Auckland Airport
Auckland Airport Taunga Rererangi o Tāmaki-Makaurau | |||||||||||||||
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Satellite view of the airport in 2017 | |||||||||||||||
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| Summary | |||||||||||||||
| Airport type | Public | ||||||||||||||
| Owner/Operator | Auckland International Airport Limited (AIAL) | ||||||||||||||
| Serves | Auckland | ||||||||||||||
| Location | Ray Emery Drive, Māngere, Auckland, New Zealand | ||||||||||||||
| Opened | 29 January 1966 | ||||||||||||||
| Hub for | Air New Zealand | ||||||||||||||
| Focus city for | Qantas | ||||||||||||||
| Operating base for |
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| Time zone | NZST (UTC+12:00) | ||||||||||||||
| • Summer (DST) | NZDT (UTC+13:00) | ||||||||||||||
| Elevation AMSL | 7 m / 23 ft | ||||||||||||||
| Coordinates | 37°00′29″S 174°47′30″E / 37.00806°S 174.79167°E | ||||||||||||||
| Website | www | ||||||||||||||
| Maps | |||||||||||||||
AKL/NZAA Location of airport in New Zealand AKL/NZAA AKL/NZAA (New Zealand) AKL/NZAA AKL/NZAA (Oceania) | |||||||||||||||
| Runways | |||||||||||||||
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| Statistics (2024) | |||||||||||||||
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Source: WAD[4] | |||||||||||||||
Auckland Airport[5] (IATA: AKL, ICAO: NZAA) is an international airport serving Auckland, the most populous city of New Zealand. It is the largest and busiest airport in the country, with over 18.7 million passengers served in the year ended December 2024.[6] The airport is operated by Auckland International Airport Limited and is located near Māngere, a residential suburb, and Airport Oaks, a service-hub suburb 21 kilometres (13 mi) south of the Auckland city centre. It serves as the principal hub for Air New Zealand, and the New Zealand operating base for Jetstar.
The airport is one of New Zealand's most important infrastructure assets, providing several thousand jobs for the region. It handled 71 per cent of the country's international air passenger arrivals and departures in 2000.[7] It is one of only two commercial airports in New Zealand that can handle Airbus A380 jet aircraft (the other being Christchurch).
The airport has a single 3,635 m (11,926 ft) runway, 05R/23L, which is Cat IIIb capable (at a reduced rate of movements) in the 23L direction. It has a capacity of about 45 flight movements per hour, and is currently the busiest single-runway airport in Oceania.[8] In November 2007 work began on a new northern runway, to be built in several stages and to be used mainly by smaller aircraft, freeing up capacity on the main runway. The project has been repeatedly delayed and is now expected to be completed in 2038, a delay of more than a decade.[9]
The airport covers 1,500 hectares (5.8 sq. miles).[10] At present the airport has an international and domestic terminal. In 2023 it announced plans for all jet services to operate from a single expanded terminal, with turboprop services continuing to use the existing domestic facility.[11]
- ^ "AIA Corporate Monthly Traffic Updates December 2024". AIACorporate. Retrieved 18 April 2025.
- ^ "December 2024 Monthly Traffic Update". Auckland airport. Retrieved 18 April 2025.
- ^ "Auckland airport – Economic and social impacts". Ecquants. Archived from the original on 12 May 2014. Retrieved 7 September 2013.
- ^ "AUCKLAND INTL". World Aero Data. WorldAeroData.com. Archived from the original on 2 March 2020. Retrieved 2 March 2020.
- ^ "Te marae o Te Mānukanuka o Hoturoa, Te Taunga Rererangi o Tāmaki-makaurau – Te whakahaere marae – Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand".
- ^ "AIA Monthly Traffic Update December 2024". Auckland Airport.
- ^ "Tourism and migration 2000, Part 1: International passenger traffic". Statistics New Zealand. 2000. Archived from the original on 17 October 2015. Retrieved 8 June 2015.
- ^ Cite error: The named reference
HERwas invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ "Auckland Airport second runway pushed out to 2038". Radio New Zealand. 29 April 2025.
- ^ "Auckland Int'l Airport Fast Facts". corporate.aucklandairport.co.nz. Retrieved 16 November 2023.
- ^ "Building the gateway New Zealand needs: Multi-billion-dollar investment in future of travel at Auckland Airport". 17 March 2023.