Why Airlines and Airports Must Embrace Observability Ahead of the Summer Travel Surge

NETSCOUT solutions for observability help the aviation industry meet passenger expectations.

Passenger airplane soaring into the sunset above the clouds

Air travel is entering another high-stakes summer, and early activity shows that global air passenger demand increased by 3.8 percent in January 2026 versus 2025. Ticket prices remain elevated due to rising fuel costs, demand is strong, and passengers, conditioned by years of disruption, are no longer willing to tolerate poor experiences. They check on-time flight performance, prioritizing reliability over convenience.  In this environment, even short-lived IT failures can cascade into operational chaos, reputational damage, and significant financial loss. Airlines and airports must adopt a new observability strategy, based on deep packet inspection (DPI), to prevent outages and dramatically reduce time to resolution when they do occur.

Airline Disruptions Over the Summer of 2025

There were several clear warnings over the course of summer travel in 2025. In one case, a systemwide IT outage forced a complete ground stop for a U.S. carrier for several hours. The root cause was a failure in a critical piece of third-party data center hardware, which disrupted key operational systems and led to more than 200 flight cancellations, affecting tens of thousands of passengers.

Just weeks later, another airline experienced a separate technology failure that disrupted hundreds of flights across the United States. A malfunction in a core system responsible for weight and balance calculations halted departures and created widespread delays across major hubs. 
These were not isolated incidents. Several multihour technology failures grounded flights and impacted passengers, flight crews, and support personnel. Collectively, these events point to deeper, symptomatic challenges of growing complexity across networks, applications, and infrastructure, combined with insufficient enterprisewide visibility.

The Visibility Gaps in End-to-End Observability

Airline and airport operations run on a highly interconnected ecosystem—reservation and crew systems, aircraft maintenance platforms, baggage handling, airport operations, and numerous third‑party services. When any disruption occurs, the impact is immediate and far‑reaching.

Airports add another layer of complexity managing internal systems such as ground operations, flight information displays, parking, and passenger Wi-Fi, while also depending on external entities such as air traffic control and government security systems. Many of these services rely on shared network infrastructure throughout the physical airport.

In this environment, outages are only part of the challenge. The larger issue is how long it takes IT teams to understand what, where, and why a disruption exists. Legacy monitoring tools often provide siloed or delayed insights. By the time an alert triggers, passengers are already stranded, gates are congested, and operations teams are scrambling in reactive troubleshooting mode.

The lack of immediate, end-to-end visibility extends outage durations and complicates root-cause identification. This is where observability, based on DPI at scale, becomes critical. Packet-based observability enables real-time visibility into every transaction across the network. Rather than guessing, IT teams can pinpoint failures down to the exact service, dependency, or infrastructure area, dramatically reducing mean time to resolution (MTTR) and turning hours of disruption into minutes of mitigation.

Broader Ecosystem Risks

The risk is not limited to airlines or the United States. Aviation infrastructure globally is equally vulnerable. In the UK, a summer 2025 air traffic control system failure triggered widespread disruption across major airports. Although the outage itself lasted only minutes, the downstream effects included more than 150 flight cancellations and hours of delays during peak travel season.

Separately, ongoing issues with digital border systems, including electronic passport gates, have highlighted how fragile passenger processing can be. When these systems fail, queues build instantly, missed connections increase, and airport capacity effectively collapses.

Together, these incidents highlight a critical reality: Aviation operates as a system-of-systems. A failure in any area, be it airline, airport, air traffic control, or border control, can snowball quickly and disrupt the entire journey.

The Business Impact Is More Than Just Delays

The financial consequences of outages extend far beyond the initial disruption. When failures are deemed controllable, airlines are often required to cover passenger expenses such as hotels, meals, and rebookings.

When failures do occur, airlines may be at risk for regulatory penalties, lost revenue from canceled flights, operational inefficiencies, and long-term brand damage. Historical data shows that major disruptions can cost airlines hundreds of millions of dollars once all factors are considered.

Perhaps most critically, customer trust erodes quickly. Travelers paying premium prices expect reliability and seamless experiences. Disruptions caused by weather or other external events are one thing. Delays resulting from “hardware failures” and “software glitches,” however, are viewed as avoidable and unacceptable.

Why DPI-Based Observability Is Now Essential

To meet these challenges, IT organizations in the aviation industry must move beyond siloed monitoring and adopt true end-to-end observability with network-level intelligence.

Packet-based observability delivers:

  • Real-time visibility across all infrastructure, applications, and critical dependencies
  • Rapid root-cause identification, even in complex, distributed environments
  • Early detection of emerging issues before they escalate into outages
  • End-to-end transaction insight from wherever the user is to where the applications are hosted

Milliseconds matter, and dependencies can span multiple organizations and geographies.

Meeting Passenger Expectations with NETSCOUT

The events of 2025 were not unusual. The question for the tea leaves is not “Will a network or application disruption occur in the summer of 2026?” It is “Exactly when and where will the disruptions will occur?”  As the summer travel season approaches, airlines and airports are operating in an environment where operational resilience and network uptime have become true competitive differentiators. With higher ticket prices and rising passenger expectations, preventable disruptions will not be tolerated.

NETSCOUT solutions for observability help airports and airlines protect their most critical business objectives. With end-to-end visibility across each essential business location and service, IT organizations can deliver service assurance that supports reliable operations and high-quality passenger experiences. Ecosystemwide insights enable aviation IT teams to resolve issues faster, avoid outages, and deliver the seamless journey experiences travelers expect.

Learn more about how NETSCOUT’s solutions for observability can help in your airline or airport environment.