Airports of Thailand PCL
SET:AOT
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Airports of Thailand PCL
SET:AOT
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Airports of Thailand PCL
Airports of Thailand PCL runs six major airports in Thailand, including the country’s main gateways for international and domestic air travel. It handles the core airport job: landing slots, terminals, baggage systems, passenger processing, runways, and airport security coordination. In simple terms, AOT is the landlord and manager of the airports, not the airline that flies the planes. The company earns money from airlines, passengers, and the businesses inside its airports. Its biggest sources are landing and passenger service fees charged to airlines, plus rent and revenue-sharing from shops, restaurants, duty-free operators, parking, and other airport concessions. That means AOT sits at an important point in the travel chain and benefits whenever people and goods move through Thailand’s main airports. Its business is different from an airline or a travel retailer because it does not sell tickets or products directly to consumers. Instead, it owns and manages essential airport infrastructure that many different airlines and tenants must use to reach travelers. This makes AOT a toll-collector and property manager for air traffic, with revenue tied to airport usage and commercial activity inside the terminals.
Airports of Thailand PCL runs six major airports in Thailand, including the country’s main gateways for international and domestic air travel. It handles the core airport job: landing slots, terminals, baggage systems, passenger processing, runways, and airport security coordination. In simple terms, AOT is the landlord and manager of the airports, not the airline that flies the planes.
The company earns money from airlines, passengers, and the businesses inside its airports. Its biggest sources are landing and passenger service fees charged to airlines, plus rent and revenue-sharing from shops, restaurants, duty-free operators, parking, and other airport concessions. That means AOT sits at an important point in the travel chain and benefits whenever people and goods move through Thailand’s main airports.
Its business is different from an airline or a travel retailer because it does not sell tickets or products directly to consumers. Instead, it owns and manages essential airport infrastructure that many different airlines and tenants must use to reach travelers. This makes AOT a toll-collector and property manager for air traffic, with revenue tied to airport usage and commercial activity inside the terminals.