(KENYA) Advantage Air will add a Bombardier CRJ200 to its fleet in August 2025, a small jet built for short regional hops. The move comes as East Africa’s airlines, governments, and tourism boards race to meet rising demand and make cross-border trips simpler for tourists and tour operators.
Regional officials expect over 14 million international arrivals in 2025, up from 8.5 million in 2024 and above the 2019 baseline. The East African Community (EAC) projects USD 10.4 billion in tourism revenue and 11 million visitors by year-end, highlighting how aviation and visa policy now shape the region’s recovery and growth.

Advantage Air’s CRJ200: purpose and impact
Advantage Air, a Kenyan private carrier, says the CRJ200 will open more links to secondary cities and underserved routes, carrying both passengers and cargo. The jet’s size and range suit short, often bumpy sectors that connect safari gateways, conservation zones, and remote airfields.
For small lodges that need steady supplies and for travelers planning multi-country itineraries, more frequent flights cut connection times and reduce missed-tour risks. According to analysis by VisaVerge.com, regional fleets that fit short-haul demand tend to lift traffic fastest because they can add frequencies without waiting for major airport upgrades.
Regional expansion: carriers, airports, and marketing
The airline’s expansion mirrors a wider trend. Through 2025, multiple carriers are launching or restoring routes into and within East Africa, including Turkish Airlines and South Africa’s Airlink. Tanzania’s Arusha Airport is set to receive international arrivals from June 2025, strengthening a key gateway to the northern safari circuit.
The timing aligns with a rebound already visible on the ground: Tanzania counted 1,748,500 tourists in 2024, up 12.4% from 2023 and well above 2019 levels. Regional leaders see this as proof that air connectivity, smart marketing, and steady policy changes are working in tandem.
Flights and infrastructure expand across the region
Advantage Air positions itself as a nimble operator for both passengers and cargo, with the CRJ200 giving it flexibility to serve remote destinations and time-sensitive lodge operations. The carrier’s model fits a network where many high-demand sites sit far from major hubs.
More aircraft suited for short runways and quick turns mean more early-morning and late-afternoon options, which matter to travelers syncing game drives or connecting to long-haul flights.
Other airlines are adding capacity, too. Wider international links funnel visitors into Nairobi, Dar es Salaam, Kilimanjaro, Entebbe, and Kigali, then regional jets and turboprops move them onward. Airport projects, notably at Arusha, are geared to spread arrivals beyond the busiest single gateway, easing bottlenecks and giving tourists more direct access to parks and coastal areas.
Sector planners say this mix—long-haul feeders plus regional spokes—helps spread tourism money across communities rather than concentrating it in one or two cities.
Marketing push: “Visit East Africa: Feel the Vibe”
Under the “Visit East Africa: Feel the Vibe” brand, the EAC and national boards in Kenya, Tanzania, Rwanda, and Uganda promote multi-country trips and higher-spend experiences. With international partners backing this push, the region is selling curated routes that include primate trekking, savannah safaris, cultural visits, and beach stays on a single ticket.
Policy shifts making trips simpler
Visa and entry policies are loosening in step with airline growth. Kenya revised its Electronic Travel Authorization, streamlining online pre-travel checks for many visitors. Travelers should apply through the official portal at https://www.etakenya.go.ke/ and carry their approval when they fly.
Rwanda maintains one of the continent’s most open entry regimes, and the EAC continues work on a Single Tourism Visa, a pass that would allow movement across member states on one document. While full rollout requires ongoing coordination, officials say the shared approach already supports multi-destination packages and longer stays.
These changes reduce planning friction for travelers and simplify operations for tour operators, enabling more confident pricing and fewer unexpected border issues.
The benefits of relaxed entry rules include:
– Fewer application steps and lower friction for multi-country trips.
– Tour operators can price and schedule with greater certainty.
– Border officers gain from clearer standards and digital systems that speed queues and improve data.
A practical example: a 10-day itinerary could include 3 nights in Nairobi, 4 nights near the Serengeti, and 3 nights in Rwanda for gorilla trekking—without juggling different paper applications. For safari operators, predictable entry rules help assign guides and vehicles more efficiently, and better flight options reduce cancellations that ripple across bookings.
What this means for travelers and operators
- Booking and access:
- More direct and frequent flights within East Africa mean shorter total travel times and fewer overnight layovers.
- Advantage Air’s CRJ200 is expected to add frequencies on regional legs where larger jets don’t fit demand or runway limits.
- Cargo and supply chains:
- Regional jets that carry cargo improve reliability of supplies for remote lodges: food, maintenance parts, medical supplies, and camera gear.
- More reliable logistics enhance guest experiences and cut costly delays.
- Multi-destination stays:
- With the EAC’s push toward a Single Tourism Visa and aligned marketing, travelers are increasingly booking two to four countries per trip, boosting average spend per visitor and supporting jobs across borders.
- Conservation funding:
- More visitors, if managed well, bring more funds for parks and community conservancies.
- Experts stress that anti-poaching work and habitat protection must keep pace with growth to protect wildlife.
- Local jobs and economic impact:
- Tourism supports over 7% of jobs in East Africa and contributes about 9.5% to regional GDP.
- Growth in arrivals, when tied to fair labor practices and training, can lift incomes in guiding, hospitality, transport, and crafts.
Challenges and cautions
The wider context matters. After the pandemic slump, East Africa is not just back; it is surpassing pre-2020 benchmarks thanks to coordinated policy and steady airline planning. The “Visit East Africa: Feel the Vibe” campaign, launched in 2024 with European Union support, gives the region a single, clear message.
Still, operators see areas to watch:
– Weather can disrupt short-runway schedules.
– Peak-season crowding needs careful management to protect wildlife and visitor safety.
– Digital systems require user support for travelers who struggle with online forms or payment.
– Experts warn against price races that push mass tourism at the expense of quality and conservation.
Outlook and practical advice
Forecasts point to continued expansion, with international arrivals projected to reach 15.2 million by 2027 at a compound annual growth rate of about 6.09%. Airlines, including Turkish Airlines and Airlink, signal more capacity and routes during 2025, while carriers such as Advantage Air plan fleet upgrades sized for regional needs.
Policy work will continue, with EAC officials aiming to harmonize visa rules, fees, and visitor data systems so borders feel more seamless to tourists and more secure for states.
Practical tips for travelers planning late 2025–2026 trips:
1. Book early for peak migration windows.
2. Check entry rules before you pay deposits.
3. Look for itineraries that use the new regional flights to reduce ground transfers.
4. Mix famous parks with lesser-known reserves reachable by short hops to spread out crowds and add variety.
5. Prefer tour companies that build flexible legs using jets like the Bombardier CRJ200 to keep schedules tight without sacrificing rest time.
As Advantage Air readies its next aircraft and East Africa deepens regional cooperation, the core message is practical and hopeful: more ways in, quicker links across borders, and a better chance that tourism dollars reach the communities protecting the landscapes people come to see.
This Article in a Nutshell
Advantage Air adds a CRJ200 in August 2025 to open secondary-city routes, speed safari connections and carry cargo. East Africa’s airlines and EAC marketing aim to boost arrivals, ease visas, and spread tourism benefits across communities while protecting conservation and improving logistics for lodges and operators.