The airfield was built in 1942 as
Naval Auxiliary Air Facility Martha's Vineyard (NAAF Martha's Vineyard) to support the training of naval aviators before their deployment to aircraft carriers in the Pacific Theater. Thousands of men received six weeks of intensive training there. The installation was renamed "Naval Auxiliary Air Station Martha's Vineyard" in 1945, placed in caretaker status in 1946, and ultimately transferred to Dukes County in 1959. The new terminal building, constructed in 2001, replaced an older wooden structure that was the original base operations building. Historical photos and memorabilia are mounted on the main hall's western wall near the restaurant entrance, and tell the story of the Navy squadrons posted there during the war. Major construction was made in the airport during the 21st century. One major project was to shift 200 ft of runway 6 - 24 and renovate taxiways to allow jets such as
ERJ-190 and
CRJ-200 to operate at the airport. The airport also renovated their commercial ramp, adding one spot for
JetBlue ERJ-190, and
Delta Air Lines ERJ-145 and
CRJ-200. They also renovated taxiways; they added a tent on the terminal as they do not have a terminal building prepared for their demand. Over the years,
American Airlines stopped using their
Bombardier CRJ series to Martha's Vineyard because of demand, and started using their
Embraer E175 operated by
Republic Airways as
American Eagle. The airport renovated its ramp again in 2018, adding five spots jets to
Airbus A220. In 2020
Delta Air Lines switched using their
Bombardier CRJ series to
Embraer E175 operated by
Republic Airways as
Delta Connection. In 2017 a new firefighter department building was built next to the terminal building, replacing the old naval building. The airport also renovated and reconstructed its main runway 6 - 24 in 2018–2019; the project cost around $10 million, including adding NO TAXI islands around the ramp. The runway was done and reopened in May 2019 with a Cape Air flight from
Boston Logan to be the first aircraft to touch the new runway. In 2020 the airport repaved some areas on the ramp and added more markings. During the
COVID-19 pandemic, the airport saw a dramatic decline in passengers, with only 15,000 people passing through their doors. American and Delta Air Lines resumed service in late June with their schedules operating by half of 2019.
JetBlue resumed service back in July, but only with a concise schedule. This was the most challenging year for the airport, but demand increased in late 2020 and early 2021. 2021 was the busiest year thus far for the airport, as it had 65,992 passengers. In 2022,
Elite Airways pulled out of
Martha's Vineyard and left the airport with a space for a new airline, which still no airlines have any interest in. In January
American Airlines announced that it would begin seasonal service between the island and
Chicago; later, they changed their summer schedule and added more flights to
Washington D.C. In March 2022
Delta Air Lines announced they would make twice-daily departures to
John F. Kennedy International Airport and one daily departure to
LaGuardia Airport. Later,
JetBlue reduced their summer schedule to the island to about 15% due to pilot shortage, which postponed their Newark route to resume after Labor Day and cut some flights to
John F. Kennedy International Airport. As a result, JetBlue was scheduled to only operate five times daily during the 2022 summer season. The 2022 summer season at MVY was the busiest regarding the number of passengers.
Delta Air Lines increased their schedule to operate four times daily on the 76 seats
ERJ-175; they also extended their season until October 10 from flights to
LaGuardia Airport. All other airlines were operating at the same schedule level as 2021 except for
American Airlines, which increased their frequency to DCA airport up to fifteen times weekly and added a Saturday service to Chicago. 2023 was the airport's busiest year in history; the airport had an average of 80,000 passengers at the airport. Even though the airport had fewer planes coming to it, all commercial flights were at total capacity daily. The airport administration team said that the airport probably will not see the number of passengers increase due to the small terminal and its facility. In 2024,
JetBlue discontinued their flights to
White Plains due to low demand. In the 2023 season, there were 7,200 passengers to
White Plains.
Tradewind Aviation will be the only airline to serve this destination. Also in 2024,
American Airlines announced that they will return flights to
LaGuardia Airport daily from June to September.
JetBlue will also now serve daily flights to
Washington–National, increasing capacity from the 2023 season, which used to operate only Fridays - Sundays. Still, the airport has space for one more airline since
Elite Airways left the airport market in 2022. The community of Martha's Vineyard hopes that either
United Airlines or
Breeze Airways will fill the cap and introduce flights to
White Plains and Newark, which would increase MVY market to NYC City.
Expansion In 2021, the airport created a
Capital Improvement Plan that cites the airport's significant problems during the peak summer months. The airport plans to renovate taxiways and the southeast and southwest ramps with new parking for aircraft. The airport is also considering expanding those ramps to accommodate more
general aviation aircraft. In addition, the airport is working to become 95% carbon-free in the future, adding electric chargers for the new Cape Air
Eviation Alice aircraft. The airport will create new hangars for aircraft maintenance and expand its terminal to accommodate the high summer demand.
Terminal Martha's Vineyard Airport Terminal has one of the most miniature terminals in Massachusetts, and it contains two gates, a restaurant, a ticket area, bathrooms, and
baggage claim. During the summer months, the secure room is an outdoor tent where all secure passengers wait for flights. The
TSA at MVY only contains one area to screen all passengers simultaneously. The ticket area contains about 12: two for
JetBlue, two for
Delta Air Lines, two for
American Airlines, four for Cape Air, and two for any future airlines. The baggage claim is on the terminal's right side, near the car rental area. The restaurant and the management building are located on the left side of the terminal. The restaurant is located before the TSA, so there is no place for food after the TSA screening. Part of the building has pictures and airplane models of the airport in
WWII. ==Airlines and destinations==