Málaga Airport

International airport serving Costa del Sol, Málaga, Spain From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Málaga Airportmap

Málaga–Costa del Sol Airport (IATA: AGP, ICAO: LEMG) [5][6] is the fourth busiest airport in Spain[3] after Madrid–Barajas, Barcelona–El Prat and Palma de Mallorca. It is significant for Spanish tourism as the main international airport serving the Costa del Sol. It is 8 km (5.0 mi) southwest[7] of Málaga and 5 km (3.1 mi) north of Torremolinos. The airport has flight connections to over 40 countries worldwide, and over 14.4 million passengers passed through it in 2015.[3] In 2023, 22.4 million passengers passed through Málaga Airport. The airport operates with three terminals and two runways.

Quick Facts Málaga–Costa del Sol Airport Aeropuerto de Málaga-Costa del Sol, Summary ...
Málaga–Costa del Sol Airport

Aeropuerto de Málaga-Costa del Sol
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Summary
Airport typePublic
Owner/OperatorAena
ServesMálaga and the Costa del Sol
LocationChurriana, Málaga, Andalusia, Spain
Operating base for
Elevation AMSL16 m / 52 ft
Coordinates36°40′30″N 004°29′57″W
Websitewww.aena.es/en/malaga-airport/index.html
Map
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AGP
Location within the province of Málaga and Andalusia
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AGP
AGP (Andalusia)
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AGP
AGP (Spain)
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Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
13/31 3,200 10,500 Asphalt
12/30 2,750 9,022 Asphalt
Statistics (2023, provisional)
Passengers22,444,373
Passenger change 2022-202321.1%
Aircraft movements161,684
Movements change 2022-202312.2%
Cargo (t)2,806
Sources: Passenger Traffic, AENA[3]
Spanish AIP, AENA[4]
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Málaga Airport is the busiest international airport of Andalusia, accounting for 80 per cent of the autonomous community's non-domestic traffic.[citation needed] It offers a wide variety of international destinations. The airport, connected to the Costa del Sol, has a daily link with twenty cities in Spain and over one hundred cities in Europe. Direct flights also operate to Africa, the Middle East and also to North America. Airlines with a base at the airport are Air Europa, Norwegian, Scandinavian Airlines, Ryanair, Vueling and EasyJet which operates a seasonal base.

History

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Control tower at Málaga Airport, built in 2002
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Málaga Airport
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Another view of the airport

Foundation and early years

Málaga Airport is one of the oldest Spanish airports that has stayed in its original location. After test flights, the first scheduled air service from Málaga began on 1 September 1919 when Didier Daurat began regular flights between Toulouse, Barcelona, Alicante, Tangier and Casablanca.[citation needed]

The single runway was extended in the 1960s, and a new terminal was erected in the centre of the site.[citation needed]

The airport was given its current title in 1965.[citation needed] In 1968, a new passenger terminal was opened. In 1972, a second passenger terminal was opened to cater specifically for non-scheduled traffic. An increase in companies offering package holidays (around 30 by 1965) meant that this type of traffic was providing an increasing proportion of the airport's business.[citation needed] The terminal was very similar to the ones that were built in Palma de Mallorca, Alicante, Ibiza and Girona.

On 30 November 1991, a new passenger terminal opened at the airport which is today's Terminal 2. It was designed by Ricardo Bofill Taller de Arquitectura. Almost all services moved their operations to this terminal when it opened.

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Terminal 3 Málaga Airport

In 1995, the old passenger building was converted into a general aviation terminal, and a new hangar for large aircraft maintenance was built to the north of the airport site.[citation needed] Also constructed was a terminal specifically catering for cargo traffic a year later, along with a hangar for maintenance of big aircraft. In 1997, an enlargement of the parking of gates was built and fuel systems were added at all the gates.[citation needed]

The airport's domestic departures section once had the head office of Binter Mediterraneo.[8]

In November 2002, a new control tower was built with a height of 54 m (177 ft).[9]

In 2004, the "Málaga Plan" was started, including ideas for construction of a new terminal, and a new runway.[citation needed]

In 2005, the old passenger terminal from the late 60s was demolished to make room for the planned expansion of the airport.[citation needed]

In November 2005, Monarch Airlines opened a base at Málaga.[10] It based an Airbus A320-200 there, and operated scheduled services were added to Aberdeen, Blackpool and Newquay. However, due to their routes being unpopular, the base was closed in 2007. In March 2007, Clickair opened a base at Málaga after announcing a new route to Barcelona.[citation needed] The base has remained since the airline merged with Vueling.

On 26 February 2009, Ándalus Líneas Aéreas started operations from Málaga, but then ceased operations in August 2010. This was the only airline that had their main base at Málaga, until Helitt Líneas Aéreas opened their base in late 2011. On 16 December 2009, low-cost carrier Ryanair announced a base at this airport. This would be their 38th base with an additional 19 routes, bringing Ryanair's total routes from Málaga to 39. The base opened on 23 June 2010.[citation needed] An extra route to Barcelona was announced after the planned opening of their Barcelona base.

Development since 2010

On 15 March 2010, the new Terminal 3 was completed. It was opened by King Juan Carlos of Spain, opening to public use the following day. On 10 September 2010, the suburban railway station at Málaga Airport was opened, providing access to catch a train to Málaga from Terminal 3.

In November 2011, Helitt Líneas Aéreas opened their base at Málaga, operating flights to Melilla Airport as well as opening additional routes. The company ceased operations in November 2014.[citation needed]

On 17 May 2012, the first commercial landings on the second runway took place for the first time. The first aircraft to use it was a PA-28 private 4 seated single engine light aircraft and the first commercial flight was Transavia Flight HV6115 from Amsterdam, operated by a Boeing 737-800. A total of 44 aircraft landed on the new runway. The runway was placed into service after the airport obtained the safety clearance of Civil Aviation on 30 April 2012. The runway officially opened on 26 June 2012 and it was inaugurated by the Spanish Minister of Transport, Ana Pastor.[11] It is located on the other side of the terminals where the current runway is. It is in the direction of 12/30 and it has three rapid exits.[12][13]

In June 2017, Scandinavian Airlines Ireland announced they were to open a base at Málaga. The base opened in June 2018 and operated until April 2020.[14] On 14 March 2018, Primera Air announced they were also to open a base at the airport with one based aircraft and six new routes. The base was to open on 27 October 2018, however this did not happen as the company ceased operations on 1 October 2018.[15]

On 8 October 2020, it was announced that EasyJet would open a seasonal base at Málaga. The based flights are operated by subsidiary EasyJet Europe.[16]

Terminals

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Málaga Airport has three adjacent terminals, although only two are in use. It also has a General Aviation Terminal and a Cargo Terminal. Passengers can interchange between Terminal 2 and Terminal 3 both landside and airside. The Airport consists of three piers or docks used by airlines: Pier B (with 13 gates, seven with airbridges) and Pier C (with 10 gates, seven with airbridges) in Terminal 2, and Pier D (with 20 gates, 12 with airbridges) in Terminal 3. Pier B is used for non-Schengen traffic, Pier C is used for non-Schengen Traffic but can be used for Schengen traffic and Pier D is used by Schengen Traffic. EasyJet flights check in at Terminal 2 whilst all others use Terminal 3. The terminals have a total of 164 check-in desks, and have a total of 48 boarding gates of which 26 have airbridges.

Terminal 1

Terminal 1 (styled as T1) opened on 30 June 1972 and was used for flights to non-Schengen destinations, along with flights to Ceuta and Mellila. On 16 March 2010, flights to non-Schengen destinations moved to Pier C in Terminal 3 and flights to Ceuta and Mellila moved to Pier D, leaving Terminal 1 operating no flights, although Jet2.com continued to checked in flights there for a short while afterward. The terminal has since closed to the public.

Terminal 2

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Terminal 2

Terminal 2 (styled as T2) was opened on 30 November 1991, known as the Pablo Ruiz Picasso terminal. The building was designed by architect Ricardo Bofill, and was built to be operated in combination with the pre-existing passenger terminal. It has three floors and a basement, the second floor is for departures and the ground floor is for arrivals. The first floor is used for access to the ground floor of Pier B, and for walkways leading to arrivals. The basement is for the rental-car pickup desks. To complete the terminal, a building was built for car parking and rental cars, which were built right next to the entrance of the departures and arrivals lounges.

Development work was completed on the terminal whilst Terminal 3 was being constructed. In 2008, the original structure connecting Pier C to the main building was demolished and replaced with a temporary structure to allow building work for Terminal 3 to be completed in its place. The temporary structure was removed once Terminal 3 opened and Pier C is now accessed from Terminal 3. All gate numbers were changed in 2010 prior to Terminal 3's opening, with only one gate, B16, keeping the original gate number. When Terminal 3 opened, the old arrivals waiting area was converted to a passengers' transfer between terminals.

Terminal 2 has been refurbished since Terminal 3 has opened costing around €2.5 million.[17] The arrivals floor of Terminal 2 was refurbished in early 2011, and all the ceilings were painted between late 2013 and mid 2014. In September 2017 it was announced that Terminal 2 was to undergo a further refurbishment costing €8.4 million. This included the improvements of the toilet facilities, new flooring and new air conditioning.[18] Pier C closed for refurbishment on 12 November 2018 and reopened on 18 March 2019 while Pier B was refurbished in the winter of 2019.[19]

In 2022, the passport control desks, previously on the upper floor, were moved into the baggage hall, removing three baggage carousels in the process, increasing the number of desks subsatntially.

Terminal 3

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Pier D, opened on 15 March 2010

Terminal 3 (styled as T3) opened on 15 March 2010, with flight operations commencing the following day. Plans for construction started in 2001 and construction started in 2004. The works were carried out by Ferrovial.[20] It was opened on 15 March 2010 by King Juan Carlos.[21]

The new terminal building at Málaga Airport was designed by architect Bruce S. Fairbanks. The terminal was built to increase tourism around the Costa del Sol, and to expand the airport due to increasing number of passengers. It is adjacent to Terminal 2 and has an area of 250,000m², which is more than double the size of Terminal 2. It has 86 check-in counters, numbered 301 to 386, 20 new boarding gates, twelve which have airbridges and 12 baggage reclaim carousels; nine European Union, two non-European Union and one special baggage reclaim carousel.

The terminal has more than doubled capacity to 30 million passengers or 9,000 an hour, is expected to double the number of flights and the 12,813,764 passengers handled during 2008,[22] and this has increased further since the new runway was completed.

In early 2024, Aena began talks of the possible expansion of Terminal 3 to increase capacity and to improve passenger experience.[23]

General aviation terminal

The general aviation terminal at Málaga Airport (also known as the private aviation terminal) is located next to the N-340 motorway, and close to runway 31. The terminal was formed from the old passenger terminal building, and has since been renewed and refurbished. It was opened on 29 January 1968 and is used for private jets.

Cargo terminal

The cargo terminal was opened in 1996, with 16 docking bays for road transport vehicles.[24] It has an area of 5,700 m2 (61,000 sq ft) and contains four cold-storage rooms, a vault for valuable merchandise, and an area for hazardous and radioactive materials.[24] It is located in the north of the airport, named "Carga Aena" in Spanish.[24]

Other

A car park has been built with seven floors and 2,500 parking spaces, with underground parking for 66 coaches.[17] A long-stay car park opened in mid-2010.[25]

Airlines and destinations

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The following airlines operate regular scheduled and charter services to and from Málaga:[26]

More information Airlines, Destinations ...
AirlinesDestinations
Aegean Airlines Seasonal: Athens[27]
Aer Lingus Cork, Dublin[28]
Air Arabia Casablanca,[29] Tangier
Air Cairo Cairo[citation needed], Hurghada,[30] Luxor[31][32]
Air Europa Madrid[33]
Seasonal: Palma de Mallorca,[34] Tenerife–North[citation needed]
Air France Paris–Charles de Gaulle[35][36]
Air Serbia Belgrade[37]
Air Transat Montréal–Trudeau
airBaltic Riga,[38] Tallinn,[39] Tampere,[40] Vilnius[41]
Austrian Airlines Vienna[42]
British Airways London–City, London–Gatwick,[43] London–Heathrow[44]
Brussels Airlines Brussels[45]
Bulgaria Air Seasonal: Sofia[citation needed]
Condor Seasonal: Düsseldorf,[46] Frankfurt,[47] Hamburg,[48] Munich[48]
Corendon Dutch Airlines Seasonal: Amsterdam,[49] Maastricht/Aachen[50]
easyJet Amsterdam,[51] Basel/Mulhouse,[52] Belfast–International,[53] Berlin,[53] Birmingham,[54] Bristol,[52] Geneva,[52] Glasgow,[53] Liverpool,[53] London–Gatwick,[55] London–Luton,[56] London–Southend,[57] Lyon,[58] Manchester,[59] Milan–Malpensa,[60] Marrakesh,[61] Rabat[62]
Seasonal: Athens,[63] Leeds/Bradford,[64] Nantes,[63] Newcastle upon Tyne,[64] Nice,[63] Zürich[64]
Etihad Airways Seasonal: Abu Dhabi[citation needed]
Eurowings Cologne/Bonn,[65] Düsseldorf,[66] Hamburg,[67] Hannover,[68] Prague,[69] Stuttgart[70]
Seasonal: Berlin[71]
Finnair Helsinki[72]
Gulf Air Seasonal: Bahrain[73]
Hélity Ceuta
HiSky Seasonal: Bucharest–Otopeni[74]
Iberia Madrid,[75] Melilla
Seasonal: Casablanca,[76] Funchal,[77] Ibiza,[78] La Palma,[79] León,[80] Menorca,[citation needed] Nador,[81] Nice,[82] Tangier,[83] Tétouan,[84] Valencia,[citation needed]
Israir Tel Aviv[85]
Jet2.com Birmingham,[86] East Midlands,[87] Edinburgh,[88] Glasgow,[89] Leeds/Bradford,[90] Liverpool,[91] London–Stansted,[92] Manchester,[93] Newcastle upon Tyne[94]
Seasonal: Belfast–International,[95] Bournemouth (begins 24 July 2026),[96] Bristol[97]
KLM Amsterdam[98]
Kuwait Airways Seasonal: Kuwait City[99]
Lufthansa Frankfurt,[100] Munich[100]
Luxair Luxembourg[101]
Marabu Seasonal: Hamburg,[102] Munich[103]
Norwegian Air Shuttle[104] Aalborg,[105] Bergen,[106] Copenhagen,[107] Helsinki,[108] Munich,[109] Oslo,[110] Sandefjord,[111] Stavanger,[112] Stockholm–Arlanda,[110] Stockholm–Skavsta,[113] Trondheim[114]
Seasonal: Aarhus,[109] Billund,[109] Haugesund,[115] Växjö[116]
Play Reykjavík–Keflavík[117][118]
Qatar Airways Doha[119]
Royal Air Maroc Express Casablanca[120]
Ryanair[121] Aarhus,[53] Amsterdam,[53] Barcelona,[53] Bari,[122] Beauvais,[53] Belfast–International,[123] Bergamo,[124] Berlin,[53] Birmingham,[53] Bologna,[53] Bournemouth,[53] Bristol,[53] Brussels,[125] Bucharest–Otopeni,[126] Budapest,[53] Charleroi,[53] Cologne/Bonn,[53] Copenhagen,[53] Cork, Dublin,[53] East Midlands,[53] Edinburgh,[53] Eindhoven,[53] Exeter,[53] Fez,[53] Glasgow,[53] Glasgow–Prestwick,[53] Gothenburg,[53] Gran Canaria,[53] Hahn,[127] Ibiza,[53] Karlsruhe/Baden-Baden,[53] Kaunas,[53] Knock,[53] Kraków,[53] Lanzarote,[53] Leeds/Bradford,[53] Lisbon,[53] Liverpool,[53] Łódź,[128] London–Luton,[53] London–Stansted,[129] Manchester,[53] Marrakesh,[53] Marseille,[53] Memmingen,[53] Milan–Malpensa,[130] Naples,[53] Newcastle upon Tyne,[53] Newquay,[131] Ostrava,[132] Palma de Mallorca,[53] Porto,[133] Poznan,[134] Prague,[135] Rabat,[136] Riga,[53] Rome–Fiumicino,[53] Sandefjord,[53] Santander,[53] Santiago de Compostela,[53] Shannon,[53] Sofia,[53] Stockholm–Arlanda,[137] Tenerife–South,[53] Tétouan,[53] Treviso,[138] Valencia,[53] Vienna,[53] Warsaw–Chopin,[139] Warsaw–Modlin,[53] Weeze,[53] Zagreb[140]
Seasonal: Aberdeen,[53] Bremen,[141] Brno,[142] Cardiff,[53] Gdansk,[143] Lübeck,[144] Menorca,[53] Münster/Osnabrück,[145] Nador,[146] Nuremberg,[citation needed] Paderborn/Lippstadt,[147] Pisa,[53] Stockholm–Västerås,[53] Tangier,[53] Teesside,[148] Turin,[146] Vitoria,[146] Wrocław[53]
Saudia Seasonal: Jeddah,[149] Riyadh[150]
Scandinavian Airlines Copenhagen,[151] Gothenburg,[151] Oslo,[151] Stockholm–Arlanda[151]
Seasonal: Bergen (resumes 27 June 2025)[152]
Smartwings Prague[153]
Swiss International Air Lines Geneva,[154] Zürich[155]
TAP Air Portugal Lisbon[156]
Transavia Amsterdam,[157] Brussels,[158] Eindhoven,[159] Paris–Orly, Rotterdam/The Hague[160]
Seasonal: Lyon,[citation needed] Nantes[161]
TUI Airways Birmingham, Cardiff, East Midlands, London–Gatwick, Manchester
Seasonal: Bristol,[citation needed] Glasgow,[citation needed] Newcastle upon Tyne[citation needed]
TUI fly Belgium Antwerp,[162] Brussels,[163] Liège,[164] Ostend/Bruges[165]
Turkish Airlines Istanbul[166]
United Airlines Seasonal: Newark[167]
Volotea Seasonal: Asturias,[168] Bari,[169] Bilbao,[170] Bordeaux,[citation needed] Brest,[171] Genoa,[citation needed] Lille,[172] Lyon,[173] Menorca,[174] Nantes,[citation needed] Palermo,[citation needed] San Sebastián,[175] Strasbourg,[176] Toulouse[citation needed]
Vueling[177] Amsterdam,[178] Barcelona,[178] Bilbao,[178] Brussels,[178] Cardiff,[179] Gran Canaria,[178] Lanzarote,[178] London–Gatwick,[180] Palma de Mallorca,[181] Paris–Orly,[178] Rome–Fiumicino,[178] Santiago de Compostela,[178] Tenerife–North[178]
Seasonal: Fuerteventura,[178] Ibiza[181]
Wizz Air Bucharest–Otopeni, Budapest, Cluj-Napoca, Gdańsk,[182] Kraków,[182] London–Gatwick, Milan–Malpensa,[183] Rome–Fiumicino,[184] Sofia, Vilnius,[185] Wrocław[186]
Seasonal: Katowice,[citation needed] Warsaw–Chopin[citation needed]
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Statistics

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Passenger numbers at Málaga increased from 6 million in 1995 to 13.6 million passengers in 2007, dropping to 12.8 million in 2008. There was a further 9.3% reduction in 2009 with passenger numbers falling to around 11.6 million and the number of aircraft movements reducing by 13.6% to 103,536. However, passenger numbers in 2010 increased to 12 million, and increased again in 2011 to 12.8 million and decreased slightly to 12.5 million in 2012. Passenger numbers increased to 12.9 million in 2013.[3][needs update]

Annual traffic

Annual passenger traffic at AGP airport. See Wikidata query.
More information Passengers, Aircraft movements ...
Traffic by calendar year
PassengersAircraft movementsCargo (tonnes)
2000 9,443,87292,9309,920
2001 9,932,97598,1749,365
2002 10,429,439101,5198,670
2003 11,566,616110,2206,837
2004 12,046,277116,0476,811
2005 12,669,019123,9595,493
2006 13,076,252127,7765,399
2007 13,590,803129,6985,828
2008 12,813,472119,8214,800
2009 11,622,443103,5363,400
2010 12,064,616105,6313,064
2011 12,823,117107,3972,992
2012 12,581,944102,1622,711
2013 12,922,403102,3592,661
2014 13,748,976108,2612,498
2015 14,404,170108,8972,472
2016 16,672,776123,7002,288
2017 18,628,876137,0922,866
2018 19,021,704 141,313 2,768
2019 19,858,656 144,939 3.080
2020 5,161,636 59,668 912
2021 8,874,635 92,248 1,500
2022 18,457,194 144,107 2,193
2023 22,344,261 161,716 2,806
Source: Aena Statistics[3]
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Busiest routes

More information Rank, Destination ...
Busiest european routes from AGP (2023)
Rank Destination Passengers Change 2022 / 23
1 London-Gatwick 1,124,824 Increase 27%
2 Dublin 774,343 Increase 20%
3 Amsterdam 764,005 Increase 19%
4 Manchester 592,590 Increase 11%
5 Copenhagen 576,855 Increase 7%
6 Stockholm-Arlanda 528,875 Increase 12%
7 Brussels 507,899 Increase 8%
8 Paris-Orly 470,303 Increase 18%
9 London-Stansted 416,550 Increase 22%
10 Bristol 394,190 Increase 24%
11 London-Luton 379,125 Steady 0%
12 Zurich 351,651 Increase 23%
13 Helsinki 350,822 Increase 25%
14 Rome-Fiumicino 346,262 Increase 65%
15 Eindhoven 343,463 Increase 14%
16 Paris-Charles de Gaulle 337,009 Increase 15%
17 Oslo 322,146 Decrease 12%
18 Birmingham 307,291 Increase 3%
19 East Midlands 291,098 Increase 17%
20 Frankfurt 285,906 Steady 0%
Source: Estadísticas de tráfico aereo[187]
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More information Rank, Destination ...
Busiest intercontinental routes from AGP (2023)
Rank Destination Passengers Change 2022 / 23
1 Marrakech 127,602 Increase 57%
2 Casablanca 93,114 Increase 9%
3 Tangier 918,626 Increase 32%
4 Montréal-Trudeau 65,126 Increase 77%
5 Tétouan 61,972 Increase 94%
6 Rabat 55,491 Increase 134%
7 Fez 55,072 Increase 51%
8 Nador 31,840 Increase 28%
9 Doha 21,198 Increase 10%
10 Kuwait City 21,033 Increase 74%
Source: Estadísticas de tráfico aereo[187]
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More information Rank, Destination ...
Busiest domestic routes from AGP (2023)
Rank Destination Passengers Change 2022 / 23
1 Barcelona 937,442 Increase 20%
2 Madrid 725,171 Increase 38%
3 Palma de Mallorca 360,809 Increase 9%
4 Bilbao 329,785 Increase 19%
5 Gran Canaria 243,386 Increase 22%
6 Melilla 229,611 Increase 5%
7 Tenerife-North 211,174 Increase 18%
8 Santiago de Compostela 204,722 Increase 21%
9 Ibiza 172,945 Increase 30%
10 Valencia 134,689 Increase 65%
11 Asturias 112,574 Increase 7%
12 Lanzarote 69,137 Decrease 4%
13 Santander 53,295 Increase 29%
14 Ceuta 44,276 Increase 16%
15 Vitoria 40,620 Increase 17%
16 Menorca 38,015 Decrease 7%
17 Tenerife-South 37,109 Steady 0%
18 A Coruña 30,274 Increase 39%
19 San Sebastián 21,219 Increase 4%
20 Fuerteventura 19,171 Decrease 15%
Source: Estadísticas de tráfico aereo[188]
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Ground transport

Two roads access the airport – the MA-21 (TorremolinosMálaga), and an access road from the MA20.[189]

Transportation hub

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Transportation hub

Málaga Airport has a transportation hub outside terminal 3 with both arrival and departure levels. The bus station and the suburban train station and car parking can be reached from the hub.

Ride-hailing

Since 2024, the Estonian ride-hailing company Bolt has operated exclusive pickup areas at the airport.[190][191]

Suburban railway line

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New railway station

The airport has an underground railway station connecting Cercanías Málaga commuter trains with Málaga.[192] The station opened on 10 September 2010[193] and is located at the arrivals area of Terminal 3. Trains run every 20 minutes between Málaga City and Fuengirola via Málaga Airport.[194]

Bus station

There is an underground bus station. There is also a bus stop outside the cargo terminal.

Car parks

Before Terminal 3 opened the airport had only one large car park, called P2. The airport now has two, with 3,700 spaces (1,200 in P2, 2,500 in the new P1). All outdoor spaces are covered. They can be reached by the transportation hub.

Accidents and incidents

  • 13 September 1964 – A Balair Fokker F-27 (registration HB-AAI) approaching the runway too high. The pilot did a steep descent and the plane landed heavily, causing part of a wing to break off. There were no fatalities. The aircraft was written off.[195]
  • 20 December 1970 – A Sobelair Douglas DC-6B (registration OO-CTL) returned to Málaga due to severe weather at the aircraft's destination. A hydraulic system failure occurred and the left main undercarriage gear failed. This caused the aircraft to veer left once it landed. There were no fatalities. The aircraft was written off.[196]
  • 13 September 1982 – Spantax Flight BX995 a DC-10-30CF (registration EC-DEG) When the aircraft was rolling for take-off, the pilot felt a strong vibration and aborted the take-off. The flightcrew lost control of the aircraft and were unable to stop in the runway length available. The aircraft overran the runway, hit an airfield aerial installation, and lost an engine. It crossed the Málaga–Torremolinos Highway, hitting three vehicles before hitting a farming construction and bursting into flames. An emergency evacuation of the aircraft was carried out but 50 on board died, and a further 110 persons were hospitalized. The cause of the accident was the detachment of fragments from a recapped tread on the right wheel of the nose gear, creating vibration.[197]
  • 13 October 2000 - The hijacked Sabena Flight 689 operated by an Airbus A330-200 en route from Brussels to Abidjan made an emergency landing at Málaga where the perpetrator, a Nigerian national, was overpowered by police.
  • 29 August 2001 – Binter Mediterráneo Flight BIM8261 a CASA CN-235 (registration EC-FBC) was on a flight from Melilla to Málaga. On final approach, the aircraft's left engine failed, and the aircraft made an emergency landing. The plane hit the first edge lights and stopped next to the N-340. Investigation into the accident revealed that shortly after the initial engine failure, the First Officer inadvertently shut down both of the aircraft's engines, leading to a total loss of power. Four out of the 44 people on board were killed, including the pilot Capt. Fdez. Ruano.[198] The aircraft was written off.[199]

See also

References

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