Global Aircraft Interface Device Market Trends and Insights
Digitized flight operations elevate demand for AIDs
Airlines have replaced paper charts and performance calculations with fully digital processes dependent on secure, high-capacity data bridges. Certified tablet interface modules like Collins Aerospace’s InteliSight suite stream real-time avionics data to cloud analytics platforms for flight-crew decision support. Predictive-maintenance dashboards now draw directly from onboard sensors, increasing the required processing power of each interface device. Airbus’s company-wide mandate for electronic flight bag usage accelerated global demand for certified gateways connecting legacy aircraft networks to modern apps. Operators also integrate these devices to comply with emerging performance-based navigation rules and real-time flight tracking initiatives.Expansion of real-time aircraft health-monitoring and predictive-maintenance ecosystems
Edge-based computing capabilities inside modern AIDs filter and compress raw data before transmission to ground servers, reducing bandwidth costs while preserving diagnostic fidelity. Aireon’s space-based ADS-B data stream combines with Boeing’s analytics platform to monitor flight parameters beyond traditional maintenance limits, underscoring the strategic role of interface gateways in fleet-wide health programs. Astronics has responded with Smart Aircraft Interface Devices, integrating server and router functionality, incorporating Federal Information Processing Standards-level encryption to protect sensitive telemetry.Escalating cybersecurity compliance burden
DO-326A and DO-356A standards add rigorous design, verification, and penetration-testing steps that can extend certification schedules by over a year. The FAA’s Aircraft Network Security Program requires operators of connected aircraft to document threat models and mitigation strategies before receiving approvals, raising development costs for smaller suppliers. European research consortia such as AIDA are prototyping AI-driven cyber agents to monitor avionics networks in real time, reflecting the rapidly expanding scope of required defensive capabilities.Other drivers and restraints analyzed in the detailed report include:
- Military ISR platforms require high-speed data exfiltration
- Adoption of open-architecture avionics standards
- Supply-chain volatility in multi-protocol data-bus components
Segment Analysis
Retrofit programs are outpacing new-build deliveries with a 14.12% CAGR through 2031, even though line-fit options still held 49.89% of the aircraft interface device market share in 2025. Airlines view cockpit upgrade packages as a cost-effective alternative to new airframes, particularly for regional and business jets approaching mid-life checks. Collins Aerospace offers Pro Line Fusion conversions that deliver synthetic vision and advanced flight-management functions while satisfying next-generation airspace mandates. Regulatory ADS-B and FANS 1/A requirements further stimulate retrofit demand across every continent.Line-fit retains scale advantage because OEMs embed gateways during assembly, avoiding additional downtime and ensuring tight integration with other avionics suites. Yet delivery backlogs push operators toward immediate capability gains through retrofit, reinforcing the long-term growth advantage in that channel. The aircraft interface device market size for retrofit solutions is forecast to approach USD 225.6 million by 2031, underscoring how modernization schedules and certification paths shape buyer behavior.
Wired networks dominated with 65.22% revenue in 2025, benefitting from deterministic latency and proven electromagnetic compatibility. Nevertheless, wireless AIDs are growing at 16.10% CAGR as airlines adopt multi-orbit satellite and 5G air-to-ground links. Delta’s selection of the Hughes Fusion platform, which can blend low-earth and geostationary bandwidth, illustrates how carriers expect seamless roaming across diverse networks.
Bombardier’s continental 5G roll-out highlights a shift toward terrestrial links for high-density routes. Wireless gateways handle traffic prioritization, encryption, and antenna handovers that used to require multiple discrete boxes. Certification hurdles slow adoption for safety-critical applications, so wired backbones will remain essential inside fly-by-wire and navigation domains. The aircraft interface device market size attached to wireless solutions is projected to expand at double-digit rates through 2031, matching passenger demand for uninterrupted broadband.
Complete Report Scope:
- By Fit
- Line Fit
- Retrofit
- By Connectivity
- Wired
- Wireless
- By Platform
- Hardware
- Software
- By Aircraft Type
- Commercial
- Narrowbody Aircraft
- Widebody Aircraft
- Regional Jets
- Military
- Combat
- Non-Combat
- General Aviation
- Business Jets
- Helicopters
- Unmanned Systems
- Commercial
- By Geography
- North America
- United States
- Canada
- Mexico
- Europe
- United Kingdom
- Germany
- France
- Italy
- Rest of Europe
- Asia-Pacific
- China
- Japan
- India
- South Korea
- Rest of Asia-Pacific
- South America
- Brazil
- Rest of South America
- Middle East and Africa
- Middle East
- United Arab Emirates
- Israel
- Rest of Middle East
- Africa
- South Africa
- Rest of Africa
- Middle East
- North America
Geography Analysis
North America led the aircraft interface device market with a 35.96% share in 2025, supported by large fleets, strict FAA connectivity mandates, and robust defense spending. Military modernization contracts such as the UH-60M avionics upgrade sustain high unit volumes and guarantee long-term support revenues. The region’s mature MRO ecosystem accelerates retrofit cycles, while the FAA’s roadmap for next-generation air-traffic management further stimulates demand for certified gateways.Asia-Pacific registers the strongest growth outlook, with a 13.25% CAGR to 2031. Expanding middle-class travel, rapid low-cost carrier fleet additions, and heightened regional security considerations drive commercial and military aircraft procurement. Recent multi-year modernization programs for Mi-17 rotary fleets showcase how operators across Southeast Asia and India prioritize glass-cockpit conversions that depend on advanced interface devices. National airworthiness authorities in Japan, China, and Australia now recognize standards such as DO-178C, making it easier for suppliers to transfer products across borders.
Europe maintains measured growth through joint defense initiatives and sustainability commitments that rely on granular flight-data analytics. EASA guidance harmonizes certification pathways, enabling coordinated adoption of open-architecture avionics. Corporate consolidation, highlighted by Thales’s acquisition of Cobham Aerospace Communications, enhances local supply resilience and competitive positioning. South America, the Middle East, and Africa remain early-stage yet attractive, especially for retrofit solutions that extend asset life while meeting evolving navigation mandates.
List of Companies Covered in this Report:
- Astronics Corporation
- Collins Aerospace (RTX Corporation)
- Teledyne Technologies Incorporated
- Honeywell International Inc.
- Thales Group
- SKYTRAC Systems Ltd.
- Elbit Systems Ltd.
- SCI Technology, Inc. (Sanmina Corporation)
- Avionics Interface Technologies (Teradyne, Inc.)
- Curtiss-Wright Corporation
- Anuvu Operations LLC
- The Boeing Company
- L3Harris Technologies, Inc.
- Garmin Ltd.
- Panasonic Avionics Corporation
- Lufthansa Technik AG
- Safran S.A.
Additional Benefits:
- The market estimate (ME) sheet in Excel format
- 3 months of analyst support
Table of Contents
Companies Mentioned (Partial List)
A selection of companies mentioned in this report includes, but is not limited to:
- Astronics Corporation
- Collins Aerospace (RTX Corporation)
- Teledyne Technologies Incorporated
- Honeywell International Inc.
- Thales Group
- SKYTRAC Systems Ltd.
- Elbit Systems Ltd.
- SCI Technology, Inc. (Sanmina Corporation)
- Avionics Interface Technologies (Teradyne, Inc.)
- Curtiss-Wright Corporation
- Anuvu Operations LLC
- The Boeing Company
- L3Harris Technologies, Inc.
- Garmin Ltd.
- Panasonic Avionics Corporation
- Lufthansa Technik AG
- Safran S.A.

