The airport was built in 1955 by the Government of
the Portuguese State of India, on of land, as the
Aeroporto de Dabolim, which was later officially renamed
Aeroporto General Bénard Guedes. Until 1961, the airport served as the main hub of the
Portuguese India's airline
TAIP (Transportes Aéreos da Índia Portuguesa), which on a regular schedule served
Daman,
Diu,
Karachi,
Mozambique,
Portuguese Timor, and other destinations. During the
Annexation of Goa, in December 1961, the airport was bombarded by the
Indian Air Force with parts of the infrastructure being destroyed. Two civilian planes that were in the airport – a
Lockheed Constellation from
TAP (Transportes Aéreos Portugueses) and a
Douglas DC-4 from
TAIP – managed to escape with refugees, during the night, to
Karachi. In April 1962, it was occupied by the
Indian Navy's air wing when
Major General K. P. Candeth, who had led the successful military operation into Goa, "handed over" the airport to the Indian Navy before relinquishing charge as its
military governor to a
Lieutenant Governor of the then
Union Territory of
Goa, Daman and Diu in June 1962. For civilian air travel out of Vasco da Gama and Goa, the Indian Navy and the
Government of India invited the public sector airline (known now as
Indian) to operate at Dabolim from 1966 after the runway was repaired and jet-enabled. A new domestic terminal building was built in 1983, designed to process 350 arrivals and departures simultaneously, while the international terminal, built in 1996 was designed for 250. Once two vital road bridges across the main waterways of Goa were built in the early 1980s, and Goa hosted the
Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in
1983, the charter flight business began to take off at Dabolim a few years later, pioneered by
Condor Airlines of Germany. In 2006, the Indian
Civil Aviation Ministry announced a plan to upgrade Dabolim Airport. This involved constructing a new international passenger terminal (after converting the existing one to domestic) and adding several more aircraft stands over an area of about . The construction was scheduled to be completed by the end of 2007. However delays in transfer of the required land from the Navy held up proceedings. The modernisation project of Dabolim Airport was one of 35 airport expansion projects undertaken by the AAI and, in terms of size and money, was its third largest project after the ones at Chennai and Kolkata airports. It included the construction of an integrated terminal building to replace the older terminals, a multi-level car parking (MLCP) facility to accommodate between 540 and 570 cars and construction of additional parking stands for aircraft. The AAI acquired additional land from the Indian Navy and the State Government for apron expansion and the expansion of the older international terminal building complex. The foundation stone for the terminal was laid on 21 February 2009, the project work began in May 2010 and construction of the terminal began in May 2011. Due to rising passenger traffic, restrictions over the airport on night flights by the Navy and no scope to expand the airport due to space and navy limitations, an alternative airport,
Manohar International Airport, has been built at
Mopa,
North Goa district. It has been built specially to help relieve the growing pressure on Dabolim Airport and to connect the state of Goa and its adjoining regions with more international destinations to increase
tourism. It was inaugurated by
Prime Minister Narendra Modi on 11 December 2022 and flight operations began on 5 January 2023. The new airport has already connected many domestic destinations, which previously did not have any connection/s with Goa. To carry international traffic to and from the new airport, some airlines like
Aeroflot,
Oman Air and
TUI Airways will shift their operations from Dabolim Airport by the end of 2023.
Air India shifted its
London flights to the new airport, which is at present the only regular
European destination from Goa, on 21 July 2023, thus making it the first international airline to operate to and from the new airport. ==Economic factors==