While international aviation hubs traditionally invest millions in custom proprietary apps and flashing digital kiosks, El Salvador International Airport (Aeropuerto Internacional de El Salvador San Óscar Arnulfo Romero y Galdámez) is quietly pulling off a masterclass in digital accessibility.
Managed by the Autonomous Port Executive Commission (CEPA), the airport has officially launched a centralized, dedicated support system utilizing the world’s most ubiquitous messaging platform: WhatsApp (+503 7070 8312).
What looks on the surface like a practical customer service update is being closely watched by global TravelTech and digital inclusion experts. By leveraging existing, consumer-facing infrastructure rather than demanding travellers learn a new, siloed interface, El Salvador is pioneering a low-barrier design philosophy that significantly lowers hurdles for passengers with disabilities.
Why universal tech is accessible tech
In the realm of digital accessibility, a common mistake for major transit networks is building custom mobile applications. These apps often require strong cellular signals, hefty storage memory, and high technological literacy. But by migrating its real-time customer support entirely to WhatsApp, El Salvador addresses several major digital accessibility friction points simultaneously:
- Native Screen-Reader Optimization:WhatsApp is built to integrate seamlessly with native iOS and Android accessibility tools, such as VoiceOver and TalkBack. Blind and low sighted passengers do not have to struggle with unlabelled buttons or poorly coded custom app layouts, they can navigate flight schedules, terminal layouts, and lost-and-found queries using an environment they already know intimately
- Asynchronous communication for the neurodivergent: Busy airport terminals are high-stress environments. Loud loudspeaker announcements and crowded physical information desks can cause sensory overload for neurodiverse travellers or individuals with anxiety. Text-based, asynchronous chat allows passengers to ask questions, process answers at their own pace, and re-read directions without the pressure of a real-time spoken conversation
- Deaf and hard–of-hearing: Traditional airport help lines depend heavily on audio-based phone centres or intercoms at assistance pillars. A secure text-based channel entirely democratizes help line access, giving the Deaf and hard-of-hearing community direct parity with other travellers.
Overcoming Infrastructure Hurdles
The shift to a decentralized, digital-first communication infrastructure comes at a critical operational juncture for El Salvador. In the last year alone, El Salvador International Airport managed a record-breaking 5.2 million passengers, solidifying its position as a major Central American transit hub. Traditional, physical information desks simply lack the spatial footprint to handle that volume of travellers simultaneously. But by migrating terminal logistics to a digital help lone, the airport has effectively decoupled passenger support from physical constraints.
In high-traffic periods, cellular networks inside terminals become heavily congested. Because text-based messaging requires minimal data packet transfer compared to heavy mobile websites or custom apps, the WhatsApp line remains operational even when network speeds drop, maintaining bandwidth efficiency.
A small team of remote airport agents can manage dozens of text-based accessibility inquiries simultaneously, whereas a physical desk is limited to one passenger at a time, eliminating long, physically exhausting lines for elderly or disabled travellers.
The airport’s dedicated line (+503 7070 8312) focuses strictly on the physical and structural environment of the airport. It provides immediate digital mapping for wheelchair access, elevator usage, terminal locations, security checkpoints, and internal lost-and-found. It does not handle airline specific digital tasks.
The Global Takeaway
El Salvador’s dual-layered approach—combining CEPA’s streamlined digital wayfinding with the Defensoría’s aggressive consumer safety net—presents a highly replicable model for developing nations. It proves that modernizing an aviation network doesn’t require a multi-million-dollar tech overhaul. By pairing existing consumer applications with clear protocols, a destination can significantly enhance its accessibility, safeguard traveller rights, and seamlessly absorb historic levels of global tourism traffic.