Early history While Imperial Japan occupied Xiamen during
World War II in 1941, they constructed the airport east of Gaoqi Village as a military airfield to defend against the U.S. military. It concurrently also served scheduled flights between Xiamen and Taipei, Fuzhou, Guangzhou, and Hong Kong. After the end of the
Second Sino-Japanese War, the airport was reclaimed by the
Nationalist government, who converted it for civilian use. It was now under the management of the Xiamen office of the
Civil Aviation Administration. In February of 1949, the management was transferred to the
Republic of China Air Force who established the
242nd Supply Squadron to manage the airport. On 24 August that year, the last plane departed the airport carrying high-ranking Nationalist officials en route to Taipei before it shut down due to the
People's Liberation Army occupying the area. After the PLA occupied
mainland China, the airport underwent maintenance and expansion to prepare for military operations against Taiwan, which was completed in 1952. In 1955, it underwent a second renovation. However, due to the airport being close to the attack radius of Kinmen Island, the airport never reopened, and henceforth was left abandoned.
Current airport In 1982, the airport received a loan of the equivalent of 21 million U.S. Dollars from the Kuwait Fund to fund the expansion with the assistance of the then-director of the
National Development and Reform Commission Jiang Zemin. The expansion commenced on January of 1982, and the airport was re-opened on 22 October 1983 as the first airport in China to be built with foreign funding and managed by a local government. Once the airport was re-opened, Terminal 1 officially commenced operations with
CAAC flight 265 to Shanghai being the first flight to depart, to massive fanfare. In April of 1987, after the airport completed a 550 m (1,800 ft) extension via land reclamation, the total length of the runway became 2,700 m (8,900 ft). In October of 1993, Terminal 2 was built and opened to alleviate passenger traffic of Terminal 1. On 8 November 1996, Terminal 3 was opened, becoming the largest and the most state-of-the-art passenger air terminal in China at the time. On 5 May 2012, the renovated Terminal 2 was re-opened as a section of Terminal 3 to serve domestic flights, with Terminal 1 being demolished and the area being turned into parking space. On 8 December 2014, the airport surpassed the 20 million passenger throughput threshold. On 28 December 2014, Terminal 4 was opened, rendering the airport capable of operating with two terminals. At 2:00 a.m. local time on 4 December 2017, an Air France A380 became the first of its type to land at Xiamen, with the reason being for maintenance being performed by TAECO. To prevent the spread of inbound
COVID-19 cases from abroad, the second international/Hong Kong/Macau/Taiwan arrivals hall located in the former Terminal 2 commenced operations on 23 October 2021 to handle arriving passengers from the given areas. It had seven sections: the customs epidemiological investigation area, sampling area, disinfection area, symptomatic medical screening area, border inspection hall, baggage claim and inspection area, and logistics office area. It also features an independent partitioned air conditioning system. The border inspection area is divided into two sections: passengers requiring medical attention or transfer are inspected in a dedicated inspection room on the second floor; normal passengers complete entry procedures in the inspection hall on the first floor. The waiting and inspection halls cover approximately 700 m2 (7,500 sq ft) and has 12 manual inspection areas and one staff-only inspection area, all equipped with intelligent verification desks, translation machines, and intelligent gate systems. At 6:00 a.m. on 8 January 2023, the arrival area ceased operations. Simultaneously, the international/Hong Kong/Macau/Taiwan arrival area at Terminal 3 resumed operations, and all flights and passengers from the given areas proceed there for immigration and customs.
New destinations KLM began the first intercontinental route out of Xiamen, to
Amsterdam, on 27 March 2011. Since then, long-haul traffic has expanded, with XiamenAir launching flights to Amsterdam,
Sydney,
Melbourne,
Vancouver,
Los Angeles,
Paris,
Doha and
Malé after taking delivery of the
Boeing 787.
New airport and closure Following the opening of Terminal 4, Gaoqi Airport can no longer expand. For this reason, a new airport is currently under construction on Dadeng Island, Xiang'an District, currently known as Xiamen Xiang'an International Airport. When completed in late 2026, it will have two new runways, a terminal, be able to handle up to 45 million passengers, and have subway links to the
Xiamen Railway Station. Gaoqi Airport will cease all civilian operations once Xiang'an Airport opens. == Current terminals ==