(TORONTO, ONTARIO, CANADA) Airports Council International (ACI) World has released new ACI World guidelines for airport concession agreements amid record air travel, seeking to bring common rules and clear steps to a market that now spans more than 90 countries. Unveiled during the 2025 ACI North America and ACI World Annual General Assembly in Toronto, the guidance sets out how airports and private partners should prepare, negotiate, and manage deals from early studies to day‑to‑day execution. ACI says the guidance is built to make risk identification and management central to every stage of these public‑private partnerships.
ACI reports it represents 830 members operating 2,181 airports worldwide. By ACI’s count, more than 850 airports in over 90 countries already involve some type of PPP structure, and 132 airport PPP transactions are now in various stages. Those figures place serious weight on how airport concession agreements are designed and monitored, especially as passenger demand keeps growing and airports race to add capacity, improve service, and shore up non‑aeronautical revenue.

The new guidance arrives as many governments face budget limits while travelers expect faster lines, cleaner terminals, and better retail and food options. Airport concession agreements—deals that grant a private party the right to finance, build, operate, or maintain airport assets—are one of the main ways to bring in private capital and expertise. According to analysis by VisaVerge.com, the mix of public oversight and private investment has become a key tool for modernizing terminals, adding gates, and improving customer experience without placing all the cost on taxpayers.
What the ACI World guidelines cover
ACI says the document walks readers through every stage, from feasibility and project scoping to procurement, contract design, financing, and performance oversight. The aim is to provide practical steps for planning and running a concession, plus tools for spotting risks early—like cost overruns, demand shortfalls, funding gaps, legal disputes, or service problems—and then setting fair ways to handle them.
The guidelines are designed for a wide group of stakeholders. ACI lists:
– Advisers and technical consultants
– Concessionaires and operators
– Governments and grantors
– Investors and lenders
Key focuses in the guidance:
– Clear tender documents and transparent evaluation methods
– Balanced risk sharing and realistic timelines for approvals and construction
– Robust performance targets and aligned incentives to keep safety, service quality, and long‑term upkeep at the forefront
– Tools for early risk mapping and mitigation
The guidance emphasizes aligning incentives so both airport owners and private partners focus on long-term service and safety rather than short-term gains.
Why airport concession agreements matter for travelers, workers, communities, and investors
Airport PPPs affect daily life in multiple ways:
- For travelers:
- Shorter waits and more reliable flights from improved infrastructure
- Wider choice of shops and services
- Benefits when contracts include simple, measurable service targets (e.g., restroom cleaning frequency or response times for equipment failures)
- For workers:
- Predictable contract terms that support stable staffing plans, training pathways, and safety commitments
- For local communities:
- Opportunities for local hiring, small-business participation, and enforceable rules on noise, emissions, and community benefits
- For investors and lenders:
- Predictable cash flows via clear step‑down schedules for fees, balanced revenue‑sharing formulas, and periodic review clauses
- Improved bankability without placing all risk on either party
The guidance encourages governments and grantors to undertake:
– Early market sounding
– Realistic timelines
– Independent value‑for‑money checks before launching tenders
For concessionaires, the document outlines expectations on operations, workforce, and maintenance to ensure bid promises match delivery capacity.
Global context and practical safeguards
ACI notes the global reach of PPPs: 850+ airports with private participation and 132 transactions underway indicate this market is mainstream. As projects multiply across Latin America, Europe, Africa, Asia, the Middle East, and North America, consistent contract language and sound risk allocation become increasingly important.
Practical financial and operational safeguards highlighted include:
– Step‑in rights
– Maintenance reserves
– Transparent reporting
– Periodic reviews and flexible clauses for shocks (traffic swings, supply chain issues, tech upgrades)
The release in Canada 🇨🇦 highlights the country’s active role in airport management reform, and the guidance resonates with U.S. policy where the federal FAA Airport Investment Partnership Program (AIPP) provides a PPP participation framework. Readers can review the U.S. policy baseline at the Federal Aviation Administration’s page: FAA Airport Investment Partnership Program (AIPP).
While rules vary by country, many share core themes: keep safety and security public, set clear service standards, manage debt prudently, and ensure fair competition in procurement.
Risks, benefits, and practical advice for stakeholders
Important warnings and considerations:
– A rushed or unbalanced deal can lead to stalled construction, higher fees, or service declines.
– Speed without structure may create costly problems later; early risk mapping and clear performance metrics are key to avoiding these pitfalls.
Practical advice ACI offers to stakeholders:
1. Do thorough due diligence on demand forecasts, construction risk, and regulatory oversight.
2. Align projects with community needs early to secure local support.
3. Build in flexible clauses to handle shocks such as traffic swings, supply chain disruptions, or technology changes.
4. Use realistic service targets and workforce provisions to protect employees and maintain continuity.
Benefits for passengers, employees, and small businesses
For passengers, well‑structured concessions can deliver:
– Brighter terminals, better wayfinding, and reliable assistance for families, seniors, and travelers with disabilities.
For employees and unions:
– Value from clear labor terms, safety protocols, and training standards embedded in contracts, which protect jobs and ensure performance during transitions.
For small businesses:
– Opportunities through transparent tendering for retail and service contracts.
Conclusion and next steps
ACI encourages interested parties to review the full guidance through its official publications as part of a broader effort to grow commercial revenue and improve passenger experience via well‑structured concessions. By centering airport concession agreements within a strong PPP framework, the ACI World guidelines aim to provide a shared language and practical tools so projects are safer, faster to deliver, and fairer over the long term.
This Article in a Nutshell
Airports Council International (ACI) World released new guidelines at its 2025 assembly in Toronto to standardize airport concession agreements across more than 90 countries. The guidance covers the full concession lifecycle: feasibility, procurement, contract drafting, financing, and performance oversight, emphasizing early risk identification and balanced risk allocation in public-private partnerships (PPPs). ACI notes it represents 830 members operating 2,181 airports and that over 850 airports already involve PPPs, with 132 transactions active. The guidance targets advisers, concessionaires, governments, investors, and lenders, promoting clear tender documents, realistic timelines, robust performance metrics, and financial safeguards like step-in rights and maintenance reserves. ACI aims to improve passenger experience, protect workers, enable local business participation, and enhance project bankability while urging careful due diligence, community alignment, and flexible contract clauses to manage shocks and demand swings.