Maiquetía "Simón Bolívar" International Airport (IATA:CCS,ICAO:SVMI, Spanish:Aeropuerto Internacional de Maiquetía "Simón Bolívar")[1] is aninternational airport located inMaiquetía,Vargas, Venezuela, servingCaracas, the capital of the country, the center of which is about 21 kilometres (13 mi) to the west. Commonly known simply asMaiquetía by the local population, it is the main international air passenger gateway to Venezuela. The airport handles flights to several destinations in Central and South America as well as a few services to Spain, Russia and China although many international routes have been terminated since 2014.
The airport opened in 1945 as the Maiquetía International Airport (Aeropuerto Internacional de Maiquetía).[2] The site had been recommended as an appropriate location for an airport byCharles Lindbergh on behalf ofPan Am.[3] The USA subsidised the construction of the airport as part of the Airport Development Program. The original passenger terminal was designed by architect Luis Malaussena.[4]
In the 1950s, under the regime of dictatorMarcos Pérez Jiménez, road transport between the airport and the capital was improved by the inauguration of theCaracas-La Guaira highway, and the La Guaira and Caracas Railway, dating from the nineteenth century, was closed.
Between 1952 and 1962, two new wings were added to the passenger terminal, and the runway was expanded to 2,000 metres (6,600 ft). Lighting was installed on the runway and approach zones to allow night operations. A new runway was built in 1956, and in 1962 extended to 3,000 metres (9,800 ft) long by 60 metres (200 ft) wide.
From the late 1970s until the 1980sAir France operated a weekly service by the Anglo-French supersonic airlinerConcorde between Caracas and Paris, with a stop atthe airport of Santa Maria in the Atlantic OceanAzores archipelago.[5]
In the 1970s a new international terminal was constructed to offer increased capacity, with a domestic terminal opening in 1983.Viasa, the flag-carrier of Venezuela, ceased operations on 23 January 1997. Since 2000, the airport has been undergoing major changes in order to meet international standards and to improve passenger traffic, security, immigration areas, and customs areas. Security measures have become top priority since the September 11, 2001 attacks, and departure and arrival areas are completely separate, in the lower and upper levels of the airport. Proyecto Maiquetía 2000 (Project Maiquetia 2000) was completed in 2007, adding added new customs and immigration areas, a new cargo terminal, and a connecting passageway between the domestic and international terminal.
In March 2007,Iran Air introduced service to Tehran via Damascus.[6] It had acodeshare agreement withConviasa, which took over the route seven months later.[7][8] Conviasa ended its non-stop service to Damascus in August 2012.[9]
In 2016, thejetways in the international terminal were replaced with new glass-walled jetways.[citation needed] Following the increasing economic partnershipbetween Venezuela and Turkey in October 2016,Turkish Airlines started offering direct flights from December 2016 connecting between Caracas to Istanbul (viaHavana, Cuba) in an effort to "link and expand contacts" between the two countries.[13]
By 2018, terminals in the airport lacked air conditioning and utilities such as water and electricity. Flight crews are often sent to stay in different cities to avoid crime that occurs in the area. The company charged with providing sanitation services ceased to exist, so the airport buildings were cleaned less frequently. TheBolivarian National Guard, tasked with providing security, often extorts travelers by force.[14]
In support of President Nicolas Maduro's government,Russian Air Force aircraft, includingTupolev Tu-160bombers, were deployed to the airport in early December 2018.[15] In March 2019, two Russian planes were deployed to the airport carrying 100 troops and 35 tonnes ofmatériel;[16] they stayed until 26 June 2019, according to a Russian embassy announcement.[17]
During theCOVID-19 pandemic, the government announced on 3 February 2020 that the country had imposed epidemiological surveillance, restrictions and diagnostic systems to detect possible COVID-19 cases at this airport and that Venezuela would receive a diagnostic kit for the virus strain from thePan American Health Organization (PAHO).[20]
On 2026, three weeks after the ousting of then-presidentNicolás Maduro and his wifeCilia Flores, US PresidentDonald Trump ordered the country's acting presidentDelcy Rodríguez to reopen flights to the Venezuelan airspace after a 7-year hiatus and scheduled international flights to Miami, Florida will be operated byAmerican Airlines, which lastly served until March 2019 (and the other Venezuelan airliners until May).[22][23][24][25]
In 2004 Dutch AirlinesKLM It was the first major airline to end its operations in Venezuela citting official reason the "consolidation" of operations with their partnersAir France, making its last flight to Venezuela on February 2005. In 2005,British Airways also stopped operating direct flights to Venezuela from London in February 2005, because the route continued to lose money and the decision was due to commercial reasons.[63]
Since 2014, foreign and domestic carriers have reduced and/or terminated their presence due to political instability and their inability to recover US$3.8 billion[64] in funds owed to airlines. Some carriers have scheduled stops in nearby countries so that flight crews do not have to stay overnight in Caracas, considered unsafe.[14][65]
In November 2025 Venezuela withdrew operating permits from six airlines, Iberia, TAP, Avianca, Latam Colombia, Turkish Airlines, and Gol, after they suspended their routes following a US warning about risks in Venezuelan airspace.[66]
The table below outlines the chronology of route terminations.[67][68]
From 1960 to 1997, it was the main hub forViasa, Venezuela's formerflag carrier until it went bankrupt in January 1997. It was also the hub forAvensa,Servivensa.Conviasa started operation in 2004, hoping to become a major airline, and flag carrier. However, due to their low pay, several pilots were leaving Conviasa from 2016 after getting "better offers from other countries".[69][70] The headquarters of Conviasa is located on the airport grounds.[71]
On 12 December 1968,Pan Am Flight 217 crashed while on approach to Caracas. All 51 passengers and crew on board were killed.[citation needed]
On 3 December 1969,Air France Flight 212 crashed shortly after takeoff from Simón Bolívar International Airport. All 62 passengers and crew on board were killed.[73]
On 3 November 1980, aLatin Carga Convair CV-880 crashed on take-off from the airport, killing its four occupants and destroying the aircraft, registration YV-145C, which had flown from 1962 to January 1974 for USDelta Air Lines, then sold toLatin Carga in 1979.[74]
On 16 October 2008, a RUTACA Airlines Boeing 737 went off the runway while braking after landing at 3:30 PM. It was flying from San Antonio de Tachira with 44 people.There were no injuries.[citation needed]
On September 24, 2025, aLearjet 35, registration YV-3440, crashed during take-off, injuring at least two passengers.[75][76]
The airport is shown in the 1981 movieMenudo: La Película, when a pair ofMenudo's friends board a flight during the film's final scenes. The airport is also shown in the 1975 French filmLe Sauvage starringCatherine Deneuve andYves Montand, and several soap-opera and movie key scenes were filmed at the airport.[citation needed]
^"Informe de Gestión 2004" [Management Report 2004](PDF) (in Spanish). 30 December 2008. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 30 December 2008. Retrieved25 March 2019.
^Spaeth, Andreas (17 June 2007)."Nach Diktatur verreist" [Traveling after dictatorship].Frankfurter Allgemeine Sunday newspaper (in German). Archived fromthe original on 25 June 2007. Retrieved10 April 2023.
^Isachenkov, Vladimir; Burns, Robert (10 December 2018)."Russia sends 2 nuclear-capable bombers to Venezuela".Sightline Media Group.Russia's Defense Ministry said a pair Tu-160 bombers landed at Maiquetia airport outside Caracas on Monday following a 10,000-kilometer (6,200-mile) flight. [...] It added that a heavy-lift An-124 Ruslan cargo plane and an Il-62 passenger plane accompanied the bombers to Maiquetia.