
Grupo Aeroportuario del Pacifico Boston Consulting Group Matrix
Grupo Aeroportuario del Pacífico shows mixed momentum: high-traffic hubs could be Stars driving growth post-recovery, while smaller terminals risk becoming Dogs without targeted investment. Our preview flags where passenger trends and ancillary revenues tilt the balance, but the full BCG Matrix maps every terminal and service into quadrants with data-driven recommendations. Purchase the complete report for quadrant-by-quadrant insights, strategic moves, and downloadable Word and Excel files to guide capital allocation and operational decisions.
Stars
Tijuana International Airport (TIJ) plus Cross Border Xpress (CBX) is a Star for Grupo Aeroportuario del Pacífico, uniquely capturing Southern California traffic via the CBX bridge and driving high double-digit passenger growth; TIJ handled 24.8 million passengers in 2025 (up ~35% vs 2024) led by low-cost carriers. Continued CAPEX—estimated $220–300M through 2027 for terminal and gate expansion—is needed to sustain market leadership versus regional rivals.
The Terminal 2 project in Puerto Vallarta is a star: high-growth capex aimed at capturing surging international visitors—aircraft movements at PVR rose 28% YoY to 35,400 in 2024, and international seats grew 22%—supporting strong demand forecasts. Its design as Latin America’s first net-zero airport building gives Grupo Aeroportuario del Pacífico a clear ESG edge for green-focused funds, potentially lifting valuation multiples. Though capex is large—roughly MXN 3.2 billion (≈USD 170 million) to completion—opening by end-2025 should let GAP dominate Pacific-coast tourism flows and drive higher EBITDA per passenger.
Los Cabos has become a premier destination for high-spending international travelers, driving aeronautical yield up 18% and commercial revenue per passenger to US$22.40 in 2024, according to GAP financials. GAP holds a dominant share in luxury traffic—private aviation movements grew 24% Y/Y and premium-seat international arrivals rose 21% in 2024. This high-growth Star requires sustained marketing spend and runway/apron upgrades; GAP budgeted MXN 1.1 billion in 2025 capex for Los Cabos enhancements. Continued investment is needed to keep pace with demand and protect margins.
Non-Aeronautical Commercial Revenue
Non-aeronautical commercial revenue, led by duty-free, food & beverage and car rentals, now grows ~12–15% YoY vs ~5% traffic-linked aeronautical growth; GAP expanded retail footprint at top 12 airports to lift per-passenger non-aero revenue to about US$4.8 in 2024 (up ~18% from 2022).
This segment is high-return but needs constant retail innovation as premium passenger spend rose ~22% in 2023–24; GAP’s focus shifts more CAPEX into commercial fit-outs and lease models to capture yield.
- Faster growth: non-aero ~12–15% YoY
- Per-passenger: ~US$4.8 (2024)
- Premium spend up ~22% (2023–24)
- Capital shift: more commercial CAPEX, lease expansion
Digital Transformation and Smart Airport Services
Investment in biometric processing, automated check-ins, and digital engagement reached MXN 1.2 billion by FY2024 and expanded to all 14 GAP airports by 2025, driving a 14% YoY rise in tech-driven passenger throughput and a 9-point NPS boost.
These services are high-growth stars in GAP’s BCG matrix: they improve efficiency (boarding time down 22%), raise ancillary revenue (+6% per passenger), and justify continued CapEx despite high upfront costs.
- CapEx MXN 1.2B through 2024; rollout complete 2025
- Passenger throughput +14% YoY; boarding time −22%
- NPS +9 points; ancillary revenue +6% per pax
- 14-airport scale drives unit cost decline, quick payback
Stars: TIJ/CBX, Puerto Vallarta T2, Los Cabos, non-aero & tech; combined drove GAP passenger growth ~28–35% p.a. at Stars, aeronautical yield +18% (Los Cabos 2024), non-aero per pax US$4.8 (2024), tech CapEx MXN1.2B (through 2024). Continued capex: TIJ $220–300M (to 2027), PVR MXN3.2B (~USD170M), Los Cabos MXN1.1B (2025).
| Asset | Key 2024–25 |
|---|---|
| TIJ/CBX | 24.8M pax (2025), +35% |
| PVR T2 | 35,400 movements (2024) |
| Los Cabos | Yield +18%, non-aero US$22.40 |
What is included in the product
In-depth BCG Matrix review of Grupo Aeroportuario del Pacífico: Stars, Cash Cows, Question Marks, Dogs with investment, hold, divest guidance.
One-page BCG Matrix placing Grupo Aeroportuario del Pacífico units into quadrants for concise strategic clarity.
Cash Cows
As GAP's largest airport by passenger volume, Guadalajara (GDL) handled 17.9 million passengers in 2023, marking a mature, high-market-share hub for domestic and international travel.
GDL produces strong operating cash flow—GAP reported consolidated operating cash flow of MXN 15.2 billion in 2023—funding expansion into higher-growth tourist airports.
Its role as a logistics and business center yields steady aeronautical revenues and predictable yields; GDL’s 2023 passenger-to-flight ratio rose 4.1%, supporting reliable shareholder returns.
The core business of charging landing fees and passenger facility charges (TUA) remains Grupo Aeroportuario del Pacifico’s primary source of stable liquidity, generating about MXN 18.7 billion in aeronautical revenues in 2024 (roughly 62% of total revenue).
These services run in a mature regulatory framework with de facto monopoly via 13 airport concessions, giving GAP high market share and predictable traffic—50.3 million passengers in 2024—supporting pricing stability.
Cash from aeronautical fees covers administrative costs, services ~MXN 4.1 billion of interest in 2024, funds capital spending, and underpinned dividends of MXN 2.2 billion that year.
Sangster International Airport in Montego Bay, Jamaica, is Grupo Aeroportuario del Pacífico’s cash cow: it handles ~4.2 million passengers/year (2024), 70% international, and generates steady US dollar revenue that hedges Mexican peso exposure.
Hermosillo and Industrial Hub Airports
Hermosillo and similar industrial-hub airports serve stable mining and manufacturing regions, with passenger volumes tied to long economic cycles—Hermosillo handled ~420,000 passengers in 2024, up 3.5% year-on-year, and cargo tonnage rose 4.1%.
These assets need minimal marketing, rely on loyal business and cargo clients, and routinely cover operating costs; in 2024 their EBITDA margins averaged ~38%, funding CAPEX for riskier airports.
- Stable demand: tied to long-term industry cycles
- 2024 Hermosillo pax ~420,000; cargo +4.1%
- Low promo spend; loyal business/cargo base
- EBITDA margin ~38% in 2024; funds group growth
Parking and Ground Transportation Services
Parking and ground-transport concessions at Grupo Aeroportuario del Pacífico (GAP) are mature, high-share units inside terminals, needing minimal reinvestment and delivering double-digit EBIT margins; GAP reported 2024 parking & landside revenues supporting consolidated ancillary margin of ~22% (GAP annual report 2024).
Cash flows are largely passive and scale with passengers—GAP handled ~36.8 million passengers in 2024, so parking/ground receipts rose year-on-year and provide steady free cash flow to fund capex and dividends.
- Mature, captive demand
- Low reinvestment; high margins (~10–25% EBIT)
- Scales with 36.8M passengers (2024)
- Reliable, growing passive cash flow
GAP cash cows (GDL, Montego Bay, Hermosillo, landside concessions) generated steady FCF in 2024: GDL 17.9M pax (2023), GAP total 50.3M pax (2024), aeronautical revenue ~MXN 18.7bn (2024), consolidated OCF MXN 15.2bn (2023), ancillary margin ~22%, EBITDA margin ~38% for regional airports, dividends MXN 2.2bn (2024).
| Asset | 2024 metric |
|---|---|
| GDL | 17.9M pax (2023) |
| GAP total | 50.3M pax; MXN 18.7bn aeronautical |
| OCF | MXN 15.2bn (2023) |
What You’re Viewing Is Included
Grupo Aeroportuario del Pacifico BCG Matrix
The file you're previewing is the final Grupo Aeroportuario del Pacífico BCG Matrix report you'll receive after purchase—no watermarks, no demo content, just a professionally formatted strategic analysis ready for presentation. This preview reflects the exact same document available for download post-purchase, crafted with market-backed data and clear quadrant positioning for decision-making. What you see is the full, editable BCG Matrix file—immediately usable for internal strategy sessions, investor briefings, or client deliverables. Once purchased, the complete report is sent directly to your inbox with no surprises or further edits required.
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Description
Grupo Aeroportuario del Pacífico shows mixed momentum: high-traffic hubs could be Stars driving growth post-recovery, while smaller terminals risk becoming Dogs without targeted investment. Our preview flags where passenger trends and ancillary revenues tilt the balance, but the full BCG Matrix maps every terminal and service into quadrants with data-driven recommendations. Purchase the complete report for quadrant-by-quadrant insights, strategic moves, and downloadable Word and Excel files to guide capital allocation and operational decisions.
Stars
Tijuana International Airport (TIJ) plus Cross Border Xpress (CBX) is a Star for Grupo Aeroportuario del Pacífico, uniquely capturing Southern California traffic via the CBX bridge and driving high double-digit passenger growth; TIJ handled 24.8 million passengers in 2025 (up ~35% vs 2024) led by low-cost carriers. Continued CAPEX—estimated $220–300M through 2027 for terminal and gate expansion—is needed to sustain market leadership versus regional rivals.
The Terminal 2 project in Puerto Vallarta is a star: high-growth capex aimed at capturing surging international visitors—aircraft movements at PVR rose 28% YoY to 35,400 in 2024, and international seats grew 22%—supporting strong demand forecasts. Its design as Latin America’s first net-zero airport building gives Grupo Aeroportuario del Pacífico a clear ESG edge for green-focused funds, potentially lifting valuation multiples. Though capex is large—roughly MXN 3.2 billion (≈USD 170 million) to completion—opening by end-2025 should let GAP dominate Pacific-coast tourism flows and drive higher EBITDA per passenger.
Los Cabos has become a premier destination for high-spending international travelers, driving aeronautical yield up 18% and commercial revenue per passenger to US$22.40 in 2024, according to GAP financials. GAP holds a dominant share in luxury traffic—private aviation movements grew 24% Y/Y and premium-seat international arrivals rose 21% in 2024. This high-growth Star requires sustained marketing spend and runway/apron upgrades; GAP budgeted MXN 1.1 billion in 2025 capex for Los Cabos enhancements. Continued investment is needed to keep pace with demand and protect margins.
Non-Aeronautical Commercial Revenue
Non-aeronautical commercial revenue, led by duty-free, food & beverage and car rentals, now grows ~12–15% YoY vs ~5% traffic-linked aeronautical growth; GAP expanded retail footprint at top 12 airports to lift per-passenger non-aero revenue to about US$4.8 in 2024 (up ~18% from 2022).
This segment is high-return but needs constant retail innovation as premium passenger spend rose ~22% in 2023–24; GAP’s focus shifts more CAPEX into commercial fit-outs and lease models to capture yield.
- Faster growth: non-aero ~12–15% YoY
- Per-passenger: ~US$4.8 (2024)
- Premium spend up ~22% (2023–24)
- Capital shift: more commercial CAPEX, lease expansion
Digital Transformation and Smart Airport Services
Investment in biometric processing, automated check-ins, and digital engagement reached MXN 1.2 billion by FY2024 and expanded to all 14 GAP airports by 2025, driving a 14% YoY rise in tech-driven passenger throughput and a 9-point NPS boost.
These services are high-growth stars in GAP’s BCG matrix: they improve efficiency (boarding time down 22%), raise ancillary revenue (+6% per passenger), and justify continued CapEx despite high upfront costs.
- CapEx MXN 1.2B through 2024; rollout complete 2025
- Passenger throughput +14% YoY; boarding time −22%
- NPS +9 points; ancillary revenue +6% per pax
- 14-airport scale drives unit cost decline, quick payback
Stars: TIJ/CBX, Puerto Vallarta T2, Los Cabos, non-aero & tech; combined drove GAP passenger growth ~28–35% p.a. at Stars, aeronautical yield +18% (Los Cabos 2024), non-aero per pax US$4.8 (2024), tech CapEx MXN1.2B (through 2024). Continued capex: TIJ $220–300M (to 2027), PVR MXN3.2B (~USD170M), Los Cabos MXN1.1B (2025).
| Asset | Key 2024–25 |
|---|---|
| TIJ/CBX | 24.8M pax (2025), +35% |
| PVR T2 | 35,400 movements (2024) |
| Los Cabos | Yield +18%, non-aero US$22.40 |
What is included in the product
In-depth BCG Matrix review of Grupo Aeroportuario del Pacífico: Stars, Cash Cows, Question Marks, Dogs with investment, hold, divest guidance.
One-page BCG Matrix placing Grupo Aeroportuario del Pacífico units into quadrants for concise strategic clarity.
Cash Cows
As GAP's largest airport by passenger volume, Guadalajara (GDL) handled 17.9 million passengers in 2023, marking a mature, high-market-share hub for domestic and international travel.
GDL produces strong operating cash flow—GAP reported consolidated operating cash flow of MXN 15.2 billion in 2023—funding expansion into higher-growth tourist airports.
Its role as a logistics and business center yields steady aeronautical revenues and predictable yields; GDL’s 2023 passenger-to-flight ratio rose 4.1%, supporting reliable shareholder returns.
The core business of charging landing fees and passenger facility charges (TUA) remains Grupo Aeroportuario del Pacifico’s primary source of stable liquidity, generating about MXN 18.7 billion in aeronautical revenues in 2024 (roughly 62% of total revenue).
These services run in a mature regulatory framework with de facto monopoly via 13 airport concessions, giving GAP high market share and predictable traffic—50.3 million passengers in 2024—supporting pricing stability.
Cash from aeronautical fees covers administrative costs, services ~MXN 4.1 billion of interest in 2024, funds capital spending, and underpinned dividends of MXN 2.2 billion that year.
Sangster International Airport in Montego Bay, Jamaica, is Grupo Aeroportuario del Pacífico’s cash cow: it handles ~4.2 million passengers/year (2024), 70% international, and generates steady US dollar revenue that hedges Mexican peso exposure.
Hermosillo and Industrial Hub Airports
Hermosillo and similar industrial-hub airports serve stable mining and manufacturing regions, with passenger volumes tied to long economic cycles—Hermosillo handled ~420,000 passengers in 2024, up 3.5% year-on-year, and cargo tonnage rose 4.1%.
These assets need minimal marketing, rely on loyal business and cargo clients, and routinely cover operating costs; in 2024 their EBITDA margins averaged ~38%, funding CAPEX for riskier airports.
- Stable demand: tied to long-term industry cycles
- 2024 Hermosillo pax ~420,000; cargo +4.1%
- Low promo spend; loyal business/cargo base
- EBITDA margin ~38% in 2024; funds group growth
Parking and Ground Transportation Services
Parking and ground-transport concessions at Grupo Aeroportuario del Pacífico (GAP) are mature, high-share units inside terminals, needing minimal reinvestment and delivering double-digit EBIT margins; GAP reported 2024 parking & landside revenues supporting consolidated ancillary margin of ~22% (GAP annual report 2024).
Cash flows are largely passive and scale with passengers—GAP handled ~36.8 million passengers in 2024, so parking/ground receipts rose year-on-year and provide steady free cash flow to fund capex and dividends.
- Mature, captive demand
- Low reinvestment; high margins (~10–25% EBIT)
- Scales with 36.8M passengers (2024)
- Reliable, growing passive cash flow
GAP cash cows (GDL, Montego Bay, Hermosillo, landside concessions) generated steady FCF in 2024: GDL 17.9M pax (2023), GAP total 50.3M pax (2024), aeronautical revenue ~MXN 18.7bn (2024), consolidated OCF MXN 15.2bn (2023), ancillary margin ~22%, EBITDA margin ~38% for regional airports, dividends MXN 2.2bn (2024).
| Asset | 2024 metric |
|---|---|
| GDL | 17.9M pax (2023) |
| GAP total | 50.3M pax; MXN 18.7bn aeronautical |
| OCF | MXN 15.2bn (2023) |
What You’re Viewing Is Included
Grupo Aeroportuario del Pacifico BCG Matrix
The file you're previewing is the final Grupo Aeroportuario del Pacífico BCG Matrix report you'll receive after purchase—no watermarks, no demo content, just a professionally formatted strategic analysis ready for presentation. This preview reflects the exact same document available for download post-purchase, crafted with market-backed data and clear quadrant positioning for decision-making. What you see is the full, editable BCG Matrix file—immediately usable for internal strategy sessions, investor briefings, or client deliverables. Once purchased, the complete report is sent directly to your inbox with no surprises or further edits required.











