CRJ 200 The first recorded flight in Billings was in 1913 by a local dentist named
Dr. Frank Bell, using his home-made
Curtiss 0-X-5, on Memorial Day 1913. With much publicity. Dr. Bell took off from Billings flying west-southwest to
Park City and back, a round trip. This flight was captured by local artist J.K. Ralston in his painting entitled
First Flight, displayed in the airport lobby. In 1927, the City of Billings approved $5,000 and on top of the Rims to build a runway. The runway and small administrative building was built by horse-drawn equipment; the airport opened on May 29, 1928. In 1933,
Northwest Airlines introduced the first scheduled passenger air service. Northwest was serving Billings in 1935 as a stop on a route between Chicago and Seattle flown with
Lockheed Model 10 Electra twin prop airliners. During the 1950s and early 1960s, Northwest operated
Douglas DC-3,
Douglas DC-4,
Douglas DC-6B and
Douglas DC-7C propeller aircraft into Billings. Inland Air Lines was serving the airport in 1939 as a stop on a route between Denver and Great Falls.
Western Airlines then acquired Inland Air Lines and in 1944 was serving Billings with
Douglas DC-3 and
Lockheed Model 18 Lodestar twin prop aircraft on the route between Denver and Great Falls. Western operated
Convair 240 and
Douglas DC-6B propeller aircraft into the airport during the 1950s and early 1960s. The original
Frontier Airlines was serving Billings in 1950 with
Douglas DC-3 aircraft operated on routes to Denver and Salt Lake City. By 1962, Frontier had introduced
Convair 340 aircraft on its flights into the airport and would later serve Billings with
Boeing 737-200 jets as well as with
Convair 580 and
de Havilland Canada DHC-6 Twin Otter turboprops. Improvements over the years include runway lights in 1935 to the new air traffic control tower in 2005. Major terminal expansions were made in 1958, 1972, and 1992. In early 2006 the airport added electronic monitors giving info on arrivals and departures. The name changed from the Billings Municipal Airport to Billings Logan Field in 1957, after Dick Logan, the airport manager, died. In 1971 the airport became Billings Logan International Airport. By 1961,
Northwest Airlines was operating
Lockheed L-188 Electra propjet service into the airport on a routing of New York
Idlewild Airport (IDL, now
JFK Airport) - Detroit (DTW) - Milwaukee (MKE) - Minneapolis/St. Paul (MSP) - Bismarck, ND (BIS) - Billings (BIL) - Great Falls (GTF) - Spokane (GEG) - Yakima (YKM) - Seattle (SEA). The jet age arrived in Billings by 1966 when Northwest introduced
Boeing 727-100 "Fan Jet" flights in addition to its Electra turboprop service. In 1968, Northwest was operating nonstop 727 jet service from the airport to Chicago
O'Hare International Airport, Minneapolis/St. Paul, Great Falls and Spokane as well as direct, no change of plane 727 flights to New York
LaGuardia Airport, Newark, Washington, D.C.
National Airport, Detroit, Cleveland, Milwaukee, Seattle and Portland, OR.
Western Airlines was serving Billings in 1966 with
Lockheed L-188 Electra turboprops with an example routing being Los Angeles (LAX) - San Diego (SAN) - Phoenix (PHX) - Denver (DEN) - Cheyenne (CYS) - Casper (CPR) - Sheridan (SHR) - Billings (BIL). Western was also operating direct Electra propjet service to Calgary (YYC) via a stop in Great Falls (GTF) during the late 1960s. By the early 1970s, Western was operating all of its flights into the airport with
Boeing 737-200 jetliners. In 1979, Western was operating nonstop
Boeing 727-200 service to both Minneapolis/St. Paul and Seattle as well as flying nonstop
Boeing 737-200 service to Denver, Great Falls and Salt Lake City. For at least part of each year from the late 1970s to early 1980s, Billings was served by wide body
McDonnell Douglas DC-10 jetliners operated by
Northwest Airlines. In 1979, Northwest was flying DC-10 service on a round trip routing of Newark
Liberty International Airport (EWR) - Detroit (DTW) - Chicago
O'Hare International Airport (ORD) - Billings (BIL) - Great Falls (GTF) - Spokane (GEG) - Seattle (SEA). The DC-10 was the largest aircraft ever to be operated in scheduled passenger service into the airport. For a short period in 1979, Northwest used a
Boeing 747 to provide passenger service to MSP-BIL-SEA. This was at the tail end of a pilot/airline dispute. Northwest also served Billings with
Boeing 727-200,
McDonnell Douglas DC-9-30,
McDonnell Douglas DC-9-50,
McDonnell Douglas MD-80 and
Airbus A319 jetliners over the years. In 1983, four airlines were operating mainline jet service into the airport:
Continental Airlines with
Douglas DC-9-10 and
McDonnell Douglas DC-9-30 nonstop flights to Denver and Great Falls, the original
Frontier Airlines (1950-1986) with
Boeing 737-200 nonstop flights to Denver, Great Falls and Helena,
Northwest Airlines with
Boeing 727-200 nonstop flights to Great Falls, Helena, Minneapolis/St. Paul and Spokane with direct service to Chicago, Seattle and Portland, OR, and
Western Airlines with
Boeing 737-200 nonstop flights to Salt Lake City with direct service to Los Angeles and San Francisco. By 1985, Northwest had once again added nonstop service to Chicago
O'Hare International Airport flown with
Boeing 727-200 aircraft while
United Airlines had begun flying
Boeing 737-200 nonstop service to Denver. Also in 1985, the airport had commuter airline service operated by
Big Sky Airlines,
Centennial Airlines and Pioneer Airlines with the latter air carrier operating as
Continental Express on behalf of
Continental Airlines. By 2003, the airline was serving Billings with
Canadair CRJ-700 regional jets. Horizon Air continues to serve the airport at the present time on behalf of Alaska Airlines with the
Bombardier Dash 8 Q400 propjet which is the largest and fastest member of the
de Havilland Canada DHC-8 regional turboprop family of aircraft. Additional airlines operating regional jets from the airport in the past included
America West Express operated by
Mesa Airlines with
Canadair CRJ-200 aircraft and
Frontier JetExpress flown by
Horizon Air with
Canadair CRJ-700 aircraft with both air carriers operating nonstop service to Denver.
Big Sky Airlines was a commuter air carrier that was based in Billings from 1978 to 2008. Big Sky primarily operated small turboprop airliners including the
Beechcraft 1900D,
British Aerospace BAe Jetstream 31,
Fairchild Swearingen Metroliner (Metro III and Metro 23 models) and
Handley Page Jetstream as well as
Cessna prop aircraft. The airline operated nonstop flights from the airport to
Butte, MT,
Casper, WY,
Denver, CO,
Glasgow, MT,
Great Falls, MT,
Helena, MT,
Lewistown, MT,
Miles City, MT,
Sidney, MT and
Wolf Point, MT at various times during its existence. In addition, Big Sky operated direct, no change of plane flights from the airport to
Bismarck, ND,
Boise, ID,
Dickinson, ND,
Havre, MT,
Jamestown, ND,
Kalispell, MT,
Minneapolis/
St. Paul, MN,
Missoula, MT,
Moses Lake, WA,
Seattle, WA,
Spokane, WA and
Williston, ND at various times during its existence as well. Besides operating as an independent air carrier, Big Sky also operated
Northwest Airlink service from Billings via a
code sharing agreement with
Northwest Airlines in 1989. Between 2019 and 2024, the airport terminal was modernized and expanded for the first time since the 1990s. The project cost was approximately $45 million. The number of gates increased to 9 (from 6), and the number of jet bridges increased to 8 (from 4). The airport remodeled both the A and B concourses and constructed new screening, lobby, restaurant, and gift shop facilities. The project's purpose was to provide capacity for future growth, attract air carriers, and increase the city's economic vitality. ==Airport governance==