Santiago–Rosalía de Castro Airport

International airport in Spain From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Santiago–Rosalía de Castro Airport (Galician: Aeroporto de Santiago-Rosalía de Castro, Spanish: Aeropuerto de Santiago-Rosalía de Castro) (IATA: SCQ, ICAO: LEST), previously named Lavacolla Airport and also known as Santiago de Compostela Airport, is an international airport serving the autonomous community and historic nationality of Galicia in Spain. It is the biggest and busiest airport in Galicia[1] and the 2nd busiest airport in northern Spain after Bilbao Airport. It has been named after the Galician romanticist writer and poet Rosalía de Castro, since 12 March 2020.[2]

Airport typePublic/military
Owner/OperatorAENA
Quick facts Aeropuerto de Santiago–Rosalía de CastroAeroporto de Santiago–Rosalía de Castro, Summary ...
Santiago–Rosalía de Castro Airport
Aeropuerto de Santiago–Rosalía de Castro
Aeroporto de Santiago–Rosalía de Castro
Summary
Airport typePublic/military
Owner/OperatorAENA
ServesSantiago, Spain
LocationSantiago de Compostela
Focus city for
Built1932
Elevation AMSL1,213 ft / 370 m
Coordinates42°53′47″N 08°24′55″W
Websitewww.aena.es/en/santiago-rosalia-de-castro.html
Map
SCQ is located in Spain
SCQ
SCQ
Location within Spain
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
17/35 10,499 3,200 Asphalt
Statistics (2025)
Passengers3,120,759
Passengers change 24-25Decrease14.3%
Aircraft movements24,837
Movements change 24-25Decrease7.9%
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Control tower

The airport is located in the parish of Lavacolla, 12 km from Santiago de Compostela and handled 3,640,664 passengers in 2024. It is the focus city of Vueling in the northwest Iberian Peninsula. The Christian pilgrimage route of the Camino de Santiago runs near the airport.

History

The airport was set up by a group of aviation enthusiasts in October 1932 and two months directors were chosen to select where the airport was going to be built. In 1935 construction work started at the airport where two years later on 27 September 1937 the first scheduled flight from Santiago de Compostela took place.[citation needed] After the Spanish Civil war, political prisoners (who were held in the concentration camp of Lavacolla) were forced to work in the construction of the airport.[3]

In 1969 a new terminal was built at the airport. It later underwent several expansions, including a remodeling in 1993.[citation needed]

In June 1980, Iberia launched a seasonal flight to New York City on a Boeing 747. This was Santiago de Compostela's first transatlantic route.[4][5] Four months later, Viasa added non-stop service to Caracas using McDonnell Douglas DC-10s.[4] In 1981, a cargo terminal was built, giving the airport capacity to handle cargo flights.[citation needed] Viasa shut down in 1997, but Avensa resurrected the route to Caracas in March 1999.[4][6] United will resume intercontinental flights to the Americas with a new route to Newark starting in May 2026. [7]

On 13 October 2011, a new passenger terminal opened at the airport.[8]

Terminal

The airport currently has one operating terminal. The old terminal at Santiago de Compostela airport opened in 1969 and was often expanded.[citation needed] The old terminal closed on the night of 13 October 2011 when operations transferred to the new terminal.[citation needed]

The new terminal at Santiago de Compostela Airport officially opened on 13 October 2011 and passenger operations transferred there the following day. It is adjacent to the old terminal and has a size of 74,000 sq m. It has 22 check-in desks, three security checkpoints, four baggage carousels, and 13 gates of which 5 have airbridges. The baggage hall is split into two zones, one for Schengen flights and one for non-Schengen. It can handle as many as 4 million passengers per year.[9] The terminal is due to be expanded in the future. This includes adding another five airbridges to five of the current gates as well as three more baggage carousels and an expanded shopping area.[10]

Airlines and destinations

The following airlines operate regular scheduled and charter flights at Santiago–Rosalía de Castro Airport:

Statistics

During the early 2000s, numbers increased significantly at the airport, from 1.24 million in 2002 to peak at 2.46 million in 2011. Because of the financial crisis in Spain, those numbers decreased to 2.1 million in 2014, with cargo decreasing significantly during that period. The Spanish economic recovery in the mid-2010s and the rise of Santiago de Compostela as an international destination are again increasing cargo and passenger numbers, breaking the 3 million passenger mark for the first time in 2022.[22]

Traffic figures by year

More information Passengers handled, Passengers % change ...
Passengers handledPassengers % changeAircraft movementsAircraft % changeFreight (tonnes)Freight % change
2000 1,332,893-19,660-6,773-
2001 1,281,334Decrease 3.86%19,084Decrease 2.92%6,228Decrease 8.04%
2002 1,240,730Decrease 3.16%17.362Decrease 9.02%5,716Decrease 8.22%
2003 1,381,826Increase 11.37%18,454Increase 6.28%5,318Decrease 6.96%
2004 1,580,675Increase 14.39%21,593Increase 17.00%4,938Decrease 7.14%
2005 1,843,118Increase 16.60%25,693Increase 18.98%3,805Decrease 22.94%
2006 1,994,519Increase 8.21%24,719Decrease 3.79%2,587Decrease 32.01%
2007 2,050,172Increase 2.79%24,643Decrease 0.30%2,749Increase 6.26%
2008 1,917,466Decrease 6.47%21,945Decrease 10.94%2,418Decrease 12.04%
2009 1,944,068Increase 1.38%20,166Decrease 8.10%1,988Decrease 17.78%
2010 2,172,869Increase 11.76%21,252Increase 5.38%1,964Decrease 1.20%
2011 2,464,330Increase 13.41%22,322Increase 5.03%1,787Decrease 9.01%
2012 2,194,611Decrease 10.94%19,511Decrease 12.59%1,815Increase 1.56%
2013 2,073,055Decrease 5.53%18,688Decrease 4.21%1,929Increase 6.28%
2014 2,083,873Increase 0.52%19,431Increase 3.97%2,095Increase 8.60%
2015 2,296,248Increase 10.20%20,540Increase 5.70%2,311Increase 10.10%
2016 2,510,740Increase 9.30%21,227Increase 3.60%2,936Increase 27.04%
2017 2,644,925Increase 5.34%21,520Increase 1.38%2,693Decrease 8.28%
2018 2,724,750Increase 3.01%21,839Increase 1.50%3,019Increase 12.10%
2019 2,903,427Increase 6.56%22,396Increase 2.55%3,201Increase 6.02%
2020 935,394Decrease 67.8%10,949Decrease 51.1%2,981Decrease 6.9%
2021 1,653,821Increase 76.8%15,375Increase 40.4%4,938Increase 65.6%
2022 3,236,619Increase 95.7%25,458Increase 65.6%4,853Decrease 1.7%
2023 3,537,445Increase 9.2%25,903Increase 1.7%4,818Decrease 0.7%
2024 3,640,664Increase 2.9%26,968Increase 4.1%4,941Increase 2.6%
2025 3,120,759Decrease 14.3%24,837Decrease 7.9%3,733Decrease 25.6%
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Traffic figures by month

More information 2025 passengers, 2026 passengers ...
2025 passengers2026 passengersPassengers % change
January 187,988133,079Decrease 29.2
February 185,997130,533Decrease 29.8
March 244,637172,067Decrease 29.7
April 284,639164,277Decrease 42.3
May 302,990--
June 310,351--
July 340,346--
August 346,012--
September 303,244--
October 276,814--
November 157,855--
December 179,886--
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Busiest routes

More information Rank, Destination ...
Busiest international routes from SCQ (2025)
Rank Destination Passengers Change 2024 / 25
1 London-Stansted 98,227 Decrease 13.27%
2 London-Heathrow 77,462
-
3 London-Gatwick 68,223 Decrease 33.86%
4 Dublin 58,427 Decrease 25.84%
5 Geneva 58,107 Decrease 35.27%
6 Paris-Charles de Gaulle 53,767 Decrease 16.57%
7 Basel/Mulhouse 45,629 Decrease 16.61%
8 Frankfurt 38,331 Increase 20.03%
9 Charleroi 20,650 Decrease 30.71%
10 Memmingen 20,029 Decrease 3.25%
Source: Estadísticas de tráfico aereo[23]
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More information Rank, Destination ...
Busiest domestic routes from SCQ (2025)
Rank Destination Passengers Change 2024 / 25
1 Barcelona 461,800 Increase 3.26%
2 Madrid 297,717 Decrease 35.17%
3 Seville 275,869 Decrease 2.60%
4 Palma de Mallorca 255,233 Increase 3.06%
5 Málaga 194,672 Decrease 16.76%
6 Gran Canaria 185,488 Increase 0.76%
7 Tenerife-North 150,084 Increase 21.14%
8 Valencia 149,907 Decrease 9.21%
9 Alicante 142,393 Decrease 39.00%
10 Tenerife-South 127,717 Decrease 17.97%
Source: Estadísticas de tráfico aereo[23]
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Ground transportation

Road

The airport is linked with Santiago de Compostela (13 km) by the Autovía A-54. This motorway, although some sections are yet to be built and opened, also connects the airport with Lugo (94.5 km), where it connects with the Autovía A-6, providing toll-free motorway access to the rest of Spain; and to the French border through the Autovía A-8 that intersects with the Autovía A-6 near Lugo. Nearby Autopista AP-9 connects the airport directly to A Coruña (66 km), Ferrol (88 km), Pontevedra (75 km), Vigo (100 km) and the Portuguese border. Ourense (116 km) is reachable through the Autopista AP-53 that connects with the Autopista AP-9.

There are several major car rental companies at the airport. The airport has more than 5,000 short and long-term covered parking spaces in the new terminal building. In addition, there are several low-cost, long-term private parking facilities around the airport.

Bus services

A city bus service connects the airport with the center of Santiago de Compostela and the bus and train terminal in the city regularly. From the station in Santiago de Compostela, private coach operators run direct services in a multiple daily basis to most cities and towns in Galicia, including A Coruña, Ferrol, Lugo, Ourense, Pontevedra and Vigo, as well as long-distance services to the rest of Spain, and international services. In addition, three regional services link the airport directly to A Coruña, to Lugo, including several stops in the French Way of the Camino de Santiago, and to the A Mariña coastal area (home to As Catedrais beach) in the province of Lugo.

Rail

There are no rail facilities at the airport. However, the train station in Santiago de Compostela,[24] located 12 km. away, is connected to the airport by the city bus service every 30 minutes. There are combined available train+bus tickets to and from the airport. The train station in Santiago de Compostela has regional, medium and long-distance high-speed Alvia services to most cities in Galicia, including A Coruña, Ferrol, Ourense, Pontevedra, Vilagarcía and Vigo; and further to Madrid Chamartín and the rest of Spain.

Foot and bike

The Camino de Santiago runs next to the runway of the airport. This is the busiest and final journey in the Camino de Santiago that goes through the famous Monte do Gozo. There are dedicated pathways for both pedestrians and bikers towards the city. The walking distance from the runway to the Cathedral is estimated at 10.90 km.

Accidents and incidents

  • On 3 March 1978, a McDonnell Douglas DC-8-63 operated by Iberia from Madrid–Barajas Airport with 211 passengers and 11 crew members, registration EC-BMX. The aircraft touched down far down the runway after a high approach, aquaplaned off the runway, dropped into a hollow 20m deep and caught fire. The crash was settled with 70 injured people, 10 of them seriously injured, and no fatalities.[25]
  • On 7 June 2001, a Beechcraft B300C Super King Air 350, registration F-GOAE, departed from Le Mans-Arnage Airport (LME), France, to Santiago De Compostela Airport (SCQ), Spain, on a cargo flight according to instrument flight rules. Near the destination airport, the meteorological conditions were reported to be good, and the crew requested a visual approach to runway 17, even though the active runway was 35. Once cleared to land, the aircraft encountered a fog patch and from this moment it began a high ate descent (2000 to 3000 ft/min). A minute after entering an unexpected and unforeseen fog patch, the aircraft struck some trees in level flight and with an airspeed of 148 kt. The wings and engines detached from the fuselage, and they dragged along a scrubland area until they came to a stop. The crew suffered minor injuries and the aircraft was completely destroyed.[26]
  • On 2 August 2012, an Airnor Cessna 500 Citation I, registration EC-IBA, flying from Asturias crashed whilst on approach to the airport with the death of both crew members.[27]

References

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