IndiGo soars, rivals bleed: Data shows India’s skies are a loss-making battlezone
As passengers continue to face widespread flight delays and cancellations following IndiGo’s operational collapse, new data tabled in the Lok Sabha has revealed an uncomfortable truth: most of India’s airlines are deep in the red.
According to a written reply from the Ministry of Civil Aviation, IndiGo was the only major carrier to turn a profit in 2024–25, reporting earnings of ₹7,253 crore. Every other significant airline posted losses.
Air India ended the year with a ₹3,976-crore deficit, Air India Express suffered a loss of ₹5,832 crore, Akasa Air reported ₹1,986 crore in losses, and Alliance Air reported ₹691 crore.
SpiceJet remained marginally negative at ₹56 crore, while Star Air stood out as a rare exception with a modest ₹68-crore profit.
The sector’s troubles are not new. In 2022–23, Indian airlines collectively lost more than ₹18,600 crore, with Air India accounting for over half that amount. IndiGo too was in the red that year, posting a ₹316-crore loss.
The following year brought a sharp rebound for the low-cost giant, which earned ₹8,167 crore in 2023–24, but most other carriers continued to struggle. Air India recorded losses of ₹4,444 crore, and SpiceJet ₹404 crore.
The numbers highlight a paradox gripping India’s aviation market: even as demand rises, airlines continue to lose money. Domestic passenger traffic grew 7.7% in 2024–25, reaching 16.55 crore flyers.
Yet high operating costs, heavy debt burdens, expensive fuel, and an intensely competitive fare environment have kept the sector largely unprofitable.
IndiGo’s overwhelming dominance, controlling nearly 65% of the domestic market, has magnified the disruptions caused by its recent meltdown.
With thousands of flights grounded due to crew shortages and stricter flight-duty regulations, passengers have found few alternatives.
Most competing airlines are either financially fragile or lack capacity to absorb the surge, resulting in overcrowded airports, spiking fares, and growing traveller frustration.
IBNS
Senior Staff Reporter at Northeast Herald, covering news from Tripura and Northeast India.
Related Articles

'Marital rape is violence, not conjugal rights': Shashi Tharoor moves bill to strip husbands of immunity
Kolkata/IBNS: Congress MP Shashi Tharoor has strongly criticised the legal provision that exempts husbands from India’s rape law as he introduced a private member’s bill in Parliament seeking its removal.

After US tariffs, Mexico hits India with 50 percent duties on key imports
Four months after the United States imposed steep 50 percent tariffs on most Indian goods, Mexico has now followed suit, approving duties of up to 50 percent on a wide range of imports from Asian countries, including India and China.

PM Modi, Donald Trump hold ‘warm’ call amid trade deal buzz, strained India-US ties
Amid growing speculation about a breakthrough on a long-pending trade deal, Prime Minister Narendra Modi and US President Donald Trump held a phone conversation on Thursday, reviewing the state of India–US ties and discussing ways to deepen cooperation across several strategic sectors.

Election Commission extends SIR deadline for five states, one UT; Bengal gets no extra time
New Delhi/IBNS: The Election Commission has extended the timeline for the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls in five states and a Union Territory (UT), even as political attention turns sharply toward poll-bound West Bengal, which did not receive any extension.
Latest News

Donald Trump unveils ‘Trump Gold Card’ visa to retain skilled global talent

CM warns CPIM-backed elements in local party for creating disturbances

Tripura Court jails three Bangladeshi nationals for Passport violations; three more arrested in Kamalpur

'Marital rape is violence, not conjugal rights': Shashi Tharoor moves bill to strip husbands of immunity

