The airport is named after the town of
Domodedovo, on the territory of which it is located. Survey work on the construction of the new Capital Airport began in 1948, after a decision by the Politburo. It was then described as special "Facility No. 306". The Domodedovo Airport is on the former territory of a village called Elgazino (). The village's wrecked wooden houses (
Izba) at and cemetery with 19th century tombstones at remained in the early 21st century, less than a kilometer west of the runway, almost immediately behind the fences. The first mention of Elgazino dates back to the 16th century. In 1550, Tsar Ivan the Terrible gave his
voivode and
boyar Ivan Vasilyevich Sheremetyev a smaller estate in the Moscow district with 150 quarters of land. In 1627, the village appears again in the records and appears as a village of Elgozino on a pond with five peasant households, in the parish of the Church of the Resurrection in the village of Kolychevo. According to the results of the General Survey of the 1760s, the village already had 25 households and 218 inhabitants. In the 1950s, just before the village was demolished, it had a population of about 200 people. In 1951, preparatory work on construction began: cutting firebreaks, and construction of access roads, including roads from Paveletskaya. A 1954 Resolution of the Council of Ministers of 13 November approved the proposal of the Main Directorate of the Civil Air Fleet under the Council of Ministers of the USSR on the construction of the second airport of the Moscow civil air fleet near the village Elgazino Podolsky (now Domodedovo) Moscow Oblast. In 1958, a decree of the USSR Council of Ministers enabled completion of construction of the first stage of the airport in 1962. In 1962, an Order of the Head of Main Directorate of Civil Aviation, issued on 7 April No. 200 ("On the organization of the Moscow Domodedovo airport") ordered "organize as part of the Moscow Transport Aviation Management Directorate the new airport, and continue to call it the Moscow Domodedovo Airport". Therefore, 7 April 1962 is considered the official birthday of the airport. By the end of 1962, after the official approbation, the airport began flights by postal and cargo planes. Services from Domodedovo began in March 1964 with a flight to
Sverdlovsk using a
Tupolev 104. The airport, intended to handle the growth of long-distance domestic traffic in the
Soviet Union, was officially opened in May 1965. A second runway, parallel to the existing one, entered service eighteen months after the opening of the airport. On 26 December 1975, Domodedovo Airport was selected for the inaugural flight of the
Tupolev Tu-144 to
Alma Ata. In 1990s, the airport was privatized and came under the control of the private tourist company (later also an airline) East Line founded by Ural entrepreneurs
Anton Bakov and
Dmitry Kamenshchik. In 1992, their efforts led to the airport obtaining international status (Decree of the Government of the Russian Federation dated 13 July 1992 N 1262-r On the opening of Domodedovo Airport (Moscow) for international flights.
Bakov left the business in 1994. On June 19, 2025
Russia's Federal Property Agency (Rosimushchestvo) has received 100% of shares in DME Holding LLC, the holding company that owns the assets of Domodedovo Airport, changes made in the Unified State Register of Legal Entities. The reconstruction of the airport terminal complex began in 1999 as part of the Comprehensive Airport Development Program until 2003, which was approved by the Government of the Moscow Region and the Board of the Federal Air Transport Service of the Russian Federation. According that Program almost complete reconstruction of the airport terminal complex took place, which opened in 2000. The airport do not stop operations during period of construction. In 2000, as a result of reconstruction, the capacity of the airport complex reached 6,000 passengers per hour: IAL – 2800 passengers per hour, DAL – 3,200 passengers per hour. As a result of this work Domodedovo airport terminal was the first in Russia to successfully pass the certification to ISO 9001:2000. In 2003, the authoritative British magazine
Airline Business recognized the growth in Domodedovo's passenger traffic as one of the highest among the 150 largest airports in the world. In 2004, the airport was among the hundred leading airports in the world, and by 2005 became the leader in passenger traffic in the Moscow aviation area, a record it held for the next ten years. By 2009, the terminal floor space was expanded to from in 2004. The renovated terminal and airport facilities allowed the owners of the airport to attract
British Airways,
China Eastern Airlines,
Lufthansa,
Royal Air Maroc,
Japan Airlines,
Austrian Airlines, and
Vietnam Airlines who moved their flights from another major international Moscow airport,
Sheremetyevo Airport, to Domodedovo. Domodedovo topped
Sheremetyevo Airport in terms of passenger traffic becoming the busiest airport in Russia. By 2010, the traffic at Domodedovo rose to over 22 million passengers per year from 2.8 million in 2000. Domodedovo is Russia's first airport to have parallel runways operating simultaneously. Since the air traffic control tower was redeveloped in 2003, Domodedovo can control over seventy takeoffs and landings per hour. By late in the first decade of the 21st century, the airport had five business lounges set up by individual airlines. In 2003, the airport began an expansion program designed to obtain approval for
wide-body aircraft operations. The runway, taxiways, and parking areas were enlarged and strengthened. In March 2009, it was announced that the approval had been granted, making Domodedovo Airport the first airport in Russia approved for new large aircraft (NLA) operations such as the
Airbus A380. The approval signifies that its operations areas comply with size and strength requirements of
ICAO Category F standards. The airport has
ILS category III A status. Domodedovo Airport has been the focus of two terrorist-related incidents. In 2004,
Muslim suicide bombers managed to pass airport security, board two passenger planes, and carry out the bombings after departure from Domodedovo. Despite the heightened security measures taken after this incident, another
suicide bomber attack occurred on 24 January 2011, when an Islamist militant entered the terminal building and detonated a bomb in the arrival hall. As a result, mandatory screening and pat-down practices have been introduced at the airport terminal entrances. In 2011 during the run-up for the IPO the holding company published information about the final beneficiary at the
London Stock Exchange website and specified Kamenshchik as its sole owner. Domodedovo Airport is the only private airport in Russia: the airport operator is DME Limited Group. On 11 March 2025 the airport was temporarily closed after drone debris fell down on a nearby village and train station during the
Russian invasion of Ukraine. In June 2025, the Russian government took over the airport after a court ruled that its owners, Dmitry Kamenshchik and Valery Kogan, were foreign residents who had no right to manage the airport.
Andrei Ivanov, the former deputy minister of economic development, who headed the airport following its nationalization, later said that Domodedovo was in significant debt and was seeking a new owner. In December 2025, finance minister
Anton Siluanov said the government was planning to sell the airport in early 2026. After a failed auction with an initial starting price of 132 billion rubles in January 2026, the airport was finally sold later in the month to Perspektiva, a subsidiary of
Sheremetyevo International Airport, for 66.1 billion rubles ($880.2 million). ==Future development==