Albuquerque was first served by two private airports. The Albuquerque Airport, later known as
Oxnard Field, opened in 1928, and the
West Mesa Airport, later known as the TWA airport, opened in 1929. The first airlines to serve the airports were
Transcontinental Air Transport (TAT),
Western Air Express (WAE), and Mid Continent Air Express, all inaugurating service in 1929. At first the airlines operated from the Albuquerque Airport but within the first year had moved to the West Mesa Airport where they stayed for most of the 1930s decade. TAT and WAE merged in 1930 to form
Transcontinental and Western Air (TWA). Mid Continent Air Express' service was replaced by
Varney Speed Lines in 1934. Three years later Varney changed its name to
Continental Airlines. In 1935, it was suggested that the city build a new public airport using
Works Progress Administration money. Having secured US$520,500 in funding, Governor
Clyde Tingley broke ground for the project on February 28, 1937. Albuquerque Municipal Airport opened in 1939 with two paved runways, a
Pueblo Style terminal building designed by Ernest Blumenthal, and a large
hangar designed to accommodate the new
Boeing 307 Stratoliner operated by TWA. TWA became
Trans World Airlines in 1946. Within two years after the airport opened, the Albuquerque Army Air Base was constructed to the east. This facility later became
Kirtland Air Force Base and still shares the runways and other facilities with the commercial operations of the airport today. Monarch Airlines came to Albuquerque in 1947 then merged with other carriers to become
Frontier Airlines in 1950.
Pioneer Air Lines began service in 1948 and merged into Continental Airlines in 1955. TWA, the largest of the carriers serving Albuquerque, introduced the first jet service in 1961 using the
Boeing 707. The airport was renamed Albuquerque Sunport on April 17, 1963. In late 1963,
Trans Texas Airways (later becoming
Texas International Airlines) began service, rounding out the first four carriers to serve the airport prior to the airline deregulation act of 1978. Several smaller commuter airlines also served the airport over the years including Ross Aviation. The present terminal was designed by William E. Burk Jr. It is built just east of the original terminal and opened on November 12, 1965. At first the terminal had eight gates, four at the main building and another four at a small satellite building to the south connected by a tunnel. None of the gates had jetbridges. The airport gained international status in 1971 and was renamed the Albuquerque International Airport on September 17, 1971. The terminal has been expanded several times, first in 1973 when a west wing was added with a large gate and jetbridge able to handle new
wide-body aircraft. TWA used this gate to introduce the
Lockheed L-1011 to Albuquerque in 1974 with flights to Chicago. After airline deregulation was passed in 1978, a flood of new airlines came to ABQ. The west wing was expanded in 1980 with three more gates, all of which had jetbridges and were used extensively by TWA and several new carriers.
Southwest Airlines, which started service on April 3, 1980, quickly grew to become the largest carrier serving the airport. Southwest used the old gates 1 and 2 at the main terminal and installed three ground level jetbridges at these two gates. During 1987 through 1989, the terminal was greatly expanded and renovated advertising a design by
Phillip Jacobson and BPLW Associates.
Historical airline service The Sunport is served by
Alaska,
American,
Delta,
JetBlue,
Southwest, and
United Airlines, as well as one commuter airline,
Advanced Air. Total weekday departures averaged 83 flights per day in the fall of 2023; however, the Sunport peaked with 163 flights per day in December 1995 and again in August 2001. Many extra flights are added during the week of the Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta in early October of each year. In the past, Albuquerque has been served by the following commercial airlines:
TWA (1929–2001),
Continental (1934–2012), Pioneer (1948–1955),
Monarch (1947–1950), Frontier Airlines (1950-1986|Frontier (1950–1986),
Trans Texas/Texas International (1963–1982),
Eastern (1979–1988),
Western (1981–1987),
PSA (1983–1988), America West (1983–2007),
Wien Air Alaska (1984),
USAir (1988–1997),
Braniff (1988–1989),
Pan Am (1989–1990),
Northwest (1992–2010),
Frontier (1994-2014 and 2017–2023),
Reno Air (1995–1998), Western Pacific/
Mountain Air Express (1997), AeroMexico Connect (1993-1994 and 2009–2010),
Great Plains (2001–2004), US Airways (formerly USAir) (2007–2015),
ExpressJet (2007–2008),
Allegiant (2016–2022),
Volaris (2018–2019), and
Spirit (2022–2025).
TWA was first: passenger flights began in 1929, with Albuquerque being one of many stops on a transcontinental route between Los Angeles and New York. TWA had the first jets to serve ABQ, the
Boeing 707, and
Convair 880 in 1961. In 1974 TWA brought the first wide-body jet to ABQ, the
Lockheed 1011. Service peaked in 1979 with 21 daily departures to 13 cities including nonstops to Los Angeles and New York. After airline deregulation in the early 1980s, TWA downsized its operation and in 1985 only had flights to its hub at St. Louis. Service continued until December 2, 2001, when the carrier merged with American Airlines.
Continental Airlines was second at Albuquerque, since 1934 as a stop on its north–south route between Denver and El Paso. In 1940 Continental added flights to several smaller cities in Southeastern New Mexico but that was transferred to Frontier and Trans Texas Airways in 1963. In the latter half of the 1960s Continental expanded with
Boeing 720,
Boeing 727, and
Douglas DC-9 jets nonstop to Chicago, Dallas, Denver, El Paso, Lubbock, Midland/Odessa, San Antonio, and San Francisco. Service peaked in summer 1977 with 24 daily departures. Continental downsized its operation after airline deregulation and by 1994 was only flying to its Houston hub (a nonstop flight to Newark was added for a period in the mid-2000s). Continental merged with United Airlines in 2012.
Frontier Airlines began service to Albuquerque in 1947 as Monarch Airlines, flying to Salt Lake City with stops at many smaller cities in the four corners states. Service was expanded in the 1960s with
Boeing 727 and
Boeing 737 jets to Denver, El Paso, Phoenix, Tucson, Dallas, and Las Vegas and in 1973 Frontier operated 19 daily flights at ABQ. Frontier began the first international flights to several resort cities in Mexico in the early 1980s but the carrier closed down in 1986. A new Frontier Airlines came to ABQ in 1994 with flights to Denver and El Paso. The carrier discontinued service in 2014 but returned in October 2017 with flights once again to Denver. Service to Austin, Orlando and San Antonio were added in 2018 but discontinued in 2019. Service was changed from
Denver to
Las Vegas, NV in 2022 but Frontier ended all service to Albuquerque by the end of 2022.
Pioneer Air Lines served Albuquerque between 1948 and 1955 with two flights per day to Dallas, Texas making eight stops en route. Pioneer merged into Continental Airlines in 1955 and by 1959 Continental was flying the route nonstop. The Albuquerque to Dallas route would be a major stronghold for Continental for the next 20 years. In 1963
Trans-Texas Airways came to Albuquerque, taking over service to the smaller cities in New Mexico that Continental had served. It later expanded with nonstop
Douglas DC-9s to Dallas and Los Angeles. TTA became
Texas International Airlines in 1969 and flew DC-9's from ABQ to Santa Fe and Roswell, New Mexico. The carrier peaked in 1975 with 15 daily departures and merged with Continental Airlines in 1982.
Southwest Airlines began service to the Sunport in 1980 and expanded quickly creating a hub at ABQ. The carrier took over the number one spot by the early 1980s and peaked with 66 daily departures in October 2001. Although Southwest has cut back since then, it has served 29 cities nonstop from ABQ. The decline in service is attributed to the repeal of the
Wright Amendment which only allowed air travel to Texas and airports in bordering states from
Dallas Love Field.
American Airlines began serving the Sunport in 1979,
Delta Air Lines in 1982,
United Airlines in 1983,
jetBlue in 2013,
Alaska Airlines in 2014, and
Sun Country in 2024 (Seasonally). At least 35 commuter and regional airlines have served Albuquerque, the largest of these by far was
Mesa Airlines which served the Sunport from 1980 through 2007. Mesa peaked with 46 daily departures in 1990 and served 18 cities in New Mexico and Colorado nonstop from their hub in ABQ. Mesa still serves ABQ but now as a regional airline providing feeder service for American Eagle and United Express on regional jets. Other larger commuter airlines that served the Sunport for many years include
Air Midwest and
Great Lakes Airlines. Regional airlines serving the Sunport on behalf of the majors are: CommutAir, Envoy, Horizon, Mesa, Republic, and SkyWest. Sun Country Airlines, iAero, and Denver Air Connection, also serve ABQ with regular charter flights. In November 2018, low-cost Mexican carrier
Volaris began serving Albuquerque from Guadalajara, Mexico, and later from Chihuahua, Mexico — a route previously operated by
Aeroméxico Connect in 2009. Volaris stopped serving Albuquerque in June 2019 due to very low passenger loads and a disagreement over government subsidies to its flights. At that time, these were the only two international destinations offered by any airline flying to Albuquerque.
Military facilities and operations The Sunport began a new role in 1940 when it was designated Albuquerque Army Air Base, the precursor to today's
Kirtland Air Force Base. The Sunport continues to share its runways with Kirtland AFB, which also handles rescue and firefighting operations. An
Air Force Global Strike Command (AFGSC) installation, the host unit is the
377th Air Base Wing (377 ABW). Flying units at Kirtland AFB consist of the
58th Special Operations Wing (58 SOW) of the
Air Education and Training Command (AETC) and the
150th Special Operations Wing (150 SOW), an
Air Education and Training Command (AETC)-gained unit of the
New Mexico Air National Guard.
Future developments The Airport Master Plan drafted in 2002 lays out intermediate- and long-term projects at the Sunport, including the construction of a second terminal when traffic demands it. The runway 17/35 closure and removal recommendation was based on safety,
noise abatement, and the cost of upkeep. Because 17/35 intersected all three of the other runways, it ran the highest risk of
runway incursions. The runway was closed in the summer of 2012, and the tarmac is used for taxiing aircraft and for a firefighting training aircraft located on the north end. The configuration of the other three runways, in conjunction with typical wind patterns, enabled them to handle departures and landings more efficiently. With the closure of Runway 17/35, approximately 75 acres of land just northeast of the terminal complex became available for redevelopment. The
City of Albuquerque has initiated a project called Destination Sunport to promote the area as an emerging business hub supporting collaboration among Albuquerque's research and development community and the global marketplace. Development of the business park began on 14 December 2018, with three phases estimated to be completed over five years. In the longer term, the plan calls for a new terminal to be built to the northeast of the existing terminal. A
people mover system will connect the terminal with parking facilities and the existing terminal. ==Facilities==