with travellers from Norway, Sweden, and Finland increasingly routing through Copenhagen
- Fleet modernization: 37% of aircraft operating at CPH are new-generation models (Airbus A320neo/Boeing 737 MAX), up from just 5% in 2019
Strategic Positioning as Nordic Hub
Copenhagen has solidified its role as northern Europe’s preferred transfer hub. Nine out of ten transfer passengers now fly with SAS, which has strengthened Copenhagen as its global hub by adding 18 new routes. The airport’s network expanded to 334 routes serving 171 destinations in the first half of 2025 alone.
Chief Commercial Officer Peter Krogsgaard notes: “Copenhagen Airport plays an important role as a traffic hub for the entire Nordic region. It is a clear trend that more and more travellers choose to fly via Copenhagen, especially our Nordic neighbours”.
Swedish Response: Stockholm and Gothenburg Show Parallel Growth

Stockholm Arlanda’s Competitive Position
While Copenhagen captures headlines, Stockholm Arlanda Airport (ARN) presents robust competition as Sweden’s primary international gateway. Swedavia, which operates Sweden’s ten major airports, reported handling nearly 3.3 million passengers in August 2025 across its network, with Arlanda driving the strongest development at 8% growth.
Stockholm Arlanda remains the Nordic region’s third-busiest airport (after Copenhagen and Oslo), serving as Sweden’s major international hub. In October 2025, Swedavia’s entire airport network processed 3.1 million passengers, representing a 5% year-on-year increase.
Gothenburg’s Regional Strength
Gothenburg Landvetter Airport demonstrated consistent performance with 506,939 passengers in October 2025, a 6% increase year-on-year. During the peak summer month of August, the airport welcomed 544,000 passengers (3% growth).
However, Gothenburg operates at a fundamentally different scale than Copenhagen. While CPH processes over 2.7 million passengers monthly, Landvetter averages approximately 500,000 monthly passengers—roughly one-fifth of Copenhagen’s volume. This positions Gothenburg as a vital regional hub for western Sweden but not a direct competitor for Copenhagen’s Nordic hub status.
Swedavia’s Network Strategy
Unlike Copenhagen’s single-airport dominance, Sweden’s aviation strategy distributes traffic across a broader network. Swedavia’s ten airports collectively handle comparable passenger volumes to Copenhagen but spread the demand across multiple gateways, including Malmö, LuleÃ¥, and UmeÃ¥. This approach serves Sweden’s geographic expanse but dilutes the hub concentration that Copenhagen enjoys.
Oslo: The Quiet Contender Challenging Regional Leadership
Strong Operational Performance
Oslo Airport Gardermoen (OSL) operates as the Nordic region’s second-busiest airport, processing 5.65 million passengers in Q1 2025 alone (a 5.2% increase). The broader Avinor network, encompassing 44 Norwegian airports, handled 11.45 million passengers in the first quarter, reflecting 6% overall growth.
Global Recognition for Excellence
Oslo achieved a significant competitive advantage in May 2025 when it was named the world’s most punctual large international airport, with 91.22% of departures operating on schedule. This operational reliability, combined with the airport’s position as SAS and Norwegian Air Shuttle’s hub, makes it a formidable competitor for Copenhagen’s transfer traffic.
Infrastructure and Capacity
With two parallel runways and expanded terminal facilities, Oslo Gardermoen supports over 90 aircraft movements per hour and has capacity for continued growth. The airport’s strong public transport integration (with 60% of passengers arriving via train) and sustainability leadership position it as a modern, efficient alternative to Copenhagen.
Helsinki: Specialized Asian Gateway with Measured Recovery
Moderated but Steady Growth
Helsinki Airport (HEL) processed 8.13 million passengers between January-June 2025, representing 5% growth year-on-year. October marked a significant milestone with 1.5 million passengers, the airport’s best monthly performance since the pandemic began.
Unique Market Positioning
Unlike Copenhagen’s broad European hub strategy, Helsinki specializes as the primary gateway between Europe and Asia, leveraging Finnair’s extensive Asian network. Finnair commands 75% of the airport’s capacity and operates 19 long-haul routes to Asia, the Middle East, and North America.
International traffic dominates Helsinki, accounting for 88% of total passengers. This specialization makes Helsinki less susceptible to intra-Nordic competition but also limits its ability to capture transfer traffic from neighbouring countries.
Recovery Trajectory
Helsinki-Vantaa welcomed approximately 10 million passengers during January-August 2025, still on a recovery path compared to pre-pandemic levels but showing consistent upward momentum.
Reykjavik: The Niche Transfer Hub
Tourism-Driven Traffic
KeflavÃk International Airport (KEF) expects 8.37 million passengers in 2025, a modest 0.8% increase from 2024. Foreign tourist arrivals are projected to reach 2.32 million, setting a new record and surpassing the previous 2018 peak.
Unique Operational Model
KeflavÃk operates with a transit passenger share of approximately 30%, making it Iceland’s primary gateway while serving as a North Atlantic connecting point. However, its remote geographic position limits its role in intra-Nordic competition.
Seasonal Variations
The airport experiences dramatic seasonal fluctuations, with summer operations featuring 26 airlines serving 92 destinations compared to winter’s 21 airlines and 70 destinations. July 2025 saw 302,000 foreign passengers pass through the facility.
Competitive Analysis: Can Copenhagen Maintain Its Lead?
Hub Concentration vs. Network Distribution
Copenhagen’s primary advantage lies in its single-airport concentration of Nordic traffic. While Sweden spreads its 3+ million monthly passengers across ten airports and Norway distributes traffic through Avinor’s 44-airport network, Copenhagen captures virtually all of Denmark’s international traffic through one gateway. This creates economies of scale and route density that smaller Swedish and Norwegian airports cannot individually match.
Transfer Traffic Battleground
The 35% increase in transfer traffic at Copenhagen, particularly from Norway and Sweden, represents both an opportunity and a vulnerability. SAS’s strategic decision to consolidate its intercontinental operations in Copenhagen strengthens the Danish hub, but also makes it dependent on continued Scandinavian airline cooperation.
Oslo Gardermoen and Stockholm Arlanda are actively competing for this transfer traffic, with Oslo’s superior punctuality and Stockholm’s expanding long-haul networks presenting viable alternatives.
Infrastructure Investment Race
Copenhagen is investing heavily in Terminal 3 expansion, scheduled for completion in 2028, which temporarily constrains non-aeronautical revenue due to shop closures. Conversely, Oslo has completed major infrastructure upgrades and KeflavÃk’s East Wing expansion opened in 2025, giving these competitors immediate capacity advantages.
Fleet Modernization Leadership
Copenhagen leads in environmental performance with 37% of aircraft being new-generation models, significantly ahead of regional peers. This positions CPH favourably as sustainability becomes a key competitive differentiator in European aviation.
The Evolving Nature of Nordic Travel
Demand Drivers
Several factors underpin the region’s aviation recovery:
1. Post-pandemic revenge travel: Sustained demand for leisure and business travel
2. Regional “hygge” tourism: Copenhagen’s Chief Commercial Officer Peter Krogsgaard notes growing international interest in Danish lifestyle and gastronomy
3. Business travel rebound: September’s record performance included a notable return of business travellers
4. Southern European connectivity: Peak holiday months for Spaniards and Italians boosted transfer traffic through Nordic hubs
Emerging Challenges
The Nordic aviation sector faces headwinds:
– Drone disruptions: Copenhagen experienced serious air traffic disruption from drone incursions in September
– Geopolitical uncertainty: Airport executives monitor potential impacts on international travel patterns
– Capacity constraints: Terminal expansions create short-term revenue pressures
– Climate commitments: Balancing growth with net-zero emissions targets remains critical
Strategic Outlook: Implications for Regional Competitiveness
Copenhagen Airport’s record performance reflects its successful positioning as the Nordic region’s dominant hub, but this leadership is neither guaranteed nor uncontested. The airport benefits from Denmark’s geographic centrality, SAS’s strategic commitment, and efficient single-gateway operations. However, Oslo’s punctuality excellence, Stockholm’s distributed network strength, and Helsinki’s Asian specialization create a multipolar competitive environment.
Key competitive advantages for Copenhagen:
– Scale: Processing nearly twice the passengers of its nearest Nordic competitor
– Hub efficiency: 35% transfer growth demonstrates effective connectivity
– Airline concentration: SAS’s hub strategy creates route density
– Modern fleet: Environmental leadership through new aircraft adoption
Vulnerabilities:
– Over-reliance on SAS: Strategic dependence on one carrier
– Infrastructure disruption: Ongoing construction limits near-term growth
– Cross-border competition: Losing Swedish and Norwegian transfer traffic to competing hubs
For the Nordic Business Journal readers, the critical insight is that while Copenhagen celebrates record numbers, the Nordic aviation market is rapidly evolving from a Danish-led hierarchy to a competitive ecosystem where specialization, operational excellence, and strategic airline partnerships will determine long-term success.
Sources: Copenhagen Airport Press Releases, Swedavia Traffic Statistics, Avinor Q1 2025 Report, Finavia Business Reviews, KeflavÃk Airport Passenger Forecasts
