Depends on the blade, but it does fine - I've cut my fair share of aluminum stock with a bandsaw and a wood blade. An overly aggressive pitch on the teeth will slow it down, don't push it or it'll bind same as wood. Cutting tubing needs to be done carefully and trying to cut as straight as possible. It's prone to binding, rolling and otherwise being obnoxious - but it's simple once you know it's evil ways.
Of course curves are out of the question, but bandsaws aren't really about that - that's for scrollsaws, which are also good for aluminum.
This I wouldn't try unless you have a LOT of tool experience, but I've cut 1" thick aluminum sheet on a tablesaw and a medium kerf (biggish teeth for ripping wood) blade. It did great - but kickback doing this is a
serious danger!
Of all the alloys, aluminum is by far the easiest to tool for the do-it-yourselfer. Welding alone is tricky, but a good 110v MIG can take care of that and they've gotten quite affordable. The trick to cutting with powertools is the same for all materials, rough cut close enough and then sand to fit. Not only will you get a better finish, you'll prolly keep your fingers longer lol
Just be aware of the tool, be careful and if it seems wrong - stop
BTW - benchtop belt sanders are great for workin on aluminum MB parts too, I dunno what I'd do w/o one lol