A user on X has pointed out what many frequent flyers across Africa have long suspected but rarely proven. The user wrote, “International airlines using old airplanes for African flights. If you fly often, you’d notice it, it’s obvious. Dem no too rate us lol no wam.” The post, which has circulated widely, touches on a pattern that aviation data and passenger complaints consistently support.
The claim is substantially true. According to the International Air Transport Association, aircraft operating on routes to and within Africa are on average five years older than the global fleet average. Africa currently has the oldest commercial aircraft of any region, with an average age of 19 years, while Asia’s fleet averages just 12 years. The continent also accounts for only 2 percent of new aircraft orders worldwide, meaning the planes that fly to Africa are often hand me downs from more profitable routes.
International airlines
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Using old airplanes for African flightsIf you fly often, you’d notice it, it’s obvious. Dem no too rate us lol no wam.
— UG (@UgwunnaEjikem) April 27, 2026
Industry experts say the reason is not malice but commercial logic. Airlines are businesses that assign their newest, most fuel efficient, and most passenger friendly aircraft to the most competitive routes, where premium ticket sales justify the investment. African routes are often lower yield markets, meaning airlines send older, fully depreciated planes to maximise profit margins. Airport infrastructure also plays a role. Several airports across West and Central Africa cannot accommodate larger or newer aircraft models, such as the Airbus A380, due to runway length, taxiway width, or terminal constraints.
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There are notable exceptions. South Africa has begun to receive better treatment. Emirates recently made Johannesburg and Cape Town the first African destinations to receive its retrofitted Boeing 777 with upgraded interiors. A company representative said the airline’s commitment to bringing the latest products to the market is unwavering. But critics note that such upgrades have yet to reach most of West and Central Africa, leaving passengers there to wonder why they are paying the same fares for much older planes.
The X user ended the post with a resigned phrase, “no wam,” a Nigerian pidgin expression meaning no problem or no offense taken. Yet for many who fly in and out of the continent regularly, the observation remains an uncomfortable truth. The old airplane on the tarmac is not a coincidence. It is a quiet business decision, and until African airports modernise and passenger demand forces real competition, those older jets will keep arriving.

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