Mohammed V International Airport

Airport serving Casablanca, Morocco From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mohammed V International Airport[a] IATA: CMN, ICAO: GMMN is an international airport serving Casablanca, Morocco. Located in Nouaceur Province, it is operated by Airports of Morocco.

Airport typePublic
ServesCasablanca, Morocco
LocationNouasseur
Quick facts مطار محمد الخامس الدوليMaṭar Muhammad al-Khamis ad-Dowaly, Summary ...
Mohammed V International Airport
مطار محمد الخامس الدولي
Maṭar Muhammad al-Khamis ad-Dowaly
Summary
Airport typePublic
OperatorAirports of Morocco
ServesCasablanca, Morocco
LocationNouasseur
Hub for
Elevation AMSL656 ft / 200 m
Coordinates33°22′02″N 007°35′23″W
Websitewww.aeroportcasablanca.ma/en/
Map
CMN is located in Morocco
CMN
CMN
Location of airport in Morocco
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
17L/35R 3,720 12,205 Asphalt
17R/35L 3,720 12,205 Asphalt
Statistics
Passengers (2024)10,449,372
Aircraft movements (2022)67,074
Economic impact (2012)$731 million
Sources: France Aviation Civile Services[1] and Ecquants[2]
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With about 7.6 million passengers passing through the airport in 2022, it was the busiest airport in Morocco and in the top 10 of busiest airports in Africa.[3] Passenger traffic in 2022 had recovered to 74% of the total pre-pandemic numbers of 2019.[4] The airport serves as hub for Royal Air Maroc,[5] Royal Air Maroc Express and Air Arabia Maroc. The airport is named after King Mohammed V of Morocco.

History

Transatlantic routes from Casablanca, September 1945
Terminal 1 interior
Arrivals area
Departure gates
Royal Air Maroc Boeing 737–800

1940s

The Casablanca Mohammed V Airport was originally built by the United States in early 1943 following Operation Torch in World War II. It was named Berrechid Airfield and it served as an auxiliary airfield for Casablanca's Anfa Airport.[6] The airfield handled diverse military traffic as a stopover en route to Port Lyautey Airfield, and to Marrakesh Menara Airport on the North African Cairo-Dakar route. In addition, it was the terminus of Mid-Atlantic route transatlantic flights via the Azores to Nova Scotia and airfields on the East Coast of the United States.

In addition to its transportation role, the airfield supported the North African Campaign with the Twelfth Air Force 68th Reconnaissance Group operating photo-reconnaissance versions of the P-38 Lightning and P-51 Mustang. Part of the 68th first arrived at Angads Airport in Oujda in November 1942 and moved to Berrechid in March 1943 upon its completion. It flew both antisubmarine missions over the Atlantic and photo-reconnaissance combat missions over German-held territory until early September when it moved east to Massicault Airfield in Tunisia. With the end of the war in 1945, the airfield was handed over to the civil government.

1950s

During the Cold War in the early and middle 1950s, the airfield was reopened as Nouasseur Air Base and was used as a United States Air Force Strategic Air Command staging area for B-47 Stratojet bombers pointed at the Soviet Union. These operations later moved to Ben Guerir Air Base.

With the destabilisation of French government in Morocco, and Moroccan independence in 1956, the government of Mohammed V wanted the US Air Force to pull its bases out of Morocco, insisting on such action after American intervention in Lebanon in 1958. The United States agreed to leave in December 1959, and was fully out of Morocco by 1963. The U.S. felt that, with the long range of the B-52 and completion of Spanish bases in 1959, the Moroccan bases were no longer important.

2020s

In 2022, Mohammed V Airport was ranked the 4th busiest airport in Africa.[7]

New terminal project (2025–2029)

In May 2025 Morocco's airports authority Moroccan Airports Authority launched an international tender to build a new H-shaped terminal at Mohammed V International Airport in Casablanca at an estimated cost of US$1.6 billion.[8][9] The terminal, designed in a “hub-style”, will increase capacity from roughly 15 million to 35 million passengers per year. It will form part of Morocco's Airports 2030 strategy and is expected to be completed by 2029 in time for the 2030 FIFA World Cup which Morocco will co-host with Spain and Portugal.[10]

The expansion project features:

  • A new 3,700 m parallel runway, extended taxiways and a new 42 m air traffic control tower.[11]
  • An integrated high-speed rail (LGV) station linking the airport with Casablanca, Rabat and Marrakesh via the Al Boraq line.[8]

Earthworks began in mid-2025 with main construction slated to follow and full operation targeted for 2029.[12]

Airlines and destinations

Passenger

The following airlines operate regular scheduled and charter flights at Casablanca Mohammed V International Airport:

More information Airlines, Destinations ...
AirlinesDestinations
Aegean Airlines Athens (resumes 2 October 2026)[13]
Air Arabia Barcelona,[14] Basel/Mulhouse,[14] Bergamo,[14] Bologna, Brussels,[14] Catania,[14] Cuneo,[14] Geneva,[14] Istanbul–Sabiha Gökçen,[14] Lyon,[14] Madrid,[15] Málaga, Montpellier,[16] Naples,[14] Pisa,[14] Venice[14]
Air Cairo Seasonal: Alexandria,[17] Sharm El Sheikh[18][19]
Air Canada Montréal–Trudeau[20]
Air France Paris–Charles de Gaulle,[21] Paris–Orly[22]
Air Senegal Dakar–Diass[23]
Alexandria Airlines Seasonal charter: Sharm El Sheikh[24]
Binter Canarias Gran Canaria
Egyptair Cairo[25][26]
Emirates Dubai–International[27][28]
Etihad Airways Abu Dhabi[29]
Eurowings Seasonal: Düsseldorf[30]
Flynas Jeddah[31]
Gulf Air Bahrain[32][33]
Iberia Madrid
Kuwait Airways Kuwait City[34]
Lufthansa Frankfurt[35]
Mauritania Airlines Nouakchott
Pegasus Airlines Istanbul–Sabiha Gökçen
Qatar Airways Doha
Royal Air Maroc[36] Abidjan,[37] Abuja,[38] Accra,[39] Agadir,[40] Amsterdam,[41] Bamako,[42] Bangui,[41] Banjul,[37] Barcelona,[41] Beijing–Daxing,[43] Bissau,[41] Bologna,[44] Bordeaux,[41] Brazzaville,[41] Brussels,[45] Cairo,[41] Catania,[46] Conakry,[41] Cotonou,[41] Dakar–Diass,[47] Dakhla,[40] Doha, Douala,[41] Dubai–International,[48] Errachidia,[40] Frankfurt,[41] Freetown,[41] Geneva,[41] Istanbul,[49] Jeddah,[41] Kinshasa–N'djili,[41] Laayoune,[40] Lagos,[41] Libreville,[41] Lisbon,[41] Lomé,[41] London–Gatwick,[41] London–Heathrow,[50] London–Stansted,[51] Los Angeles (begins 7 June 2026),[52] Luanda,[53] Lyon,[45] Madrid,[41] Malabo,[41] Manchester,[38] Marrakesh,[40] Marseille,[41] Medina, Miami,[54] Milan–Malpensa,[45] Monrovia–Roberts,[41] Montpellier,[41] Montréal–Trudeau,[54] Moscow–Sheremetyevo,[55] Munich,[56] Nantes,[45] Naples,[57] N'Djamena,[56] New York–JFK,[54] Niamey,[41] Nice,[41] Nouakchott,[41] Ouagadougou,[41] Oujda,[40] Paris–Charles de Gaulle,[45] Paris–Orly,[45] Porto,[58] Praia,[41] Riyadh,[41] Rome–Fiumicino,[57] Saint Petersburg,[59] Sal,[60] São Paulo–Guarulhos,[61] Seville,[62] Strasbourg, Tenerife-South,[63][41] Toronto–Pearson,[64] Toulouse,[41] Tunis, Turin,[65] Venice,[57] Washington–Dulles,[54] Yaoundé,[41] Zurich[56]
Royal Air Maroc Express[36] Agadir,[40] Al Hoceima,[41] Fez,[41] Gran Canaria,[45] Málaga,[45] Marrakesh,[40] Nador,[41] Ouarzazate,[41] Oujda,[40] Tangier,[41] Tan Tan,[41] Tétouan, Valencia,[45] Zagora[41]
Royal Jordanian Amman–Queen Alia[66]
Saudia Jeddah,[67][68] Medina, Riyadh[69][68]
Shanghai Airlines Marseille, Shanghai–Pudong[70]
TAP Air Portugal Lisbon[71]
Transavia Amsterdam,[72] Lyon, Nantes,[73] Paris–Orly[74]
Seasonal: Marseille[75]
TUI fly Belgium Bologna, Brussels,[76] Lille, Paris–Orly, Rotterdam
Tunisair Tunis
Turkish Airlines Istanbul
Seasonal: Antalya[citation needed]
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Cargo

Traffic

PassengersYear2,000,0003,000,0004,000,0005,000,0006,000,0007,000,0008,000,0009,000,00010,000,00011,000,000200020052010201520202025PassengersAnnual passenger traffic
More information Traffic, Average growth 2004–2009 ...
Traffic[83] 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 Average growth
2004–2009
Aircraft movements[83] n/a 69,119+1.11% 68,362−2.5% 70,080+7.6% 65,111+9.2% 59,621+13.9% 52,336 +5.86%
Passengers[83] 7,245,508[84]+13,28 6,395,862+2.95% 6,209,711+6.0% 5,858,192+15.5% 5,071,411+12.1% 4,456,639+17.1% 3,803,479 +10.73%
Freight (tons)[83] n/a 53,469-6.06% 56,919−6.5% 60,682+9.3% 55,673+10.7% 50,285+6.5% 47,152 +2.79%
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Ground transport

The train station in Casablanca Mohammed V Airport

Rail

The Al Bidaoui train service, operated by ONCF from 04:00 to 23:00, is available every hour and connects the airport to Casablanca's two main railway stations, Casa-Port Railway Terminal and Casa-Voyageurs Railway Station.[85]

Car

Incidents and accidents

  • On 1 April 1970, a Royal Air Maroc Sud Aviation SE-210 Caravelle crashed on approach to Casablanca Mohammed V airport when it lost control at a height of about 500 feet. The fuselage broke in two. Sixty-one of the eighty-two passengers and crew were killed.[87][88]

See also

References

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