The airport is based on a military airfield constructed during the German occupation in 1940. After the war, the Royal Danish Air Force took control of the field which is still its main base. At the request of some middle- and west-
Jutland politicians, the airport was opened on 1 November 1965 when the first direct connection between
Karup and
Copenhagen was opened. In 1968 the airport's first terminal was built. Until then, it had rented premises at the airbase. Airport ownership consisted of
Viborg and
Ringkjøbing county council districts and the municipalities of
Herning,
Holstebro,
Viborg,
Skive,
Ikast,
Karup,
Struer,
Ringkøbing,
Lemvig, and
Skjern. It was agreed that
Det Danske Luftfartsselskab - later
SAS - would start flying on the route in exchange for a subsidy by the owners. In the beginning there was a single daily departure with a 15-passenger
de Havilland Heron airplane. The route was a success and there was no need for the subsidy. On the contrary, the airport's ongoing development was paid for with the operating income and no additional public support aside from the owners' initial deposits. In 1991 the present terminal,
Glass House on the Heath, designed by the architecture firm Torsten Riis Andersen, was inaugurated. Lemvig and Skjern municipality sold their shares to Karup council (now
Viborg council) in 2002. As of 1 January 2007 the owners were
Herning,
Holstebro,
Ikast-Brande,
Lemvig,
Ringkobing-Skjern,
Silkeborg,
Skive,
Struer, and
Viborg municipalities. In 2010 approximately 350.000 passengers used the airport. Karup lost scheduled flights when
Cimber Sterling, the only operator at the airport, declared bankruptcy and cancelled all flights on 3 May 2012. However, coincidentally,
Norwegian Air Shuttle announced four daily flights to Copenhagen on an all-year basis, operated by a
Boeing 737-800 just after Cimber shut down. This was eventually replaced by an
ATR 72 operated by
Danish Air Transport, who became the only operator on the route after Norwegian Air Shuttle ended its route on 27 March 2015. In autumn 2023 DAT ceased operation on the route, and the Dutch
AIS Airlines took over, operating with a
British Aerospace Jetstream 32. However, in the summer of 2025, the airline was forced to shut down the route following economical struggles, as the route was no longer profitable. In 2025 the nine owning municipalities sold their shares in the airport to the private holding company Heartland A/S. The deal was finalised in October. In February 2026 the airport underwent a name change as part of a strategy to revitalise the airport and give it a more international profile. The airport changed name from Midtjyllands Lufthavn to Karup Midtjylland Airport. The
Air Base Karup is home to several wings of the Royal Danish Air Force, including the helicopter wings, the flying school, the air control wing and several fighter wings. ==Airlines and destinations==