Valencia Airport (Spanish: Aeropuerto de Valencia, Valencian: Aeroport de València) (IATA: VLC, ICAO: LEVC), also known as Manises Airport, is the tenth-busiest Spanish airport in terms of passengers and second in the Valencian Community after Alicante. It is situated 8 km (5.0 mi) west of the city of Valencia, in Manises. The airport has flight connections to about 20 European countries and 8.53 million passengers passed through the airport in 2019.

History

The Valencia Airport opened in 1933, and had its first regular flight the following year.[citation needed]

The airport is the main base of Iberia's regional carrier Air Nostrum. Irish low-cost airline Ryanair used the airport as a hub since 2007 but decided to close it in November 2008 following a dispute over subsidies by the airport authorities. Since then the airline has continued to operate out of Valencia and reopened base in 2011.

Delta Air Lines inaugurated a route to New York City, Valencia's first transatlantic service, in June 2009. It operated the flight with a Boeing 757. The company initially planned to fly year-round to New York. A few weeks after the maiden flight, however, Delta decided to make the service seasonal due to low ticket sales. It ultimately severed the link in September 2012 because of poor demand and rising fuel costs. In June 2025, Air Transat began seasonal flights to Montreal.

Facilities

Airside area near gates 1-4
Exterior of the regional terminal annex
Airside area near gates 12-22
Control tower

Terminal

Valencia Airport consists of a single terminal that has been built in three stages which are directly connected to each other. The landside hall consists of three check-in areas: 1-12 is the newest one with the airport station beneath it, 13-42 is the oldest main building with a currently derelict upper floor, and 43-56 is the largest annex, housing most airlines. A single central security area leads to the airside with gates 1-22, with gates 1-4 being the newest area designated for non-Schengen flights. Gates 12-22 are located in a separate hall designated as a regional terminal that opened in time for the 2007 America's Cup which allows walk-boarding, mainly for flights by Iberia Regional and low-cost carriers. Some of the gates are equipped with jet bridges. The airside area features several food outlets and shops.

Runway and apron

The sole operational runway has been also lengthened by 50 m (160 ft) by 2007. The former runway 04/22 is not in use and has no ILS but has a helipad at the southwestern end.

Airlines and destinations

Passenger

AirlinesDestinations
Aegean AirlinesSeasonal: Athens
Air AlgérieSeasonal: Algiers
Air CairoCairo,[better source needed] Hurghada, Luxor
Air EuropaMadrid, Palma de Mallorca
Air FranceParis–Charles de Gaulle
Air SerbiaBelgrade
Air TransatMontréal–Trudeau
airBalticSeasonal: Riga
Austrian AirlinesVienna
Binter CanariasGran Canaria, Tenerife–North
British AirwaysLondon–Heathrow
Brussels AirlinesBrussels
Dan AirBucharest–Otopeni Seasonal: Bacău
easyJetAmsterdam, Berlin, Lisbon, London–Gatwick Seasonal: Basel/Mulhouse, Geneva
EurowingsDüsseldorf Seasonal: Cologne/Bonn, Hamburg, Prague, Stuttgart
FinnairSeasonal: Helsinki
FlyOneSeasonal: Chisinau
IberiaBarcelona, Bilbao, Ibiza, Madrid, Málaga, Menorca, Palma de Mallorca, Seville Seasonal: Fuerteventura,[citation needed] Funchal, Jerez de la Frontera,[citation needed] Lanzarote,[citation needed], Tenerife–North,[citation needed] Vigo
ITA AirwaysSeasonal: Rome–Fiumicino (begins 1 June 2026)
KLMAmsterdam
LufthansaFrankfurt, Munich
Lufthansa City AirlinesMunich
LuxairSeasonal: Luxembourg
Norwegian Air ShuttleSeasonal: Copenhagen, Oslo
Royal Air Maroc ExpressCasablanca
RyanairBari, Beauvais, Bergamo, Berlin, Birmingham, Bologna, Bristol, Brussels, Budapest, Cagliari, Charleroi, Cork, Dublin, Eindhoven, Gran Canaria, Ibiza, Karlsruhe/Baden-Baden, Kraków, Lanzarote, Lisbon, London–Stansted, Málaga, Manchester, Marrakech, Marseille, Memmingen, Milan–Malpensa, Nantes, Naples, Nuremberg, Palermo, Palma de Mallorca, Pisa, Porto, Poznań, Rabat, Rome–Fiumicino, Santander, Santiago de Compostela, Seville, Sofia, Tangier, Tenerife–South, Toulouse, Treviso, Trieste, Turin, Verona, Vienna, Warsaw–Modlin, Wrocław Seasonal: East Midlands, Edinburgh, Fès, Hahn, Hamburg, Lamezia Terme, Malta, Menorca, Pescara, Stockholm–Arlanda
Scandinavian AirlinesSeasonal: Copenhagen
SmartwingsPrague
Swiss International Air LinesGeneva, Zürich
TAP Air PortugalLisbon
TransaviaAmsterdam, Eindhoven, Paris–Orly, Rotterdam/The Hague Seasonal: Lyon
Turkish AirlinesIstanbul
VoloteaA Coruña, Asturias, Bilbao, Bordeaux, Lille (begins 21 May 2026), Lyon Seasonal: Florence (begins 22 September 2026), Santander
VuelingAlgiers, Amsterdam, Barcelona, Bilbao, Brussels, Gran Canaria, Ibiza, Lisbon, London–Gatwick, Palma de Mallorca, Paris–Orly, Rome–Fiumicino, Seville, Tenerife–North
Wizz AirBucharest–Otopeni, Budapest, Cluj-Napoca, Iași, Kraków, London–Gatwick, London–Luton, Milan–Malpensa, Rome–Fiumicino, Sofia, Timişoara, Tirana, Turin (begins 15 September 2026), Venice, Warsaw–Chopin

Cargo

AirlinesDestinations
SwiftairIbiza, Madrid
UPS AirlinesCologne/Bonn

Statistics

Busiest routes

Busiest European routes from VLC (2023)
RankDestinationPassengersChange 2022 / 23
1Amsterdam408,35119%
2Rome–Fiumicino378,51686%
3Paris–Orly375,25328%
4London–Gatwick354,79625%
5Frankfurt250,8224%
6Zurich240,67123%
7Eindhoven237,7930%
8Milan–Bergamo231,31933%
9Paris-Charles de Gaulle226,70029%
10Lisbon216,1348%
11Brussels216,0288%
12London–Stansted209,40320%
13Bologna193,09417%
14Istanbul177,76055%
15Milan–Malpensa168,11432%
16Vienna140,50332%
17Berlin110,53938%
18Porto107,80444%
19Bucharest–Otopeni107,2078%
20London–Heathrow106,69215%
Source: Estadísticas de tráfico aereo
Busiest intercontinental routes from VLC (2023)
RankDestinationPassengersChange 2022 / 23
1Marrakech56,78019%
2Tangier51,52814%
3Fez40,004149%
4Casablanca30,83926%
5Agadir25,68754%
Source: Estadísticas de tráfico aereo
Busiest domestic routes from VLC (2023)
RankDestinationPassengersChange 2022 / 23
1Palma de Mallorca711,27211%
2Ibiza357,56815%
3Madrid356,29716%
4Seville259,26831%
5Bilbao194,50923%
6Tenerife-North157,29623%
7Santiago de Compostela148,1262%
8Menorca136,13310%
9Málaga134,56365%
10Gran Canaria101,1074%
11Asturias70,83919%
12Lanzarote52,9862%
13Santander51,74417%
14Tenerife-South41,11319%
15Barcelona36,17141%
16A Coruña31,64525%
17San Sebastián20,746New route
18Fuerteventura20,4525%
19Vigo1,19492%
20Vitoria1,1798%
Source: Estadísticas de tráfico aereo

Ground transport

Road

Valencia airport is situated adjacent to the Autovía A-3 highway which connects Valencia with Madrid and is also close to the Autovía A-7 coastal route to Barcelona. It is connected to the city of Valencia by a regular bus line operated by Fernanbus which takes between 30 and 35 minutes and passes through Mislata, Quart de Poblet and Manises.

Rail

The metro network Metrovalencia with lines 3 and 5 on the airport station connects the airport to the city centre (15 minutes), the main railway station of the city Estació del Nord (20 minutes) and the port of Valencia (30 minutes).

See also

External links