Early years The airport began operations in
Second Polish Republic on 17 August 1932 as
Wilno–Porubanek, Porubanek was the name of the neighbouring village which today is part of the Kirtimai district of Vilnius. Before
World War II, it operated the then-domestic route between Wilno (Vilnius) and Warsaw as well as international route to Riga. Since 15 April 1939, it inaugurated a new route to
Kaunas. The airport was used as a military airfield during the war. The airport resumed its activity as a civil airport as of 17 July 1944.
Recent developments Lithuanian Airlines (branded later as
FlyLAL) was established as the Lithuanian
flag carrier following independence in 1991 and inherited the Vilnius-based
Aeroflot fleet of
Tupolev Tu-134,
Yakovlev Yak-40,
Yak-42 and
Antonov An-24,
An-26 aircraft, but rapidly replaced these Soviet-era aircraft types with modern
Boeing 737 and
Boeing 757 jets and
Saab 340,
Saab 2000 turboprops. Operations were suspended effective 17 January 2009 as a result of growing financial difficulties. With the collapse of flyLAL, the airport lost its scheduled services to Amsterdam, Budapest, Istanbul, Madrid and
Tbilisi. flyLAL used to operate to Dublin, Frankfurt, London, Milan and Paris in competition with
Aer Lingus,
airBaltic and
Lufthansa.
AirBaltic, the national airline of Latvia and under
Scandinavian Airlines part-ownership, opened up a second base at Vilnius in 2004 to complement its Riga operation and became the largest carrier at Vilnius, using
Boeing 737 jets and
Fokker 50 turboprops. At one point, airBaltic operated to 19 destinations from Vilnius but, in 2009, the network covered only three destinations served by two aircraft based at Vilnius. Vilnius Airport is the main hub for Grand Cru Airlines and a base for
Wizz Air. It used to be a main hub for Star1 Airlines until their end of operations in September 2010 and
Aurela until Aurela had lost its flight license. It was the hub for
Small Planet Airlines and
Aviavilsa until both airlines folded. The airport was a secondary hub for
airBaltic,
Estonian Air and
Skyways Express until they closed the bases in Vilnius. On 30 June 2013,
Air Lituanica also began its flights from the Vilnius Airport and established its base there serving several European cities. However, by 22 May 2015, the airline shut down all operations as well. The airport was closed for 35 days from 14 July 2017 to 17 August 2017 (inclusive) for runway reconstruction work, with all flights diverted to
Kaunas Airport. In 2025, the airport was closed on several occasions due to helium-filled
weather balloons flying near the airport from Belarus being used to smuggle
black-market cigarettes into the European Union. ==Terminal==