(HUNTSVILLE) Huntsville International Airport marked its busiest month ever in July 2025, handling 168,281 passengers and topping the previous record set in June. The July total was a 16.7% jump from July 2024 and capped a third straight month of all-time monthly highs.
Through July, the airport counted 991,320 passengers year-to-date, a 6.5% rise compared with the same period last year, placing Huntsville International Airport on pace to beat its 2024 annual record.

Why the growth is happening
Airport officials and carriers point to a simple driver: more seats to more places.
- Airlines have added capacity, brought in larger aircraft, and launched new nonstop routes as local demand grew.
- For travelers, that’s meant more choices, better schedules, and pressure on fares.
- For employers and newcomers to North Alabama, the change helps link the region to key business hubs, easing trips to the coasts and opening better one-stop paths for international travel through major gateways.
According to analysis by VisaVerge.com, Huntsville’s growth in July 2025 reflects a broader pattern that began this spring and is now speeding up with fresh service and airport upgrades. The airport set annual passenger records in 2023 and 2024; if current trends hold, 2025 will exceed both.
Air service expansion and airport capacity
Multiple carriers expanded service this year:
- Breeze Airways
- Made Orlando daily and launched a new nonstop to Los Angeles.
- Under a city agreement, Breeze is encouraged to add at least six new direct routes and a minimum of 384 extra flights a year.
- Delta Air Lines
- Introduced the first nonstop to New York City (LaGuardia) since the 1970s.
- Increased flights to Detroit and Atlanta.
- American Airlines
- Added frequencies to Charlotte and Dallas.
- Allegiant Air
- Announced three new nonstops:
- Fort Lauderdale starting Nov. 19, 2025
- Sanford/Orlando on Feb. 12, 2026
- St. Petersburg/Clearwater on March 5, 2026
Airport leaders say these moves lowered average fares and gave residents more direct options—especially to major hubs that feed both domestic and overseas trips.
- New York–LaGuardia unlocks Northeast business travel.
- Charlotte, Dallas, Atlanta, and Los Angeles provide wide connection banks.
- Breeze’s growth, in particular, has put downward pressure on prices, according to airport spokesperson Mary Swanstrom.
Terminal and facility improvements
The airport has also invested in the passenger experience:
- Signature Aviation completed a major terminal renovation and expansion in March 2025, adding more than 2,000 square feet to serve private, corporate, and government aviation customers.
- On the commercial side, new restrooms, a Starbucks, and Interstellar Pizza opened in the summer.
- Construction on a new parking deck is set to begin soon.
Airport leadership stresses that the terminal and airfield can absorb more growth, and more improvements are in the pipeline.
“When airlines deploy larger planes, fly more often, and add nonstops that fit local demand, the market responds,” said Board Chair Joey Ceci. CEO Butch Roberts added that steady community support has made the case for carriers to add capacity and routes, which in turn keeps fares competitive.
Practical impacts for travelers and employers
For families and solo travelers, July 2025 meant:
- More flight choices and better departure times.
- Less need to drive to Nashville or Atlanta to find a cheaper fare or workable itinerary.
- Easier long-haul travel via one-stop connections through major hubs.
For international students and workers in North Alabama, the added frequencies to major hubs make long-haul travel simpler. One-stop connections through Atlanta, Dallas, Charlotte, or New York can place travelers in Europe, the Middle East, or Asia the same day, often with a smooth transfer.
For employers, the gains are practical:
- North Alabama’s defense, space, and tech sectors rely on fast trips to customer and partner sites.
- A nonstop to LaGuardia reduces downtime for New York meetings.
- More flights to Atlanta and Detroit keep supply chains and engineering teams linked.
- Added seats into Dallas and Charlotte support global firms’ connections across the U.S. and abroad.
International visitors connecting through HSV should plan ahead for entry rules and travel documents. U.S. Customs and Border Protection explains arrival rules and tips for international visitors on its site: https://www.cbp.gov/travel/international-visitors/know-before-you-go.
- Students, workers, and other visa holders who route through a U.S. hub before reaching Huntsville should review entry requirements well before departure to avoid delays.
- While HSV’s commercial schedule centers on domestic flights, its added feeds into large hubs can save time and cut stress for cross-border trips.
Recent monthly and annual figures
The strong summer came with clear, measurable gains across the calendar:
Period | Passengers | Year-over-year change |
---|---|---|
May 2025 | 156,967 | up 5.5% |
June 2025 | 160,455 | up 9.1% |
July 2025 | 168,281 | up 16.7% |
YTD 2025 | 991,320 | up 6.5% |
The airport’s recent performance builds on back-to-back annual records:
- 2023: 1,473,629 passengers
- 2024: 1,635,589 passengers
Huntsville International Airport is now tracking to top both, with more route news set for late 2025 and early 2026.
Policy support and incentives
Policy support has helped growth. A January 2025 memorandum of understanding with Breeze Airways provides:
- $10,000 per month for maintaining a minimum level of service
- Up to $20,000 per month when the carrier adds destinations
- The deal runs for 24 months, with a possible one-year extension
- It aims to bring at least six new direct nonstops and more than 384 additional flights each year
City officials say the approach has already widened options and pushed fares down.
Traveler tips for busy periods
- Book early for peak days; high-demand morning and evening flights fill quickly.
- Compare HSV fares with nearby airports, but factor in added time, fuel, and parking for long drives.
- If you travel often, consider TSA PreCheck or Global Entry to reduce screening time at large hubs.
- Arrive early for departures during morning bank times, when many flights leave within short windows.
Allegiant’s new routes should add more leisure choices through spring 2026, while the daily Orlando service and Los Angeles nonstop from Breeze bolster both family travel and business trips. Added frequencies from Delta and American mean more same-day connection options and better odds of rebooking if weather or air traffic delays hit.
What this means going forward
Airport leaders tie the record summer to a cycle of local behavior and airline planning:
- Residents book local flights.
- Carriers add flights and larger aircraft.
- Improved service attracts more bookings back to the home airport.
That cycle can accelerate terminal expansions, parking projects, and new concessions. In short, the airport’s strongest case to airlines is in the boarding count—and July 2025 delivered that in the clearest terms yet.
Huntsville International Airport’s busiest month ever is not only a headline; it’s a sign of a maturing air market. With steady resident support, targeted carrier incentives, and a plan to upgrade facilities, HSV is turning short-term spikes into durable growth. For a region that hosts major federal work, space programs, and a rising tech scene, air links matter—this summer showed what happens when those links get stronger, one full flight at a time.
This Article in a Nutshell
In July 2025 HSV handled 168,281 passengers (up 16.7%), driving YTD totals to 991,320 (up 6.5%). Expanded routes, larger aircraft and airport upgrades improved connectivity and lowered fares, putting Huntsville on track to surpass its 2024 annual record.