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Sangster International Airport

Coordinates:18°30′13″N77°54′48″W / 18.50361°N 77.91333°W /18.50361; -77.91333
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
International airport in Jamaica
"MKJS" redirects here. For the video game, seeMonster Kingdom: Jewel Summoner.

Sangster International Airport
The front of Sangster International Airport's passenger terminal in 2004
Summary
Airport typePublic
OwnerAirports Authority of Jamaica
OperatorMBJ Airports Limited
ServesMontego Bay,Jamaica
Built1947
Elevation AMSL4 ft / 1 m
Coordinates18°30′13″N77°54′48″W / 18.50361°N 77.91333°W /18.50361; -77.91333
Websitembjairport.com
Map
MKJS is located in Jamaica
MKJS
MKJS
Location in Jamaica
Runways
DirectionLengthSurface
mft
07/253,06010,039Asphalt
Statistics (2025)
Total passengers4,495,370
Aircraft operations37,528
Source: Sangster International Airport[1]

Sangster International Airport (IATA:MBJ,ICAO:MKJS) – also known asMontego Bay International Airport or simplyMontego Bay Airport – is aninternational airport located three miles (4.8 km) east ofMontego Bay,Jamaica. The airport is capable of handling nine million passengers per year. It serves as the most popular airport for tourists visiting the north coast of Jamaica. The airport is named after former Jamaican Prime MinisterSir Donald Sangster.

The airport is run by the management company, MBJ Airports Limited, whose leading stakeholder isGrupo Aeroportuario del Pacífico, and minority-owned byVantage Airport Group.[2] Sangster was privatised and turned over by Airports Authority of Jamaica to the consortium in 2003.[3] A 2021 study found that Sangster International Airport was one of the 20 most vulnerable international airports toclimate change-caused sea level rise.[4]

History

[edit]
AnAir Canada aircraft landing at Sangster International Airport in 2009

Sangster International Airport inMontego Bay,St. James, was first conceived in 1936 when the site now housing the Sangster International Airport was identified as one suitable for the construction of an airport in the town of Montego Bay. Originally named theMontego Bay Airport, a decision was made to build the runway in 1940, and the actual construction of the facility was completed on 18 February 1947. At the time of its completion, the town of Montego Bay was more like a playground for the rich and famous, and was then considered one of the premier vacation spots within the Caribbean, just as it is today.

The first international airline to fly into the Montego Bay Airport wasPan American Airways (which eventually becamePan Am), and the airport, which in comparison to today's standards was more like a small aerodrome, was operated by Pan American until 30 September 1949, when the Jamaican government took control of the facility. However, the Sangster International Airport, as it is known today, is nothing like it was in the early days. One of the most noticeable differences was that initially, the terminal building was on the northern side of the runway but was shifted to the southern side of the runway during one of the several upgrading exercises that took place at that facility, which was necessitated by the growth in air traffic over the years. Plans for the construction of a new terminal at its present location, on the southern side of the runway, were announced in July 1955. the plans for the new terminal building was part of what turned out to be a continued upgrading and restructuring of the facility, to enable it to cope with the growth in traffic. The original terminal was built and opened on 7 July 1959, with a capacity to accommodate 500 passengers per hour, and parking for seven aircraft at a time.

Divestment and expansion

[edit]

Over the years, the upgrading process was a continuous one, ultimately the facility had grown into the larger of the three international airports in Jamaica, handling approximately 3.7 million passengers per annum in 2007, and had seen an increase in passenger and aircraft movement in 2009. The management and partners of the airport have been trying to seek passengers from Asia, but the project stalled in 2010.

Since January 2001, plans have been executed to expand the airport to the status of a world-class airport. The new eastern concourse of the Sangster International Airport (SIA) (the result of phases 1A and 1B) was officially opened in December 2005. Phase two was then due to begin towards the end of 2006; however because the economic conditions were favourable and the tourist trade in Jamaica is increasing, phase two was brought forward to January 2006.

A planned expansion of the main runway was in a preparation phase, but due to poor economic conditions, the runway expansion project was stopped indefinitely in 2012. This expansion would have afforded the airport a fully functioning 10,000-foot (3,000 m) runway to accommodate large aircraft. MBJ Airports Limited also commissioned a new customs hall, arrivals lobby and transportation center in March 2007. Since then, further expansion and renovation projects such as the relocation of the immigration hall and duty-free mall have been launched and were completed in September 2008. This increased the handling capacity to nine million passengers per annum. Plans are also in place for the relocation of the tower and the domestic terminal.

In 2006, there was a change in management at the airport following the change in the consortium that operates this facility. Relations between the new management and unions have been difficult, with a strike in November 2007 and in November 2009.

The airport won the World Travel Awards' "Caribbean's Leading Airport" for the years 2005, and 2009 to 2017.

Current and future expansion

[edit]

Due to recent surges in passenger numbers and new routes being added, the airport consortium has taken on a number of projects to rehabilitate the airport in order to cope with the added demand. The airport will be renovating its check-in area which had been left untouched since 2008, as well as re-surfacing aprons, taxiway, and the runway. The airport also revamped its duty-free offerings and, in March 2018, welcomed threeStarbucks outlets (part of Starbucks' first foray in the Jamaican market), complementing the already well-appointed airside offerings likeAuntie Anne's,Quiznos,Nathan's,Dairy Queen,Moe's Southwest Grill andWendy's. In March 2018, the airport announced its plan to revamp the airport's retail area to enhance the customer experience and optimize profits on retailing activities in the airport.[5]

In October 2025, the airport sustained significant damage fromHurricane Melissa – the worst out of the nation's three international airports.[6][7] The storm destroyed large portions of the passenger terminal, ripping sections of its roof off, and caused extensive flooding.[6][7] By October 30, the airport reopened for relief flights, with all passenger flights remaining suspended.[7][8][9]

Airlines and destinations

[edit]
AJetBlueAirbus A320-200 on the airport's tarmac in 2024

Passenger

[edit]
AirlinesDestinations
Air CanadaToronto–Pearson[10]
Seasonal:Halifax (resumes December 3, 2026),[11]Montréal–Trudeau,[10]Ottawa (resumes December 6, 2026)[12]
Air TransatMontréal–Trudeau,[13]Toronto–Pearson[14]
Seasonal:Halifax[15]
American AirlinesCharlotte,[16]Chicago–O'Hare,[17]Dallas/Fort Worth,[16]Miami,[16]New York–JFK,[18]Philadelphia[19]
Seasonal:Boston[18]
BahamasairSeasonal:Nassau[20]
Cayman AirwaysSeasonal:Grand Cayman[21]
CondorSeasonal:Frankfurt[22]
Copa AirlinesPanama City–Tocumen[23]
Delta Air LinesAtlanta,[24]New York–JFK,[25]
Seasonal:Boston,[26]Detroit,[27]Minneapolis/St. Paul[27]
Edelweiss AirSeasonal:Zurich[28]
Flair AirlinesSeasonal:Toronto–Pearson[29]
Frontier AirlinesAtlanta,[30]Orlando[30]
Seasonal:Philadelphia,[30]St. Louis[30]
InterCaribbean AirwaysKingston–Norman Manley[31]
International AirLinkNegril[32]
JetBlueBoston,[33]Fort Lauderdale,New York–JFK,[25]Orlando[33]
LATAM PeruLima[34]
Liat AirKingston–Norman Manley[35]
NeosSeasonal:Milan–Malpensa,[36]Verona[36]
Southwest AirlinesBaltimore,[37]Chicago–Midway,[37]Fort Lauderdale,[37]Houston–Hobby,[37]Nashville (begins March 7, 2026),[38]Orlando[39]
Seasonal:Kansas City,[40]St. Louis[41]
Spirit AirlinesFort Lauderdale,[42]Orlando[43]
Sun Country AirlinesSeasonal:Milwaukee,[44]Minneapolis/St. Paul[45]
TUI AirwaysBirmingham,[46]London–Gatwick,[47]Manchester (UK)[48]
Seasonal:Glasgow[49]
TUI fly NetherlandsAmsterdam[50]
United AirlinesChicago–O'Hare,[33]Denver,Houston–Intercontinental,[33]Newark,[25]Washington–Dulles[33]
Virgin AtlanticLondon–Heathrow[51]
WestJetMontréal–Trudeau,[52]Toronto–Pearson[53]
Seasonal:Calgary,[54]Edmonton,[55]Québec City,[55]Winnipeg[56]
WingoSeasonal:Bogotá[57]
World2flySeasonal:Lisbon[58]

Statistics

[edit]
PassengersYear1,000,0002,000,0003,000,0004,000,0005,000,0006,000,0002007201020132016201920222025PassengersAnnual passenger traffic
Traffic figures at Sangster International Airport
YearPassengersChangeAircraft movementsChange
20143,633,998-40,764-
20153,800,608Increase 4.6%41,338Increase 1.4%
20163,952,273Increase 4.0%40,823Decrease 1.2%
20174,284,558Increase 8.4%41,263Increase 1.1%
20184,537,585Increase 5.9%41,005Decrease 0.6%
20194,766,301Increase 5.0%42,283Increase 3.1%
20201,624,827Decrease 65.9%19,357Decrease 54.2%
20212,589,259Increase 59.4%28,391Increase 46.7%
20224,404,134Increase 70.1%37,957Increase 33.7%
20235,267,823Increase 19.61%44,482Increase 17.19%
20245,105,417Decrease 3.08%42,228Decrease 5.07%
20254,495,370Decrease 11.95%37,528Decrease 11.13%

Accidents and incidents

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Facts & Statistics - Montego Bay Jamaica Airport". MBJ Airports Limited. Retrieved14 January 2022.
  2. ^"Workers 'followed procedures' in allowing hijacker on plane".Toronto Star. 22 April 2009. Retrieved7 December 2020.
  3. ^"Sangster International Airport privatised".Jamaica Gleaner. 22 April 2003. Retrieved7 December 2020.
  4. ^Yesudian, Aaron N.; Dawson, Richard J. (1 January 2021)."Global analysis of sea level rise risk to airports".Climate Risk Management.31 100266.Bibcode:2021CliRM..3100266Y.doi:10.1016/j.crm.2020.100266.ISSN 2212-0963.S2CID 233747386.
  5. ^Joe Bates (1 March 2018)."Revamp to boost commercial offerings at Jamaica's Sangster International Airport".Airport-world.com. Archived fromthe original on 23 March 2018. Retrieved22 March 2018.
  6. ^ab"Video shows destruction at Jamaica airport after Hurricane Melissa hits the island".NBC News. Retrieved30 October 2025.
  7. ^abc"Hurricane Melissa Destroys Jamaican Airport Roof & Interior, Video Shows".TMZ. 29 October 2025. Retrieved30 October 2025.
  8. ^Maybin, Aaron; Torres, Reporter Andrea; Journalist, Digital (30 October 2025)."Sangster International Airport in Montego Bay remains closed to commercial flights, open for Hurricane Melissa relief".wplg. Retrieved30 October 2025.
  9. ^"Hurricane Melissa: UK charters flights for Britons stranded in Jamaica".www.bbc.com. 30 October 2025. Retrieved30 October 2025.
  10. ^abStaff, TravelPress (21 May 2025)."Air Canada adds nonstop flights to Jamaica from Ottawa and Halifax".TravelPress. Retrieved21 January 2026.
  11. ^"Direct flights from Montego Bay to Halifax". flightconnections.com. Retrieved22 January 2026.
  12. ^"Direct flights from Montego Bay to Ottawa". flightconnections.com. Retrieved22 January 2026.
  13. ^"Air Transat has three restart dates for Jamaica flights".Travelweek. 28 November 2025. Retrieved21 January 2026.
  14. ^Mowers, Marsha (14 May 2024)."Transat Announces 2024-2025 Winter Schedule".travelpulseCA. Retrieved21 January 2026.
  15. ^Villamizar, Helwing (15 May 2025)."Air Transat Adds Three Winter Season Departure Points".Airways Mag. Retrieved21 January 2026.
  16. ^abcBritell, Alexander (3 November 2025)."American Airlines Resumes Montego Bay Flights, Maintaining Daily Kingston and Ocho Rios Service".Caribbean Journal. Retrieved21 January 2026.
  17. ^Sullivan, Caitlin (9 July 2025)."American Airlines Is Adding Twice-Daily Nonstops From Chicago to Montego Bay".Caribbean Journal. Retrieved21 January 2026.
  18. ^ab"American Airlines Announces New Route to Jamaica Travel Agent Central".Treavel Agent. 23 October 2023. Retrieved21 January 2026.
  19. ^"Jamaica Welcomes Inaugural American Airlines Flight from Philadelphia".South Florida Caribbean News. 5 November 2021. Retrieved21 January 2026.
  20. ^McLeod, Sheri-kae (26 June 2025)."Direct Nassau-Montego Bay flights driving regional tourism growth".CNW Network. Retrieved21 January 2026.
  21. ^"Jamaica Welcomes Cayman Airways Back to Montego Bay | Travel Agent Central".Travel Agent Center. 11 August 2022. Retrieved21 January 2026.
  22. ^Frater, Adrian (29 March 2025)."Bartlett: Emirates deal key step in driving multi-destination tourism".jamaica-gleaner. Retrieved21 January 2026.
  23. ^"Copa to expand Montego Bay service to 10 weekly flights".Jamaica Gleaner. 15 December 2025. Retrieved21 January 2026.
  24. ^"Delta flight DL1800 from Montego Bay to Atlanta cancelled - Jamaica Observer". 1 August 2025. Retrieved21 January 2026.
  25. ^abcCord-Cruz, Nicole (25 June 2014)."Nonstop Flights From Newark To The Caribbean".Islands. Retrieved21 January 2026.
  26. ^Soroff, Jonathan (30 January 2024)."Six Winter Travel Destinations That're Direct Flights from Logan".Boston Magazine. Retrieved21 January 2026.
  27. ^abTara, Serena (7 August 2023)."Delta Is Dramatically Expanding Flights to the Caribbean This Winter".Thrillist. Retrieved21 January 2026.
  28. ^"More Flights Coming Between Europe and Montego Bay, Jamaica".Caribbean Journal. 29 January 2025. Retrieved21 January 2026.
  29. ^"Jamaica welcomes new Flair service from Toronto to Montego Bay".Travelweek. 13 January 2026. Retrieved21 January 2026.
  30. ^abcdHohnholz, Linda (24 May 2023)."Jamaica Welcomes Frontier Flight from Dallas to Montego Bay". Retrieved21 January 2026.
  31. ^McLeod, Sheri-kae (14 July 2025)."LIAT 2020 launches Antigua–Montego Bay service".CNW Network. Retrieved21 January 2026.
  32. ^"Domestic flights resume on July 8 - Jamaica Observer". 4 July 2019. Retrieved21 January 2026.
  33. ^abcdeEwing-Chow, Daphne (3 June 2025)."Cayman announces more direct flights as it eyes tourism boom". Retrieved21 January 2026.
  34. ^Niland, Dana (9 December 2024)."LATAM Just Relaunched Its Peru-Montego Bay Flights".Caribbean Journal. Retrieved21 January 2026.
  35. ^"LIAT to begin flights between MoBay and Kingston July 11". 2 July 2025.
  36. ^abHohnholz, Linda (22 November 2022)."Jamaica welcomes return of direct flight out of Italy with Neos Air". Retrieved21 January 2026.
  37. ^abcd"Southwest Airlines Is Adding a New Flight to Montego Bay, Jamaica".Caribbean Journal. 15 March 2023. Retrieved21 January 2026.
  38. ^"New destinations coming to BNA through Southwest". Retrieved14 August 2024.
  39. ^Chu, Andrea (26 October 2023)."Southwest adds full schedule of new international routes out of Orlando".WTSP. Retrieved21 January 2026.
  40. ^"Jamaica Welcomes New Services from Kansas City and Denver Travel Agent Central".Travel Agent Central. 13 November 2023. Retrieved21 January 2026.
  41. ^Hethcock, Bill (15 May 2025)."Southwest Airlines files for permit to add international routes".KSDK. Retrieved21 January 2026.
  42. ^Plasencia, Amanda; Hamacher, Brian (28 May 2024)."'It was just chaotic': Passengers don life vests on Fort Lauderdale-bound Spirit flight".NBC 6 South Florida. Retrieved21 January 2026.
  43. ^McLeod, Sheri-kae (20 May 2025)."Jamaica welcomes return of nonstop Spirit Airlines flights from Baltimore to Montego Bay".CNW Network. Retrieved21 January 2026.
  44. ^"Sun Country Airlines will offer nonstop flights from Milwaukee to two Caribbean countries". 21 May 2024. Retrieved21 May 2024.
  45. ^Sego, Alyxandra (30 October 2025)."Delta, Sun Country revive seasonal routes from MSP, adding warm getaways and ski destinations".Minneapolis / St. Paul Business Journal. Retrieved21 January 2026.
  46. ^"TUI to re-start flights from UK to Jamaica".
  47. ^"TUI to re-start flights from UK to Jamaica".
  48. ^"TUI to re-start flights from UK to Jamaica".
  49. ^Franklin, Beth (21 April 2023)."TUI launches new summer 2024 flights from Glasgow airport - full list of routes".GlasgowWorld. Retrieved21 January 2026.
  50. ^Noëth, Bart (6 February 2020)."TUI fly Belgium Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner grounded at Montego Bay, Jamaica, after technical issue".Aviation24.be. Retrieved21 January 2026.
  51. ^"Virgin Atlantic Expands Caribbean Connectivity, Making Island Hopping Easier Than Ever".Caribbean Journal. 21 November 2025. Retrieved21 January 2026.
  52. ^Mallia, Jen (30 May 2025)."Sunwing Customers Now Fly WestJet - Here's What's New".travelpulseCA. Retrieved21 January 2026.
  53. ^Kucheran, Trevor (4 February 2020)."Coronavirus Prank Forces Jamaica-bound WestJet Flight Back to Canada".Travel Off Path. Retrieved21 January 2026.
  54. ^Heintz, Lauryn (24 November 2025)."Calgary airport faces delays, cancellations due to snowfall".CityNews Calgary. Retrieved21 January 2026.
  55. ^ab"WestJet announces expanded winter schedule with more sun destinations than ever before". Cision. 7 July 2025. Retrieved7 July 2025.
  56. ^"More Flights from Winnipeg this Winter Season".Canadian Travel News. 22 July 2024. Retrieved21 January 2026.
  57. ^"JTB and Wingo welcome first direct flights from Colombia to MoBay". Jamaica Observer. 2 October 2025. Retrieved27 October 2025.
  58. ^Udler, Karen (4 June 2025)."Lisbon to Montego Bay: Jamaica's New European Gateway Takes Flight".Caribbean Journal. Retrieved21 January 2026.
  59. ^Jamaica Observer,"From Avianca to CanJet: MoBay Airport at Centre of J'can Aviation History", 22 April 2009 (accessed 25 April 2009)
  60. ^"Jamaican hostage-taker makes Cuba demand". CNN. 21 April 2009. Retrieved20 April 2009.

External links

[edit]

Media related toSangster International Airport at Wikimedia Commons

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