Government to monitor airfares during year-end season

Colombia's national government has launched the Christmas Exodus Plan to ensure mobility during the year-end holidays, focusing on airfare monitoring and enhanced road inspections. It projects over 4 million vehicles and 3.28 million air passengers from December 19, 2025, to January 5, 2026.

The Ministry of Transport and the Transport Superintendency have activated the Christmas Exodus Plan, a key initiative to ensure national mobility safety and smoothness during the Christmas and New Year season. This addresses projections of high traffic: over 4 million vehicles are expected on the country's roads, while around 2.3 million people will use land terminals. In air travel, 3,280,652 passengers are projected between December 19, 2025, and January 5, 2026, with 1,986,742 on domestic flights and 1,293,910 on international ones.

Transport Minister María Fernanda Rojas highlighted the plan's significance: “When we talk about millions of vehicles and millions of passengers moving at the same time, we're talking about millions of lives that the State has the obligation to protect. The Exodus and Return Plan is a national priority”.

A particular focus is airfare monitoring. Minister Rojas urged airlines to respect the current tariff ceiling and avoid unjustified ticket price increases during the holidays. The Ministry and Superintendency will conduct ongoing market surveillance to safeguard user rights, promote equity, and prevent abusive practices amid peak demand.

Additionally, inspections and controls will be intensified under the Exodus Plan and the Life Route strategy. This includes surprise visits to transport companies and vehicles to prevent accidents. For instance, the Superintendency will inspect Precoltur, linked to a bus in a December 14 incident, due to irregularity reports. Rojas reaffirmed the government's commitment: “A vehicle not in condition cannot be on the road. Road safety cannot be a paperwork formality. When there are signs of irregularities, the State must act”.

These measures are grounded in a zero-tolerance principle for life-endangering behaviors, aligned with goals of safe and responsible mobility.

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Indonesian traffic police enforcing ban on three-axle trucks at toll road checkpoint during Christmas holidays, ensuring smooth and safe travel.
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Indonesian traffic corps bans three-axle vehicles from toll roads during holidays

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Indonesia's Traffic Corps (Korlantas) Polri has banned three-axle vehicles from using toll roads during the Christmas 2025 and New Year 2026 period. The policy follows a Joint Ministerial Decree (SKB) and cross-agency coordination. The main focus is on public safety and smooth travel.

Bogotá's Mobility Secretariat reported that over 586,433 vehicles have left the city since Friday, January 9, 2026, for the Reyes holiday bridge. Meanwhile, 609,484 vehicles have entered via access roads. To ease the return, regional pico y placa will apply on Monday, January 12.

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President Gustavo Petro endorsed the Ministry of Transport's proposal for airlines to self-regulate ticket prices during the year-end season. Minister María Fernanda Rojas asked the Aeronáutica Civil to enforce this amid expected high demand. However, Iata's Colombia manager, Paola Bernal, attributes high prices to elevated taxes and fees.

Colombia's Ministry of Mines and Energy issued Decree 1428 of 2025 to exclude private, diplomatic, and official vehicles from the diesel subsidy under the Fuel Price Stabilization Fund (FEPC). The move aims to correct distortions in subsidy use and safeguard public finances, with gradual implementation in ten departments. Public transport for cargo and passengers remains exempt to prevent effects on food prices and transportation costs.

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The National Tax and Customs Directorate (DIAN) ramped up inspections in free trade zones, airports, and border crossings during the year-end season, leading to the seizure of goods worth over $15 billion. These efforts focused on ensuring compliance with regulations for free trade zone operations and the legal movement of money by international travelers. The checks covered multiple cities and key entry and exit points across the country.

Argentine authorities have implemented new safety measures and payment conveniences to boost tourism on the Atlantic Coast for summer 2026. Radars have been installed on key routes and additional options for the SUBE system activated, while experts forecast hotel occupancy higher than projected.

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Following Decree 1428 of 2025's announcement to end diesel subsidies for private, diplomatic, and official vehicles—raising prices by ~$3,000 while sparing public transport—service stations in affected regions raise operational issues amid the Colombian government's FEPC reforms.

 

 

 

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