Stuttgart Airport (German: Flughafen Stuttgart), formerly Flughafen Stuttgart-Echterdingen (IATA: STR, ICAO: EDDS), is an international airport serving Stuttgart, the capital of the German state of Baden-Württemberg. It is christened in honor of Stuttgart's former mayor, Manfred Rommel, son of Erwin Rommel, and is the sixth busiest airport in Germany with 11,832,634 passengers having passed through its doors in 2018. The facility covers approximately 400 hectares (1,000 acres), of which 190 hectares are green space.

The airport is operated by Flughafen Stuttgart GmbH (FSG). It goes back to Luftverkehr Württemberg AG, which was founded in 1924 and initially operated Böblingen Airport. Since 2008, 65% of the operating company is owned by the state of Baden-Württemberg and 35% by the city of Stuttgart.[citation needed] It is located approximately 13 km (8.1 mi) (10 km (6.2 mi) in a straight line) south of Stuttgart and lies on the boundary between the nearby town of Leinfelden-Echterdingen, Filderstadt and Stuttgart itself. In 2007, the Messe Stuttgart convention center – the ninth biggest exhibition centre in Germany – moved to grounds directly next to the airport. Additionally, the global headquarters for car parking company APCOA Parking are located here.

History

Early years and World War II

The airport was built in 1939 to replace Böblingen Airport.[citation needed]

For the duration of the Cold War the runway and facilities were shared with the United States Army who operated helicopters, the Grumman OV-1 Mohawk and other fixed wing aircraft as Echterdingen Army Airfield on the southern portion of the airfield. Some of the units operating at Echterdingen were headquartered at nearby Nellingen Kaserne- now closed and redeveloped. In 1984–5, the 223rd Aviation Battalion (Combat) of the 11th Aviation Group (Combat) was headquartered at Echterdingen, with three aviation companies assigned (one at Schwäbisch Hall). The U.S. Army still maintains a small helicopter base - Stuttgart Army Airfield - on the southern side of the airport, which it shares with the Baden-Württemberg Police helicopter wing. The police helicopter wing falls under the control of Stuttgart Police Department and has six modern helicopters based at Stuttgart and two in Söllingen.[citation needed]

The airport in the 1950s-1990s

The airport was expanded after World War II. The runway was extended to 1,800 m (5,906 ft) in 1948, then to 2,250 m (7,382 ft) in 1961 and finally to 3,345 m (10,974 ft) in 1996. Renovation was scheduled for 2020, full closure phase was preponed to be completed in April during the corona lockdown.

The original 1938 terminal was finally replaced in 2004 and there are now four terminals with a maximum capacity of approximately 12 million passengers.[citation needed]

Politicians, town planners and nearby residents have been arguing for years about the construction of a second runway. However, on 25 June 2008, Minister-President Günther Oettinger announced that for the next 8–12 years no second runway will be built and that the restrictions for night operations stay in place.

Development since 2010

After the death of former mayor Manfred Rommel in November 2013 local politicians proposed renaming the airport after him. This proposal caused public disputes as he was the son of Erwin Rommel but also highly respected for his work on intercultural affairs. In July 2014, it has been announced that the airport will be named Flughafen Stuttgart - Manfred Rommel Flughafen from now on. In September 2016, the airport unveiled new branding and corporate design, changing its official name from Flughafen Stuttgart to Stuttgart Airport.

In September 2014, United Airlines cancelled their route to Stuttgart from Newark due to insufficient demand leaving Stuttgart Airport with only one remaining long-haul connection to Atlanta provided by Delta Air Lines.[citation needed]

In October 2014, easyJet announced they would serve Stuttgart as their seventh German destination by March 2015. In December 2014, Ryanair also added Stuttgart as a destination in their network with six weekly flights to Manchester from April 2015.

Air Berlin announced the start of a service to Abu Dhabi from December 2014. On 31 May 2016, Air Berlin ceased its flights to Abu Dhabi. In October 2016, Air Berlin announced it would close its maintenance facilities at the airport due to cost cutting and restructuring measures.

In July 2020, Lauda announced the closure of their base at Stuttgart Airport – which has been operated as a wetlease for Ryanair — by October 2020. Prior to this announcement, the base staff rejected a new labour agreement.

In August 2024, Delta Air Lines announced the end of their flights to Stuttgart from Atlanta after already having reduced their service to a seasonal one in March 2023. This marked the end of the connection after 36 years (with a three-year hiatus from 2020 to 2023 due to COVID-19) and will deprive the airport of any scheduled long-haul destinations.

Terminals

Landside view of Terminals 1 to 3

Stuttgart Airport consists of four passenger terminals which have separate check-in facilities and entrances but are directly connected to each other and share a single airside area which features eight jet bridges as well as about two dozen bus-boarding stands.

  • Terminal 1 is the first of two landside main halls and features together with its addition Terminal 1-West 50 check-in counters. It shares the roof with Terminals 2 and 3 and is mainly used by Eurowings and Turkish Airlines.
  • Terminal 2 is a small area featuring nine check-in counters and a security checkpoint. It is located within the shopping area between the main halls of Terminals 1 and 3. It is used by Lufthansa & Star Alliance partners in addition to their counters in Terminal 1.
  • Terminal 3 is the second of the two landside main halls east of Terminal 1 and 2 and features 39 additional check-in counters. It is used by TUIfly and KLM among several other airlines.
  • Terminal 4 is, unlike the other three terminals, a separate and very basic equipped building to the east of Terminals 1 to 3 but also connected to them by a walk way. It features 17 more check-in counters as well as several bus-boarding gates and is used mostly for holiday charter operations. In March 2018, the airport administration announced that Terminal 4 will be entirely rebuilt and expanded in the coming years.

Airlines and destinations

Passenger

The following airlines offer regular scheduled and charter flights at Stuttgart Airport:

AirlinesDestinations
Aegean AirlinesAthens, Thessaloniki
Air CairoSeasonal: Hurghada, Marsa Alam
Air SerbiaBelgrade
AJetIstanbul–Sabiha Gökçen Seasonal: Ankara, Adana/Mersin, Antalya, Kayseri, Samsun
Austrian AirlinesVienna
CondorDubai–International, Fuerteventura, Gran Canaria, Hurghada, Palma de Mallorca, Tenerife–South Seasonal: Corfu, Funchal, Heraklion, Kos, Lanzarote, Preveza/Lefkada, Pristina, Rhodes
Corendon AirlinesSeasonal: Antalya, Heraklion, Hurghada, İzmir[better source needed]
Croatia AirlinesSeasonal: Dubrovnik (begins 4 May 2026)
Electra AirwaysSeasonal: Burgas, Varna
EurowingsAlicante, Amman–Queen Alia, Athens, Barcelona, Beirut, Berlin, Bremen, Budapest, Catania, Chișinău, Faro, Gran Canaria, Hamburg, La Palma, Lisbon, London–Gatwick, London–Heathrow, Málaga, Manchester, Milan–Malpensa, Naples, Palma de Mallorca, Pristina, Rome–Fiumicino, Sarajevo, Split, Stockholm–Arlanda, Thessaloniki, Valencia, Vienna, Zagreb Seasonal: Adana/Mersin, Agadir, Antalya, Bari, Bastia, Bilbao, Brindisi, Bucharest–Otopeni, Burgas, Cagliari, Chania, Corfu, Dubai–International, Dublin, Dubrovnik[citation needed], Edinburgh, Fuerteventura, Funchal, Heraklion, Hurghada, Iași[citation needed], Ibiza, İzmir, Jeddah, Kalamata[citation needed], Kavala, Kos, Kraków, Lamezia Terme, Lanzarote, Larnaca, Malta, Marsa Alam, Mostar, Mykonos, Nice, Olbia, Palermo, Pisa[citation needed], Porto, Preveza/Lefkada, Pula, Rhodes, Rijeka, Rovaniemi, Santorini, Sylt, Tbilisi, Tenerife–South, Timișoara, Tirana, Tivat, Tromsø, Tunis, Varna, Venice, Zadar, Zakynthos Seasonal charter: Arvidsjaur
Enter AirPristina
FlyErbilErbil
FlyOneChișinău
Freebird AirlinesSeasonal: Antalya
IsrairSeasonal: Tel Aviv
KLMAmsterdam
LOT Polish AirlinesWarsaw–Chopin
LufthansaFrankfurt, Munich
NouvelairSeasonal: Djerba, Monastir
Pegasus AirlinesAnkara, Istanbul–Sabiha Gökçen, İzmir, Kayseri
Scandinavian AirlinesCopenhagen Seasonal: Oslo
Sky AlpsBolzano
SunExpressAdana/Mersin, Ankara, Antalya, Gaziantep, İzmir, Kayseri, Samsun Seasonal: Bodrum, Bursa, Dalaman, Diyarbakır, Edremit, Elazığ, Konya, Ordu–Giresun, Trabzon
Swiss International Air LinesZürich
Tailwind AirlinesSeasonal charter: Antalya
TUI fly DeutschlandBoa Vista, Fuerteventura, Funchal, Gran Canaria, Hurghada, Lanzarote, Palma de Mallorca, Sal, Tenerife–South Seasonal: Corfu, Dalaman, Djerba, Faro, Heraklion, Jerez de la Frontera, Kos, Marsa Alam, Menorca, Patras, Rhodes
Turkish AirlinesIstanbul
VuelingBarcelona
Wizz AirBucharest–Otopeni, Budapest, Cluj-Napoca, Skopje, Sofia, Tirana

Cargo

AirlinesDestinations
Atlas AirBirmingham (AL)
DHL AviationCologne/Bonn, Leipzig/Halle
FedEx FeederLiège, Paris-Charles de Gaulle

Statistics

Aerial view of the airport and Stuttgart Trade Fair
Apron view
Air traffic control tower
One of the two main halls in Terminal 1
Departure area in Terminal 1

Passengers and movements

PassengersMovements
19997,688,951119,904
20008,141,020150,451
20017,642,409146,771
20027,284,319144,208
20037,595,286144,903
20048,831,216156,885
20059,413,671160,405
200610,111,346164,735
200710,328,120164,531
20089,932,887160,243
20098,941,990141,572
20109,226,546135,335
20119,591,461136,580
20129,735,087131,524
20139,588,692124,588
20149,728,710122,818
201510,526,920130,485
201610,640,610129,704
201710,975,639127,981
201811,832,634137,632
201912,721,441
20249,138,25480,544
Source: Stuttgart Airport

Source: Stuttgart Airport |}

Largest airlines

Largest airlines by passengers (2023)
RankAirline%
1Germany Eurowings40.2%
2Turkey SunExpress8.0%
3Turkey Turkish Airlines6.9%
4Germany TuiFly6.3%
5Turkey Pegasus Airlines5.3%
6Germany Lufthansa5.1%
7Germany Condor Flugdienst4.6%
8Netherlands KLM2.9%
9Greece Aegan Airlines2.3%
10United Kingdom British Airways2.1%

Busiest routes

Busiest domestic routes out of Stuttgart Airport (2023) [needs update]
RankDestinationPassengers
1Berlin Berlin, Brandenburg Airport374,500
2Hamburg Hamburg, Hamburg Airport357,000
3Hesse Hesse, Frankfurt Airport265,000
4Bavaria Bavaria, Munich Airport191,900
Busiest international routes out of Stuttgart Airport (2016)[needs update]
RankDestinationPassengers
1Spain Spain, Palma de Mallorca Airport730,700
2Turkey Turkey, Istanbul (Atatürk Airport and Sabiha Gökçen Airport)643,500
3United Kingdom United Kingdom, London (Heathrow Airport, Stansted Airport and Gatwick Airport)520,200
4Austria Austria, Vienna International Airport367,100
5Turkey Turkey, Antalya Airport363,900
6Netherlands Netherlands, Amsterdam Airport311,600
7Spain Spain, Barcelona Airport239,800
8Switzerland Switzerland, Zurich Airport193,800
9Greece Greece, Athens Airport, Thessaloniki Airport180,000
10France France, Paris Paris–Charles de Gaulle Airport178,700

Ground transportation

The motorway leading to the airport with a large car park across it
Stuttgart Flughafen/Messe station

Car

There are two major highways: Just north of the airport runs the Bundesautobahn 8 (A8), which connects the cities of Karlsruhe and Stuttgart to Ulm, Augsburg and Munich. The Bundesstraße 27 (B27) leads to downtown Stuttgart, as well as to Tübingen and Reutlingen in the South.

Coach

From the regional cities of Esslingen am Neckar, Reutlingen, Tübingen and Kirchheim exists a connection by coach. Additionally, German long-distance coach operators DeinBus and Flixbus maintain their stop for Stuttgart on the airport grounds with direct connections to several major cities.

Suburban railway

Stuttgart Airport can be easily reached within 30 minutes from the city's main railway station using the Stuttgart suburban railway S2 or S3 from Stuttgart Flughafen/Messe station.

Future long-distance railway

It is planned to connect the airport with the future Stuttgart - Ulm high-speed railway line currently under construction as part of the major Stuttgart 21 railway redevelopment program. Therefore, a new long-distance train station will be built on the airport's grounds near the existing suburban railway station. The new station, which will be served by ICE high-speed trains will be connected to the new line by an underground loop track. The Stuttgart-Ulm line is scheduled to be opened in 2020. As of 2019, the airport connection is planned to commence operation in late 2025, versus an initial estimate of 2019 (made in 2010).

Accidents and incidents

See also

External links

Media related to Stuttgart Airport at Wikimedia Commons