Avianca Group International Limited
Airline group providing passenger air travel, cargo, and loyalty services
of 100 · improving trend · Some good traits but inconsistent
Standing
52/100
Raw Score
44/85
Confidence
60%
Evidence
Broad
About
Avianca shows a mixed institutional record: strong public value in regional connectivity, cargo and access, alongside meaningful governance and controversy concerns during crisis years. Its best evidence is recovery after Chapter 11, sustained transport access across Latin America, and documented social programs. Its clearest negative evidence is the 2020 executive-bonus controversy during furloughs and the contentious 2022-2023 Viva integration episode.
The observable record is constructive but inconsistent. Avianca repeatedly delivers public utility at scale and has rebuilt financial and operating strength, yet its crisis-era decisions reveal a willingness to protect institutional survival in ways that can strain trust and stakeholder confidence.
Five Pillars
Pillar scores (0–100%)
Avianca scores strongest on resilience and moderately well on social care because the public record shows survival through bankruptcy, renewed profitability, and real transport access for millions of people. It is held back by integrity concerns during crisis years, especially the 2020 bonus controversy and the market-power tension visible in the Viva integration process. The company presents a clear ethical and accountability framework in governance documents, but observable conduct shows that those commitments have not always been consistently stakeholder-first under pressure.
17 Criteria Scores
Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes
Core Worldview
Contribution to Others
Personal Discipline
Reliability
Stability Under Pressure
Timeline
Key events and documented turning points
Avianca's lineage begins with SCADTA
The current company traces its origins to 1919, when SCADTA was founded in Colombia. Avianca's current investor materials still present 1919 as the founding year and describe more than 105 years of operation.
→ This early start underpins Avianca's identity as one of the oldest airlines still operating through institutional continuity.
highSCADTA and SACO merge to form Avianca
Avianca's cargo-history materials identify June 14, 1940 as the formal constitution of Aerovias Nacionales de Colombia S.A. through the integration of SCADTA and SACO.
→ The merger created the institutional form that later evolved into the modern Avianca airline group.
highAvianca enters Chapter 11 restructuring
Avianca and affiliated entities filed voluntary Chapter 11 petitions in New York after the COVID-19 shock hit travel and grounded most passenger activity. The company framed the process as a way to preserve jobs, maintain connectivity, and continue operations while reorganizing.
→ The filing exposed deep financial fragility but kept the airline operating through a court-supervised restructuring.
highExecutive bonus payments draw criticism during furloughs and bankruptcy
Reuters reported that Avianca paid millions in bonuses to top executives during the pandemic period while much of the workforce had been furloughed without pay and the airline was in Chapter 11. The episode became a public trust and fairness controversy.
→ The controversy damaged the company's integrity signal during an already fragile crisis period.
highAvianca emerges from Chapter 11 with new capital and a redesigned model
Avianca announced it had completed restructuring after 18 months, with reduced debt, more than USD 1 billion in liquidity, and USD 1.7 billion in fresh investment commitments. The emergence marked a real recovery in institutional resilience rather than simple survival rhetoric.
→ The airline stabilized financially and moved into a more flexible, efficiency-focused operating model.
highAvianca abandons Viva integration after months of regulatory conflict
Avianca spent months arguing that integrating Viva would protect jobs, consumers, and connectivity, but the process became controversial and heavily scrutinized by regulators. After Aerocivil imposed conditions, Avianca said those terms made Viva's recovery impossible and could threaten Avianca's own stability, so it withdrew.
→ The failed integration attempt highlighted both Avianca's influence over the market and public concerns about competition and sector concentration.
highAvianca reports record route scale, access metrics, and social-impact programs
In its 2024 Corporate Responsibility Report and investor materials, Avianca reported 174 routes, 83 destinations in 28 countries, more than 37.7 million passengers, nearly 14,000 employees, and multiple social and environmental programs including donated miles, humanitarian cargo and accessibility work.
→ The company demonstrated large-scale delivery of transport access and some measurable social programs, though these do not erase earlier governance concerns.
highAvianca posts improved revenue and net income in audited 2025 statements
Avianca Group's audited 2025 financial statements reported USD 5.74 billion in operating revenue and USD 277.9 million in net income, up from USD 5.17 billion revenue and USD 128.2 million net income in 2024.
→ The results show a financially stronger company than in the immediate post-bankruptcy years.
mediumPressure Tests
Behavior under crisis or scrutiny
COVID-19 collapse and Chapter 11 filing
2020Avianca faced an existential collapse in passenger demand and entered Chapter 11 after a severe liquidity shock.
Response: The airline preserved operations through a court-supervised restructuring and later emerged with new capital, but stakeholder trust was strained by contemporaneous bonus decisions and furlough pain.
mixedExecutive-bonus backlash during furlough period
2020Public reporting showed large executive bonuses while many workers were furloughed and the company was in bankruptcy.
Response: Avianca defended the payments, but the episode left a fairness and integrity stain that still matters.
negativeViva Air integration battle
2023Avianca pursued integration with distressed rival Viva while regulators and critics raised concentration concerns.
Response: The company argued the deal would preserve jobs and connectivity, then withdrew when conditions threatened viability.
mixedPost-bankruptcy rebuilding and profitability
2024Avianca expanded routes, served tens of millions of passengers, and returned to stronger audited profitability.
Response: Management turned recovery into measurable operating delivery rather than symbolic stabilization.
positiveProgression
crisis years
The 2020-2023 period mixed existential financial stress, controversial executive decisions, and intense scrutiny over competitive behavior.
mixedcurrent stage
Avianca is now stronger operationally and financially, with broad reach and clearer governance processes, but still carries unresolved trust questions from crisis-era conduct.
upearly years
The institution's early identity was built around opening air transport in Colombia and establishing long-run national relevance.
upgrowth years
Avianca became a major regional carrier with broad network reach and strategic value in Colombia and Central America.
upBehavioral Patterns
Positive
- • Sustained role in connecting Colombia, Central America, and broader regional markets
- • Repeated use of the network for cargo, humanitarian transport, and accessibility initiatives
- • Documented ability to recover structurally after severe financial crisis
Concerns
- • Crisis-era executive compensation decisions undermined stakeholder confidence
- • Public justifications in major controversies sometimes read as more self-protective than self-corrective
- • Competition-sensitive moves can blur the line between sector stabilization and market dominance
Evidence Quality
10
Strong
3
Medium
0
Weak
Overall: broad
This profile evaluates observable institutional behavior and public evidence, not hidden intention.