Grand Rapids' first airport broke ground in November 1919, south of downtown. This was eight years after the area witnessed its first landing, a Wright
biplane at Comstock Park State Fairgrounds on September 10, 1911. The airport was operated by the Kent County Board of Supervisors. The first scheduled air service in the United States was between Grand Rapids and
Dearborn on a Ford-Stout monoplane named
Miss Grand Rapids, which started July 26, 1926. In 1938–39, the
Works Progress Administration made improvements including adding new runways, runway widening, fencing, sodding, lighting, remodeling the administration building, and constructing a new restaurant. Circa 1940, the airport extended between 32nd and 36th Streets, from Jefferson Avenue east to the railroad; the west end was soon expanded south to just north of Himes Street and in the 1950s runway 18/36 was extended to 5700’ and reached south to 44th Street. It expanded numerous times after the war. By 1956, however, county officials considered the possibility that the airport had no more room to grow. A year later, a consultant recommended building a new, larger airport at another site. In 1959, the county began construction on the present airport in
Cascade Township, several miles east of the first airport. The new airport opened November 23, 1963, and was dedicated June 6, 1964; it had a runway designated 08/26 and a designated 18/36. The first scheduled jet was a
United Airlines Boeing 737-200 on April 28, 1968, from
Chicago O'Hare. The aircraft, N9003U, was named
City of Grand Rapids. In 1968, the only scheduled non-stops beyond Michigan were to
Chicago and
Green Bay. On January 27, 1977, the Board of Commissioners renamed Kent County Airport as Kent County International Airport with the opening of a
U.S. Customs Service Office in the main terminal building. In 1997, the board added the runway 17/35 to allow continued operations during a $32 million reconstruction of runway 8R/26L, completed in 2001. It completed a passenger terminal renovation in 2000 at a cost of approximately $50 million. In 2004, the airport served more than 2 million passengers for the first time in a year. In 2010, it broke the 2004 record with almost 2.2 million passengers, as increase of over 23% from 2009. On January 2, 2007, a U.S. Air Force
Boeing VC-25 jet carried the remains of former president
Gerald Ford to his namesake airport as part of funeral services culminating in burial at his
presidential museum in Grand Rapids the next day. From April 2010 through October 2011, the airport was a
focus city for
Allegiant Air.
Air Canada operated the airport's only international flights to
Toronto Pearson International Airport from July 2008 until September 2013. It was the airline's second attempt at service between the two markets.
Delta Air Lines used to operate Boeing 757-200s seasonally between Grand Rapids and Atlanta during the winter, making it the largest aircraft to serve GRR. Allegiant Air announced in mid-January 2019 that they would be making the airport one of Allegiant's 16 focus cities once again. After dropping GRR as a focus city in 2011, Allegiant is upgrading GRR again to a focus city adding Nashville, Tennessee, and Savannah-Hilton Head, Georgia, as new routes. Allegiant would later add other new destinations such as Los Angeles, Boston, and Newark. In 2013 the airport began building a natural treatment system to improve stormwater management practices and safeguard the waters of the Thornapple River. The new, innovative system will include a biological treatment system that will improve collection of
stormwater runoff and naturally remove sediments and pollutants before sending the water to the Thornapple River, which flows just east of the airfield. The airport eliminated the two separate security checkpoints in each concourse and created one consolidated checkpoint in the grand hall area to help traffic flow much faster and to be prepared for future growth. In addition, the grand hall area and the entrance area to the airport was renovated with more shopping and dining options. Work began in late 2015 and completed in June 2017. The airport began construction of a roof over the parking deck in March 2015 to increase close-in, covered, long-term parking. The roof covers most of the fourth floor, though some spaces on the fourth and third floors remain uncovered due to airfield sight-line requirements for the FAA control tower. The garage roof was completed in November 2015 and will allow use of the fourth floor spaces during heavy snow. In 2016, the airport partnered with the Cascade Community Foundation on plans to renovate the current outdoor viewing area to make it a larger, more inviting place for people to relax. The renovated park opened in May 2017. In November 2018 the airport began the phase II of the Gateway Transformation Project, reconstructing the baggage claim, check-in, and front of house areas. It has completed the apron reconstruction, adding new pavement to the apron and taxiway areas. In calendar year 2025, GRR set an all-time record with 4,303,696 passengers served, up 3.15% over 2024. ==Facilities==