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Wikipedia

Milan Malpensa Airport

Milan Malpensa Airport (IATA: MXP, ICAO: LIMC)[3][4] is the largest international airport in northern Italy, serving Lombardy, Piedmont and Liguria, as well as the Swiss Canton of Ticino. The airport is 49 kilometres (30 mi) northwest of Milan,[5] next to the Ticino river dividing Lombardy and Piedmont.

Milan Malpensa Airport

Aeroporto di Milano Malpensa
"Città di Milano"
Summary
Airport typePublic
OwnerSEA SpA
OperatorSEA Aeroporti di Milano
ServesMilan metropolitan area
LocationFerno, Varese
Opened27 May 1910; 112 years ago (1910-05-27)
Hub for
Focus city for
Elevation AMSL1,000 ft / 304.8 m
Coordinates45°37′48″N 8°43′23″E / 45.63000°N 8.72306°E / 45.63000; 8.72306Coordinates: 45°37′48″N 8°43′23″E / 45.63000°N 8.72306°E / 45.63000; 8.72306
Websitemilanomalpensa-airport.com
Map
MXP
Location within Northern Italy
MXP
MXP (Italy)
MXP
MXP (Europe)
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
17L/35R 3,920 12,861 Asphalt
17R/35L 3,920 12,861 Asphalt
Statistics (2022)
Passengers21,347,652
Passenger change 21–22 121.9%
Aircraft movements186,626
Movements change 21–22 57.7%
Cargo (tons)721,255
Cargo change 21–22 3.5%
Statistics from Assaeroporti [2]

In 2022, Malpensa Airport handled 21.3 million passengers and was the 23rd busiest airport in Europe in terms of passengers and 2nd busiest airport in Italy in terms of passengers after Rome Fiumicino Airport, and the busiest in Italy for freight and cargo, handling 721.254 tons of international freight annually (2022).

Malpensa airport is 9th in the world and 6th in Europe for the number of countries served with direct scheduled flights.[6]

Together with Linate Airport and Orio al Serio Airport, it forms the Milan airport system with 42,2 million passengers in 2022, the largest airport system in Italy by number of passengers.[7]

The airport was opened in 1909 by Giovanni Agusta and Gianni Caproni to test their aircraft prototypes, before switching to civil operation in 1948.

History

 
Control tower with the Italian Alps visible in the background
 
Exterior of Terminal 1
 
Apron view

Early years

The site of today's Malpensa Airport has seen aviation activities for more than 100 years. The first began on 27 May 1910, when the Caproni brothers flew their "flying machine", the Cal biplane. In the years that followed, many aircraft prototypes took off from the same site; eventually, it was decided to upgrade the farming patch to a more formal airfield. Both Gianni Caproni and Giovanni Agusta established factories on the new site; the airfield soon developed into the largest aircraft production centre in Italy.

During the 1920s and 1930s, the airfield hosted two squadrons of the Regia Aeronautica Italiana (Italian Air Force). In September 1943, Malpensa airfield was taken over by Nazi Germany's Luftwaffe when northern Italy was invaded by Adolf Hitler. Soon after their arrival, the Germans laid the airfield's first concrete runway.

After the cessation of hostilities during the Second World War, manufacturers and politicians of the Milan and Varese regions, led by banker Benigno Ajroldi of Banca Alto Milanese, restored the airfield. They aimed to make it an industrial fulcrum for the post-war recovery of Italy. The main runway, heavily damaged by German troops as they retreated from northern Italy, was rebuilt and extended to 1,800 metres. A small wooden terminal was constructed to protect goods and passengers from bad weather.

After World War II

Malpensa Airport officially commenced commercial operations on 21 November 1948 as Aeroporto Città di Busto Arsizio, although the Belgian national flag-carrier Sabena had started flying to Brussels from here a year earlier. On 2 February 1950 Trans World Airlines (TWA) became the first company to fly long-haul flights from Malpensa, using Lockheed Constellations on their services to New York Idlewild Airport (now JFK).

A change of ownership occurred in 1952 when the Municipality of Milan took control of the airport's operator, the Società Aeroporto di Busto Arsizio. The operator's name was subsequently changed to Società Esercizi Aeroportuali SpA [it] (SEA). After assuming full control, SEA decided to develop Malpensa as an international and intercontinental gateway, whereas Milan's other airport, Linate Airport, would be tasked with handling only domestic services.

Between 1958 and 1962 a new terminal arrived at Malpensa and the airport's two parallel runways were extended to 3,915 m (12,844 ft), becoming the longest in Europe at that time. By the early 1960s, however, major European carriers such as British Airways, Air France, Lufthansa and Alitalia had moved the majority of their services to Linate Airport, which was just 11 km east of Milan's city centre, making it much easier for passengers to reach central Milan. This left Malpensa with just a handful of intercontinental links, charter flights and cargo operations. Malpensa suffered a decline in commercial traffic, with passenger numbers dropping from 525,000 in 1960 to just 331,000 by 1965. It was destined to play second fiddle to Linate Airport for another 20 years.

Expansion and development (1995–1998)

By the mid-1980s Linate Airport was handling seven million passengers per year and, with only a short single runway and limited parking slots, had reached its saturation point. With no available land nearby for expansion, an alternative solution was sought: Società Esercizi Aeroportuali SpA (SEA) quickly found that developing Malpensa was the only practical alternative.

By the end of 1985, a law had been passed by the Italian Parliament that paved the way for the reorganisation of the Milan airport system. Malpensa was designated as the centre for all services covering northern Italy, while Linate Airport was downgraded to a domestic and short-haul facility. "Malpensa 2000", as the plan was called, included the construction of a new terminal as well as the development of fast, efficient connections to Milan's city centre. The European Union recognised this project as one of the 14 "Essential to the Development of the Union" and provided €200 million to help finance the work. Construction started in November 1990; Malpensa airport was re-opened eight years later.

Alitalia's main hub (1998–2008)

During the night of 24/25 October 1998, Alitalia moved the majority of its fleet from Rome Fiumicino Airport – where it had been flying from for over 50 years – to Malpensa Airport. The airport started a new lease of life as the Italian flag carrier's main hub. Alitalia added up to 488 movements and 42,000 passengers a day at the facility which, by the end of 1998, had handled 5.92 million passengers (an increase of more than two million over the previous year's figure).

In 1999, it recorded a spectacular leap to 16.97 million and, by 2007, passenger numbers had reached 23.9 million. Efficient rail links from two different stations in Milan (Centrale and Cadorna stations) ensured easy access by railway, whereas the nearby A8 motorway had an extra lane added in each direction to help speed up traffic into and out of the city centre.

Before 2001, ground handling services at Malpensa were shared by the SEA (airport's operator) and Trans-World Airlines. Since then, the contracting process has gradually been deregulated. In 2000, airport security services at Malpensa were transferred from the Polizia di Stato (State Police) to SEA's internal division, SEA Airport Security. Up to 2002, SEA was assisted by IVRI in providing security services, but the contract was not renewed after its expiry. Nevertheless, SEA Airport Security is supervised by the Polizia di Stato (Italian State Police), Guardia di Finanza (Italian Military Customs Police) and Ente Nazionale Aviazione Civile (Italy's Civil Aviation Authority), whereas the Carabinieri (Italian Military Police) supervises ramp entrance.[citation needed]

Ramp services are provided by SEA Handling, ATA and, more recently, Aviapartner. SEA Handling provided 80% of the ramp services at Malpensa Airport due to its major customer, Alitalia. In May 2006, however, Italy's Civil Aviation Authority took off the limitation of two ramp handlers.

In 2008, a new development plan was launched by Società Esercizi Aeroportuali SpA (SEA), valued at €1.4 billion, to include a third pier for Terminal 1 and the construction of a third runway. In a surprise move, however, Alitalia announced its decision to revert to Rome Fiumicino Airport as its main hub, due to 'high operating costs' at Malpensa Airport. Alitalia did not pull out of Malpensa altogether and continues to fly several domestic and European services from Milan and two intercontinental flights (to New York–JFK and Tokyo–Narita). However, Malpensa lost around 20% of its daily movements, a decrease from 700 to 550, which resulted in only 19.2 million passengers passing through in 2008. The airport continued to suffer during 2009 when the international financial crisis and higher fuel prices caused a reduction to only 17.6 million passengers that year.

2010s

Responding to Alitalia's pullout, the operator SEA launched an all-out publicity programme and aggressively marketed Malpensa Airport around the world. As a result, from 2008 to 2011, a total of 34 new passenger and cargo routes were added to Malpensa's network.

The low-cost carrier EasyJet made Malpensa its main base after London Gatwick, with more than 20 of its Airbus A319s and Airbus A320s based there. The airline currently flies services from Malpensa to more than 70 destinations in Italy and across Europe.[8] Competitor Ryanair confirmed plans to open an operating base at Malpensa from December 2015, initially with one aircraft.[9]

In 2014, a contract was awarded for extension of the railway line from Terminal 1 to Terminal 2. The line was opened in December 2016.[10] The new Malpensa Terminal 2 railway station is within 200 m north of the T2 arrivals hall, that is accessed by an outdoor covered walkway.[11]

Terminals

 
easyJet Airbus A319-100 landing at Malpensa with the Alps visible in the background

Malpensa Airport has two passenger terminals and they are connected by airport shuttle buses and trains.

Terminal 1

Terminal 1, which opened in 1998, is the newer,[12] larger and more prominent terminal. The terminal is divided into three sections and handles most passengers on scheduled as well as charter flights:

  • Concourse A handles domestic and intra-Schengen flights.
  • Concourse B handles non-Schengen and intercontinental flights.
  • Concourse C (B2), opened in January 2012, handles non-Schengen, intercontinental flights and security-sensitive flights to USA and Israel.

Terminal 2

Terminal 2 is the older terminal.[12] It was previously used exclusively by easyJet, but has been closed since 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[13] It is undergoing improvement works and is scheduled to reopen in Summer 2023. All charter services, which were previously based in this terminal, moved to Terminal 1 upon its opening.

Malpensa Airport additionally provides free shuttles connecting Terminal 2 to Terminal 1.[14]

Airlines and destinations

Passenger

The following airlines operate regular scheduled, seasonal and charter flights to and from Malpensa:[15]

AirlinesDestinations
Aegean Airlines Athens, Thessaloniki
Aer Lingus Seasonal: Dublin
Aeroitalia Seasonal charter: Marsa Alam,[16] Sharm El Sheikh[17]
Air Albania Tirana
Air Algérie Algiers
Air Cairo Cairo, Sharm El Sheikh
Seasonal: Hurghada, Luxor
Air Canada Montreal–Trudeau, Toronto–Pearson
Air China Beijing–Capital, Shanghai–Pudong, Wenzhou
Air Dolomiti Frankfurt, Munich
Air Europa Madrid
Air France Paris–Charles de Gaulle
Air Horizont Seasonal charter: Olbia[18]
Air India Delhi
Air Moldova Chisinau (suspended)[19]
Air Senegal Dakar–Diass
Air Serbia Belgrade
airBaltic Riga
Seasonal: Tampere
AlbaStar Seasonal: Catania, Lampedusa
Seasonal charter: Cagliari [20] [21]
Albawings Tirana
American Airlines New York–JFK
Austrian Airlines Vienna
Azerbaijan Airlines Baku
British Airways London–Heathrow
Brussels Airlines Brussels
Cathay Pacific Hong Kong
Croatia Airlines Seasonal: Split
Cyprus Airways Larnaca
Delta Air Lines Atlanta, New York–JFK
easyJet Alghero, Amsterdam, Athens, Barcelona, Bari, Bordeaux, Brindisi, Bristol, Cagliari, Catania, Copenhagen, Edinburgh, Faro, Fuerteventura, Funchal, Hurghada, Lamezia Terme, Lanzarote, Larnaca, Lisbon, London–Gatwick, London–Luton, Luxembourg, Málaga, Manchester, Marrakech, Marsa Alam, Nantes, Naples, Olbia, Palermo, Palma de Mallorca, Paris–Charles de Gaulle, Porto, Prague, Reykjavík–Keflavík, Sharm El Sheikh, Tel Aviv, Tenerife–South
Seasonal: A Coruña, Beauvais, Bilbao, Birmingham (begins 26 June 2023),[22] Chania, Corfu, Heraklion, Ibiza, Kefalonia, Kos, Lampedusa, Lourdes, Malta, Menorca, Munich (resumes 8 September 2023),[23] Mykonos, Preveza/Lefkada, Rhodes, Rovaniemi, Santorini, Skiathos, Split, Zadar, Zakynthos
Egyptair Cairo
El Al Tel Aviv
Emirates Dubai–International, New York–JFK
Ethiopian Airlines Addis Ababa, Zürich
Etihad Airways Abu Dhabi
EVA Air Taipei–Taoyuan
Eurowings Cologne/Bonn, Düsseldorf, Hamburg, Stuttgart
Finnair Helsinki
FlyOne Chisinau, Yerevan
Gulf Air Bahrain
Seasonal: Nice (begins 1 June 2023)[24]
Iberia Madrid
Icelandair Seasonal: Reykjavík–Keflavík
Iran Air Tehran–Imam Khomeini
ITA Airways New York–JFK
Seasonal: Cagliari
KLM Amsterdam
Korean Air Seoul–Incheon
Kuwait Airways Kuwait City
La Compagnie Newark
LATAM Brasil São Paulo–Guarulhos
LOT Polish Airlines Warsaw–Chopin
Lufthansa Frankfurt, Munich
Lumiwings Foggia
Luxair Luxembourg
Middle East Airlines Beirut
Neos Almaty, Cairo, Cancún, Colombo–Bandaranaike, Dakar–Diass, Fuerteventura, Gran Canaria, Havana, Holguín, La Romana, Marsa Alam, Mombasa, Nanjing, New York–JFK, Sal, Sharm El Sheikh, Tenerife–South
Seasonal: Amman–Queen Alia, Amritsar, Boa Vista, Brindisi, Cagliari, Catania, Cayo Largo, Corfu, Djerba, Enfidha (resumes 12 June 2023),[25] Freeport, Heraklion, Ibiza, Karpathos, Kos, Lamezia Terme, Lanzarote, Luxor, Male, Marsa Matruh, Mauritius, Menorca, Monastir, Montego Bay, Mykonos, Nosy Bé, Olbia, Palma de Mallorca, Patras, Rhodes, Rovaniemi, Samos, Santorini, Skiathos, Tianjin, Toronto–Pearson, Varadero, Zanzibar
Seasonal charter: Lahore,[26] Sialkot[27]
Norwegian Air Shuttle Oslo
Nouvelair Seasonal charter: Djerba[28]
Oman Air Muscat
Qatar Airways Doha
Royal Air Maroc Casablanca
Royal Jordanian Amman–Queen Alia
Ryanair Aarhus, Alghero, Alicante, Barcelona, Bari, Berlin, Brindisi, Bucharest, Cagliari, Catania, Comiso (ends 5 May 2023),[29] Dublin, Gran Canaria, Lamezia Terme, London–Stansted, Madrid, Málaga, Malta, Manchester, Naples, Palermo, Porto, Seville, Tenerife–South, Valencia, Vienna
Seasonal: Corfu, Heraklion, Kos (begins 4 June 2023),[30] Palma de Mallorca, Santorini, Zadar (begins 4 June 2023)[31]
Saudia Jeddah
Seasonal: Medina, Riyadh
Scandinavian Airlines Copenhagen, Oslo, Stockholm–Arlanda
Seasonal: Bergen, Stavanger
Singapore Airlines Barcelona, Singapore
Sky Express Athens
SunExpress Izmir
Seasonal: Antalya
Swiss International Air Lines Zürich
TAP Air Portugal Lisbon
Thai Airways International Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi (resumes 15 November 2023)[32]
Tunisair Tunis
Turkish Airlines Istanbul
Twin Jet Lyon, Marseille
United Airlines Newark
Seasonal: Chicago–O'Hare
Uzbekistan Airways Seasonal: Tashkent
Vueling Barcelona, Paris–Orly
Seasonal: Alicante, Bilbao, Ibiza
Wizz Air Alexandria, Amman–Queen Alia, Athens, Bacau, Budapest, Catania, Giza (begins 15 June 2023), [33] Jeddah, Kraków, Kutaisi, Lamezia Terme, London–Gatwick, Madrid (begins 24 July 2023),[34] Marrakesh, Marsa Alam, Podgorica, Prague, Pristina, Reykjavik–Keflavík, Sharm El Sheikh, Skopje, Tallinn, Tel Aviv, Tirana, Vilnius, Yerevan
Seasonal: Corfu, Heraklion, Lampedusa, Olbia, Porto, Riyadh, Skiathos, Zakynthos

Cargo

The following airlines operate regular cargo services to and from Malpensa:

AirlinesDestinations
Amazon Air[35][36] Cagliari, Catania, Leipzig/Halle
Asiana Cargo[37] Almaty, Seoul–Incheon
Atlas Air[citation needed] Amsterdam, San Juan
Cargolux[38] Luxembourg
Cargolux Italia[citation needed] Almaty, Baku, Curitiba–Afonso Pena, Dallas/Fort Worth, Dubai–International, Hong Kong, Luxembourg, Mexico City, New York–JFK, Novosibirsk, Osaka–Kansai, San Juan, Vilnius, Zhengzhou
Cathay Cargo[39] Frankfurt, Hong Kong
DHL Aviation[40] Ancona, Athens, Bahrain, Barcelona, Belgrade, Brussels, Bucharest, Budapest, Cincinnati, Cologne/Bonn, East Midlands, Leipzig/Halle, London–Heathrow, London–Luton, London–Stansted, Madrid, Naples, Paris–Charles de Gaulle, Pisa, Seoul–Incheon, Thessaloniki, Vitoria, Zagreb
Egyptair Cargo[41] Cairo
Emirates SkyCargo[42] Dubai–Al Maktoum
Ethiopian Airlines Cargo[43] Addis Ababa
FedEx Express[citation needed] Ancona, Dubai–International, Guangzhou, Memphis, Munich, Newark, Paris–Charles de Gaulle, Pisa, Shanghai–Pudong, Venice
Korean Air Cargo[44] Seoul–Incheon
Lufthansa Cargo[45] Frankfurt
Nippon Cargo Airlines[46] Amsterdam, Tokyo–Narita
Qatar Airways Cargo[47] Doha, Munich[48]
Saudia Cargo[49] Jeddah, Riyadh
Silk Way West Airlines[50] Baku
Turkish Cargo[51] Istanbul
UPS Airlines[52] Cologne/Bonn, Naples

Statistics

Busiest routes

Busiest domestic routes to/from Milan Malpensa (2018)[53]
Rank Rank
var.
(prev. year)
Airport Passengers % var.
(prev. year)
Airline(s)
1     Catania, Sicily   1,048,371   10.24 Air Italy, AlbaStar, Alitalia, easyJet, Neos Air, Ryanair
2     Palermo, Sicily   673,401   81.54 Air Italy, Alitalia, easyJet, Neos Air, Ryanair
3   2   Lamezia Terme, Calabria   557,529   80.38 Air Italy, Alitalia, easyJet, Ryanair
4   1   Naples, Campania   359,168   29.13 Air Italy, Alitalia, easyJet
5   1   Olbia, Sardinia   324,110   3.16 Air Italy, Alitalia, Blue Panorama Airlines, easyJet, Neos Air
6   new   Rome–Fiumicino, Lazio   242,114   new Air Italy, Alitalia
7   1   Bari, Apulia   229,529   10.17 Alitalia, easyJet
8   1   Brindisi, Apulia   191,036   6.40 Alitalia, easyJet, Neos Air
9   1   Cagliari, Sardinia   158,621   11.38 Air Italy, Alitalia, easyJet, Neos Air
10   1   Comiso, Sicily   118,181   2.24 Ryanair
Busiest routes between Milan Malpensa and destinations within the European Union (2018)[53]
Rank Rank
var.
(prev. year)
Airport Passengers % var.
(prev. year)
Airline(s)
1     Paris–Charles de Gaulle, France   911,510   15.41 Air France, Alitalia, easyJet
2   1   Amsterdam, Netherlands   840,160   12.78 Alitalia, easyJet, KLM, Vueling
3   1   Barcelona, Spain   819,077   7.88 easyJet, Vueling
4   1   London–Gatwick, England   577,011   1.35 easyJet
5   1   Madrid, Spain   544,472   9.63 Air Europa, Alitalia, easyJet, Iberia, Ryanair
6   1   Munich, Germany   466,052   12.26 Air Dolomiti, easyJet, Lufthansa
7   1   Lisbon, Portugal   437,438   1.24 Alitalia, easyJet, TAP Portugal
8   2   Frankfurt am Main, Germany   381,004   12.86 Alitalia, Lufthansa
9   2   Vienna, Austria   377,191   25.16 Austrian Airlines, Wizz Air
10   1   Copenhagen, Denmark   362,846   1.63 Alitalia, easyJet, Scandinavian Airlines
11   3   Brussels, Belgium   337,104   8.21 Alitalia, Brussels Airlines, Ryanair
12     Prague, Czech Republic   304,128   2.76 Alitalia, Czech Airlines, easyJet
13     Athens, Thessaloniki, Greece   274,995   0.10 Aegean Airlines, Alitalia, easyJet
14     London–Heathrow, England   248,369   1.40 Alitalia, British Airways
15   2   Budapest, Hungary   239,457   7.32 Wizz Air
16   2   Düsseldorf, Germany   235,165   23.75 Alitalia, Eurowings
17   2   Ibiza, Spain   225,132   0.69 Alitalia, easyJet, Iberia, Neos Air, Vueling
18   2   London–Stansted, England   217,971   2.37 Ryanair
19   5   Paris–Orly, France   206,011   27.61 Aigle Azur, Alitalia, easyJet, Vueling
20     Helsinki, Finland   195,876   7.24 Finnair
21   2   Berlin–Schönefeld, Germany   183,298   1.19 easyJet
22   16   Oporto, Portugal   177,852   115.74 Ryanair, TAP Portugal
23     London–Luton, England   170,303   2.84 easyJet
24   1   Edinburgh, Scotland   165,084   4.69 Alitalia, easyJet
25   2   Málaga, Spain   159,629   3.13 easyJet, Neos Air, Ryanair
26   4   Manchester, England   152,858   11.26 easyJet, Flybe
27   1   Stuttgart, Germany   151,790   2.51 easyJet, Eurowings
28   new   Berlin–Tegel, Germany   149,610   new easyJet, Ryanair
29   1   Luxembourg, Luxembourg   147,866   2.72 easyJet, Luxair
30   1   Warsaw, Poland   137,333   3.99 LOT Polish Airlines
31     Palma de Mallorca, Spain   129,491   13.10 Alitalia, easyJet, Neos Air
32   11   Hamburg, Germany   129,223   25.67 Eurowings
33     Valencia, Spain   128,252   new Ryanair
34   4   Sofia, Bulgaria   113,709   8.28 Bulgaria Air, Ryanair
35   3   Bucharest, Romania   112,400   1.56 Blue Air, Ryanair
36   2   Stockholm–Arlanda, Sweden   109,095   5.88 easyJet, Neos Air, Norwegian Air Shuttle, Scandinavian Airlines
37   2   Mykonos, Greece   99,491   2.37 easyJet, Neos
38   5   Cologne, Germany   94,148   12.97 Eurowings
39   new   Alicante, Spain   93,742   new easyJet, Ryanair, Vueling
40   4   Menorca, Spain   85,662   2.22 easyJet, Neos
41     Bordeaux, France   79,224   9.87 easyJet
42   2   Tenerife, Spain   77,708   2.64 easyJet, Neos, Ryanair
43   1   Dublin, Ireland   71,749   14.54 Aer Lingus
44   5   Nantes, France   71,259   11.82 easyJet
45   new   Vilnius, Lithuania   67,869   Wizz Air
46   3   Riga, Latvia   67,589   7.85 airBaltic
47   2   Heraklion, Greece   61,370   5.31 Blue Panorama Airlines, easyJet, Neos Air, Ryanair
48   11   Birmingham, England   59,974   29.69 Flybe
49   3   Seville, Spain   54,643   0.19 Ryanair
50   2   Toulouse, France   54,436   1.12 easyJet
51   4   Lyon, France   53,475   1.13 HOP!
52   2   Lanzarote, Spain   52,420   1.03 easyJet, Neos Air
Busiest routes between Milan Malpensa and destinations outside the European Union (2018)[53]
Rank Rank
var.
(prev. year)
City Passengers % var.
(prev. year)
Airline(s)
1     New York–JFK, New York, United States   791,985   15.30 Air Italy, Alitalia, American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, Emirates
2     Dubai-International, United Arab Emirates   681,844   3.18 Emirates
3     Istanbul–Atatürk, Turkey   416,778   6.30 Turkish Airlines
4     Moscow–Sheremetyevo, Russia   398,790   6.78 Aeroflot
5     Doha, Qatar   359,792   14.19 Qatar Airways
6   1   Tirana, Albania   283,107   6.06 Blue Panorama Airlines, Ernest Airlines
7   1   Tel Aviv, Israel   275,348   0.89 Alitalia, easyJet, El Al, Neos Air
8   1   Zurich, Switzerland   229,597   5.95 Swiss International Air Lines
9   1   Cairo, Egypt   215,614   4.03 Air Italy, Egypt Air
10   1   Hong Kong, SAR   176,538   0.38 Cathay Pacific
11   6   Miami, Florida, United States   176,283   36.95 Air Italy, American Airlines
12   1   Muscat, Oman   164,120   8.39 Oman Air
13   1   Shanghai-Pudong, China   148,389   3.64 Air China
14   2   São Paulo-Guarulhos, Brazil   147,770   7.22 LATAM Brasil
15   9   Bangkok Suvarnabhumi, Thailand   145,414   46.34 Air Italy, Thai Airways International
16     Newark, New Jersey, United States   145,394   10.31 United Airlines
17   9   Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates   143,445   34.96 Etihad Airways
18   3   Casablanca, Morocco   133,982   0.94 Jetairfly, Royal Air Maroc
19   1   Tokyo-Narita, Japan   130,477   1.84 Alitalia
20   2   Beijing-Capital, China   124,394   20.47 Air China
21   2   Oslo, Norway   118,130   2.72 Norwegian Air Shuttle, Scandinavian Airlines
22   1   Kyiv, Ukraine   116,101   7.75 Ukraine International Airlines
23   3   Tunis, Tunisia   113,614   2.29 Tunisair
24   1   Singapore, Singapore   112,287   11.23 Singapore Airlines
25   new   Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt   108,124   new Air Cairo, Air Italy, Neos Air
26     Saint Petersburg, Russia   103,460   16.46 Rossiya Airlines
27   8   Marsa Alam, Egypt   102,956   79.19 Air Cairo, Neos Air
28   3   Havana, Cuba   92,704   5.36 Blue Panorama Airlines, Neos
29   2   Delhi, India   92,583   11.36 Air India, Air Italy
30   2   Marrakesh, Morocco   88,805   7.17 easyJet
31   2   Toronto, Canada   75,347   25.90 Air Canada, Air Italy
32   3   Istanbul–Sabiha Gökçen, Turkey   69,684   0.88 Turkish Airlines
33   3   Seoul-Incheon, South Korea   68,056   1.89 Korean Air
34   3   Belgrade, Serbia   65,439   1.81 Air Serbia
35   3   Tehran, Iran   62,207   0.24 Iran Air, Mahan Air
36   new   Moscow–Domodedovo, Russia   61,429   new Air Italy
37   new   Moscow–Vnukovo, Russia   60,114   new Utair
38   new   Addis Ababa, Ethiopia   56,481   new Ethiopian Airlines
39   new   La Romana, Dominican Republic   53,448   new Neos Air
40   new   Zanzibar, Tanzania   52,810   new Blue Panorama Airlines, Neos Air
41   new   Dakar, Senegal   51,104   new Air Italy

Movements by country

European Union countries with passenger movements
from/to Milan Malpensa Airport (2018)
Rank Rank
var.
(prev. year)
Country Passengers 2018
1     Italy   4,093,221
2     Spain   2,559,852
3   1   Germany   1,805,491
4   1   UK   1,717,631
5     France   1,396,510
6     Netherlands   841,773
7     Greece   652,323
8     Portugal   644,147
9   2   Austria   377,548
10     Denmark   367,156
11   2   Belgium   337,648
12     Czech Republic   304,878
13     Hungary   240,128
14   1   Poland   232,147
15   1   Finland   198,838
16     Luxembourg   147,866
17     Romania   119,021
18     Bulgaria   114,080
19     Sweden   109,465
20   1   Lithuania   75,768
21   1   Ireland   71,749
22   1   Estonia   36,937
23   1   Cyprus   34,714
24     Malta   10,198

General statistics

Years Movements % variation Passengers % variation Cargo (tons) % variation
2000 249,107  13.3 20,716,815  22.1 301,045  4.6
2001 236,409  5.1 18,570,494  10.4 323,707  7.5
2002 214,886  9.1 17,441,250  6.1 328,241  1.4
2003 213,554  0.6 17,621,585  1 362,587  10.5
2004 218,048  2.1 18,554,874  5.3 361,237  13.1
2005 227,718  4.4 19,630,514  5.8 384,752  6.5
2006 247,456  8.7 21,767,267  10.9 419,128  8,9
2007 267,941  8.3 23,885,391  9.7 486,666  16.1
2008 218,476  18.5 19,221,632  19.5 415,952  14.5
2009 187,551  14.2 17,551,635  8.7 344,047  17.3
2010 193,771  3.3 18,947,808  8 432,674  25.8
2011 190,838  1.5 19,303,131  1.8 450,446  4.1
2012 174,892  8.4 18,537,301  4 414,317  8
2013 164,745  5.8 17,955,075  3.1 430,343  3.9
2014 166,749  1.2 18,853,203  5 469,657  9.1
2015 160,484  3.8 18,582,043  1.4 511,191  8.8
2016 166,842  4 19,420,690  4.5 548,767  7.4
2017 178,953  7.3 22,169,167  14.2 589,719  7.5
2018 194,515  8.7 24,725,490  11.5 572,774.8  2.9
2019 234,054  20.3 28,846,299  16.7 558,481.5  2.5
2020 92,432  60.5 7,241,766  74.9 516,739.6  7.5
Annual passenger traffic at MXP airport. See Wikidata query.

Transport links

Rail

 
Malpensa Express at Milan Cadorna station platform 1
 
Connection between Terminal 1 and its railway station

The airport is served by two train stations, one in each terminal.

Malpensa Express

Malpensa Express is a direct train connection between Terminal 2, Terminal 1 and Milan's city centre.

As of 2019, its service is based on a clock-face timetable with four services per hour in both directions: two run between the two airport terminals and Milan Cadorna station; the other two between the two airport terminals, Milan Garibaldi and Milan Centrale stations. All services call at Busto Arsizio Nord, Saronno (connections for Como, Novara and Varese) and Milan Bovisa stations.[54]

The journey time ranges between 30 and 50 minutes, depending on the type of service and the number of stops.

Other train services

TiLo operate services to Bellinzona in Switzerland.[55]

Milan's Suburban Line S10 (Milano Rogoredo–Milano Bovisa) ran to Malpensa Airport/Aeroporto from June 2010.[56] Trains called at: Ferno, Busto Arsizio, Castellanza, Rescaldina, Saronno, Milano Bovisa, Milano Lancetti, Milano Porta Garibaldi M2-M5, Milano Repubblica M3, Milano Porta Venezia M1, Milano Dateo and Milano Porta Vittoria. The service was terminated in October 2012.

The Malpensa – Varese – Mendrisio (CH) – Lugano (CH) line provides a direct connection between Malpensa Airport/Aeroporto and the south-eastern part of Switzerland. There are plans to connect Gallarate Station and Milan's Centrale Station (FS), which is currently a terminus station with no through tracks, to allow more convenient access to high-speed international lines.

Bus

Road

Malpensa Airport is accessible by a four-lane motorway to the A8 (connecting Switzerland to Milan) and by a five-lane motorway to the A4 (connecting Turin/Torino, Verona, Venice and Triest/Trieste). Local access to the airport is provided by the State Road SS336 from Busto Arsizio and by the State Road SS336dir from Magenta.

References

  1. ^ GmbH, DVV Media Group (14 February 2017). "FedEx Express opens new Malpensa hub ǀ Air Cargo News". Aircargonews.net. from the original on 12 March 2017. Retrieved 10 March 2017.
  2. ^ "Excel 2022.xls" (PDF). assaeroporti.com. Retrieved 22 March 2023.
  3. ^ "Official website of Milan Malpensa airport, flights, parking and services". www.milanomalpensa-airport.com. from the original on 24 March 2022. Retrieved 20 March 2022.
  4. ^ "Milan Malpensa Airport (MXP)". www.airportmalpensa.com. from the original on 31 March 2022. Retrieved 20 March 2022.
  5. ^ "EAD Basic". Ead.eurocontrol.int. from the original on 5 October 2013. Retrieved 7 November 2010.
  6. ^ Ceresa, Gabriele (15 February 2023). "Malpensa torna tra i primi 10 aeroporti al mondo per Paesi serviti con voli diretti". MALPENSA24 (in Italian). from the original on 22 February 2023. Retrieved 22 February 2023.
  7. ^ "Statistiche Dati di Traffico Aeroportuale Italiano". Assaeroporti (in Italian). from the original on 8 December 2013. Retrieved 21 February 2023.
  8. ^ . Archived from the original on 23 February 2015. Retrieved 2 June 2015.
  9. ^ "Ryanair". Airliner World: 7. November 2015.
  10. ^ "Malpensa Terminal 2 rail link contract awarded". Railway Gazette. 10 September 2014. from the original on 4 April 2015. Retrieved 28 March 2015.
  11. ^ "How to catch a train to Milan city from Malpensa Airport Terminal 2". Milanfinally.com. from the original on 14 November 2016. Retrieved 17 December 2016.
  12. ^ a b . Avventure Bellissime. Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 27 March 2015.
  13. ^ "Coronavirus Emergency: FAQ". from the original on 13 April 2022. Retrieved 21 March 2022.
  14. ^ "Directions and Parking". from the original on 21 January 2015. Retrieved 6 April 2015.
  15. ^ "Destinazioni Milano Malpensa". Milan Malpensa Airport. from the original on 8 December 2021. Retrieved 8 December 2021.
  16. ^ "Voli in partenza da Malpensa | Milano Malpensa Airport". from the original on 7 August 2022. Retrieved 1 August 2022.
  17. ^ "AeroItalia iniziera' a volare sul Mar Rosso. Voli da Bologna, Milano, Roma e Verona". 30 July 2022. from the original on 1 August 2022. Retrieved 1 August 2022.
  18. ^ "Network Summer 2023 OLB" (PDF). geasar.it. 16 March 2023.
  19. ^ https://www.airmoldova.md/news-records-ro/air-moldova-anunta-restructurarea-accelerata-a-companiei/
  20. ^ "ECCO I VOLI DELLA SUMMER 2023 A CAGLIARI" [Here's the services for Summer 23 from/to Cagliari] (PDF). sogaer.com (in Italian). 14 March 2023.
  21. ^ "L'Aereoporto di Cagliari presenta la sua programmazione estiva [...]" [Cagliari Airpost shows up its 2023 summer schedule [...]]. Italiavola.com (in Italian). 14 March 2023.
  22. ^ "EASYJET NS23 NETWORK ADDITIONS – 11DEC22". Aeroroutes. 12 December 2022. from the original on 12 December 2022. Retrieved 12 December 2022.
  23. ^ "Archived copy". from the original on 20 May 2019. Retrieved 10 March 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  24. ^ "Milan Airports" [Aeroporti Milano]. Facebook.com (in Italian). 11 April 2023.
  25. ^ "Prenotazione voli Malpensa Hammamet" [Flights Malpensa

milan, malpensa, airport, iata, icao, limc, largest, international, airport, northern, italy, serving, lombardy, piedmont, liguria, well, swiss, canton, ticino, airport, kilometres, northwest, milan, next, ticino, river, dividing, lombardy, piedmont, aeroporto. Milan Malpensa Airport IATA MXP ICAO LIMC 3 4 is the largest international airport in northern Italy serving Lombardy Piedmont and Liguria as well as the Swiss Canton of Ticino The airport is 49 kilometres 30 mi northwest of Milan 5 next to the Ticino river dividing Lombardy and Piedmont Milan Malpensa AirportAeroporto di Milano Malpensa Citta di Milano IATA MXPICAO LIMCWMO 16066SummaryAirport typePublicOwnerSEA SpAOperatorSEA Aeroporti di MilanoServesMilan metropolitan areaLocationFerno VareseOpened27 May 1910 112 years ago 1910 05 27 Hub forCargolux Italia DHL Aviation FedEx Express 1 Focus city forAlbaStar Amazon Air easyJet Europe Malta Air Neos Ryanair Wizz AirElevation AMSL1 000 ft 304 8 mCoordinates45 37 48 N 8 43 23 E 45 63000 N 8 72306 E 45 63000 8 72306 Coordinates 45 37 48 N 8 43 23 E 45 63000 N 8 72306 E 45 63000 8 72306Websitemilanomalpensa airport comMapMXPLocation within Northern ItalyShow map of LombardyMXPMXP Italy Show map of ItalyMXPMXP Europe Show map of EuropeRunwaysDirection Length Surfacem ft17L 35R 3 920 12 861 Asphalt17R 35L 3 920 12 861 AsphaltStatistics 2022 Passengers21 347 652Passenger change 21 22121 9 Aircraft movements186 626Movements change 21 2257 7 Cargo tons 721 255Cargo change 21 223 5 Statistics from Assaeroporti 2 In 2022 Malpensa Airport handled 21 3 million passengers and was the 23rd busiest airport in Europe in terms of passengers and 2nd busiest airport in Italy in terms of passengers after Rome Fiumicino Airport and the busiest in Italy for freight and cargo handling 721 254 tons of international freight annually 2022 Malpensa airport is 9th in the world and 6th in Europe for the number of countries served with direct scheduled flights 6 Together with Linate Airport and Orio al Serio Airport it forms the Milan airport system with 42 2 million passengers in 2022 the largest airport system in Italy by number of passengers 7 The airport was opened in 1909 by Giovanni Agusta and Gianni Caproni to test their aircraft prototypes before switching to civil operation in 1948 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early years 1 2 After World War II 1 3 Expansion and development 1995 1998 1 4 Alitalia s main hub 1998 2008 1 5 2010s 2 Terminals 2 1 Terminal 1 2 2 Terminal 2 3 Airlines and destinations 3 1 Passenger 3 2 Cargo 4 Statistics 4 1 Busiest routes 4 2 Movements by country 4 3 General statistics 5 Transport links 5 1 Rail 5 1 1 Malpensa Express 5 1 2 Other train services 5 2 Bus 5 3 Road 6 References 7 External linksHistory Control tower with the Italian Alps visible in the background Exterior of Terminal 1 Apron view Early years This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message The site of today s Malpensa Airport has seen aviation activities for more than 100 years The first began on 27 May 1910 when the Caproni brothers flew their flying machine the Cal biplane In the years that followed many aircraft prototypes took off from the same site eventually it was decided to upgrade the farming patch to a more formal airfield Both Gianni Caproni and Giovanni Agusta established factories on the new site the airfield soon developed into the largest aircraft production centre in Italy During the 1920s and 1930s the airfield hosted two squadrons of the Regia Aeronautica Italiana Italian Air Force In September 1943 Malpensa airfield was taken over by Nazi Germany s Luftwaffe when northern Italy was invaded by Adolf Hitler Soon after their arrival the Germans laid the airfield s first concrete runway After the cessation of hostilities during the Second World War manufacturers and politicians of the Milan and Varese regions led by banker Benigno Ajroldi of Banca Alto Milanese restored the airfield They aimed to make it an industrial fulcrum for the post war recovery of Italy The main runway heavily damaged by German troops as they retreated from northern Italy was rebuilt and extended to 1 800 metres A small wooden terminal was constructed to protect goods and passengers from bad weather After World War II This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Malpensa Airport officially commenced commercial operations on 21 November 1948 as Aeroporto Citta di Busto Arsizio although the Belgian national flag carrier Sabena had started flying to Brussels from here a year earlier On 2 February 1950 Trans World Airlines TWA became the first company to fly long haul flights from Malpensa using Lockheed Constellations on their services to New York Idlewild Airport now JFK A change of ownership occurred in 1952 when the Municipality of Milan took control of the airport s operator the Societa Aeroporto di Busto Arsizio The operator s name was subsequently changed to Societa Esercizi Aeroportuali SpA it SEA After assuming full control SEA decided to develop Malpensa as an international and intercontinental gateway whereas Milan s other airport Linate Airport would be tasked with handling only domestic services Between 1958 and 1962 a new terminal arrived at Malpensa and the airport s two parallel runways were extended to 3 915 m 12 844 ft becoming the longest in Europe at that time By the early 1960s however major European carriers such as British Airways Air France Lufthansa and Alitalia had moved the majority of their services to Linate Airport which was just 11 km east of Milan s city centre making it much easier for passengers to reach central Milan This left Malpensa with just a handful of intercontinental links charter flights and cargo operations Malpensa suffered a decline in commercial traffic with passenger numbers dropping from 525 000 in 1960 to just 331 000 by 1965 It was destined to play second fiddle to Linate Airport for another 20 years Expansion and development 1995 1998 This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message By the mid 1980s Linate Airport was handling seven million passengers per year and with only a short single runway and limited parking slots had reached its saturation point With no available land nearby for expansion an alternative solution was sought Societa Esercizi Aeroportuali SpA SEA quickly found that developing Malpensa was the only practical alternative By the end of 1985 a law had been passed by the Italian Parliament that paved the way for the reorganisation of the Milan airport system Malpensa was designated as the centre for all services covering northern Italy while Linate Airport was downgraded to a domestic and short haul facility Malpensa 2000 as the plan was called included the construction of a new terminal as well as the development of fast efficient connections to Milan s city centre The European Union recognised this project as one of the 14 Essential to the Development of the Union and provided 200 million to help finance the work Construction started in November 1990 Malpensa airport was re opened eight years later Alitalia s main hub 1998 2008 During the night of 24 25 October 1998 Alitalia moved the majority of its fleet from Rome Fiumicino Airport where it had been flying from for over 50 years to Malpensa Airport The airport started a new lease of life as the Italian flag carrier s main hub Alitalia added up to 488 movements and 42 000 passengers a day at the facility which by the end of 1998 had handled 5 92 million passengers an increase of more than two million over the previous year s figure In 1999 it recorded a spectacular leap to 16 97 million and by 2007 passenger numbers had reached 23 9 million Efficient rail links from two different stations in Milan Centrale and Cadorna stations ensured easy access by railway whereas the nearby A8 motorway had an extra lane added in each direction to help speed up traffic into and out of the city centre Before 2001 ground handling services at Malpensa were shared by the SEA airport s operator and Trans World Airlines Since then the contracting process has gradually been deregulated In 2000 airport security services at Malpensa were transferred from the Polizia di Stato State Police to SEA s internal division SEA Airport Security Up to 2002 SEA was assisted by IVRI in providing security services but the contract was not renewed after its expiry Nevertheless SEA Airport Security is supervised by the Polizia di Stato Italian State Police Guardia di Finanza Italian Military Customs Police and Ente Nazionale Aviazione Civile Italy s Civil Aviation Authority whereas the Carabinieri Italian Military Police supervises ramp entrance citation needed Ramp services are provided by SEA Handling ATA and more recently Aviapartner SEA Handling provided 80 of the ramp services at Malpensa Airport due to its major customer Alitalia In May 2006 however Italy s Civil Aviation Authority took off the limitation of two ramp handlers In 2008 a new development plan was launched by Societa Esercizi Aeroportuali SpA SEA valued at 1 4 billion to include a third pier for Terminal 1 and the construction of a third runway In a surprise move however Alitalia announced its decision to revert to Rome Fiumicino Airport as its main hub due to high operating costs at Malpensa Airport Alitalia did not pull out of Malpensa altogether and continues to fly several domestic and European services from Milan and two intercontinental flights to New York JFK and Tokyo Narita However Malpensa lost around 20 of its daily movements a decrease from 700 to 550 which resulted in only 19 2 million passengers passing through in 2008 The airport continued to suffer during 2009 when the international financial crisis and higher fuel prices caused a reduction to only 17 6 million passengers that year 2010s Responding to Alitalia s pullout the operator SEA launched an all out publicity programme and aggressively marketed Malpensa Airport around the world As a result from 2008 to 2011 a total of 34 new passenger and cargo routes were added to Malpensa s network The low cost carrier EasyJet made Malpensa its main base after London Gatwick with more than 20 of its Airbus A319s and Airbus A320s based there The airline currently flies services from Malpensa to more than 70 destinations in Italy and across Europe 8 Competitor Ryanair confirmed plans to open an operating base at Malpensa from December 2015 initially with one aircraft 9 In 2014 a contract was awarded for extension of the railway line from Terminal 1 to Terminal 2 The line was opened in December 2016 10 The new Malpensa Terminal 2 railway station is within 200 m north of the T2 arrivals hall that is accessed by an outdoor covered walkway 11 Terminals easyJet Airbus A319 100 landing at Malpensa with the Alps visible in the background Malpensa Airport has two passenger terminals and they are connected by airport shuttle buses and trains Terminal 1 Terminal 1 which opened in 1998 is the newer 12 larger and more prominent terminal The terminal is divided into three sections and handles most passengers on scheduled as well as charter flights Concourse A handles domestic and intra Schengen flights Concourse B handles non Schengen and intercontinental flights Concourse C B2 opened in January 2012 handles non Schengen intercontinental flights and security sensitive flights to USA and Israel Terminal 2 Terminal 2 is the older terminal 12 It was previously used exclusively by easyJet but has been closed since 2020 due to the COVID 19 pandemic 13 It is undergoing improvement works and is scheduled to reopen in Summer 2023 All charter services which were previously based in this terminal moved to Terminal 1 upon its opening Malpensa Airport additionally provides free shuttles connecting Terminal 2 to Terminal 1 14 Airlines and destinationsPassenger The following airlines operate regular scheduled seasonal and charter flights to and from Malpensa 15 AirlinesDestinationsAegean AirlinesAthens ThessalonikiAer LingusSeasonal DublinAeroitaliaSeasonal charter Marsa Alam 16 Sharm El Sheikh 17 Air AlbaniaTiranaAir AlgerieAlgiersAir CairoCairo Sharm El SheikhSeasonal Hurghada LuxorAir CanadaMontreal Trudeau Toronto PearsonAir ChinaBeijing Capital Shanghai Pudong WenzhouAir DolomitiFrankfurt MunichAir EuropaMadridAir FranceParis Charles de GaulleAir HorizontSeasonal charter Olbia 18 Air IndiaDelhiAir MoldovaChisinau suspended 19 Air SenegalDakar DiassAir SerbiaBelgradeairBalticRiga Seasonal TampereAlbaStarSeasonal Catania Lampedusa Seasonal charter Cagliari 20 21 AlbawingsTiranaAmerican AirlinesNew York JFKAustrian AirlinesViennaAzerbaijan AirlinesBakuBritish AirwaysLondon HeathrowBrussels AirlinesBrusselsCathay PacificHong KongCroatia AirlinesSeasonal SplitCyprus AirwaysLarnacaDelta Air LinesAtlanta New York JFKeasyJetAlghero Amsterdam Athens Barcelona Bari Bordeaux Brindisi Bristol Cagliari Catania Copenhagen Edinburgh Faro Fuerteventura Funchal Hurghada Lamezia Terme Lanzarote Larnaca Lisbon London Gatwick London Luton Luxembourg Malaga Manchester Marrakech Marsa Alam Nantes Naples Olbia Palermo Palma de Mallorca Paris Charles de Gaulle Porto Prague Reykjavik Keflavik Sharm El Sheikh Tel Aviv Tenerife South Seasonal A Coruna Beauvais Bilbao Birmingham begins 26 June 2023 22 Chania Corfu Heraklion Ibiza Kefalonia Kos Lampedusa Lourdes Malta Menorca Munich resumes 8 September 2023 23 Mykonos Preveza Lefkada Rhodes Rovaniemi Santorini Skiathos Split Zadar ZakynthosEgyptairCairoEl AlTel AvivEmiratesDubai International New York JFKEthiopian AirlinesAddis Ababa ZurichEtihad AirwaysAbu DhabiEVA AirTaipei TaoyuanEurowingsCologne Bonn Dusseldorf Hamburg StuttgartFinnairHelsinkiFlyOneChisinau YerevanGulf AirBahrain Seasonal Nice begins 1 June 2023 24 IberiaMadridIcelandairSeasonal Reykjavik KeflavikIran AirTehran Imam KhomeiniITA AirwaysNew York JFKSeasonal CagliariKLMAmsterdamKorean AirSeoul IncheonKuwait AirwaysKuwait CityLa CompagnieNewarkLATAM BrasilSao Paulo GuarulhosLOT Polish AirlinesWarsaw ChopinLufthansaFrankfurt MunichLumiwingsFoggiaLuxairLuxembourgMiddle East AirlinesBeirutNeosAlmaty Cairo Cancun Colombo Bandaranaike Dakar Diass Fuerteventura Gran Canaria Havana Holguin La Romana Marsa Alam Mombasa Nanjing New York JFK Sal Sharm El Sheikh Tenerife South Seasonal Amman Queen Alia Amritsar Boa Vista Brindisi Cagliari Catania Cayo Largo Corfu Djerba Enfidha resumes 12 June 2023 25 Freeport Heraklion Ibiza Karpathos Kos Lamezia Terme Lanzarote Luxor Male Marsa Matruh Mauritius Menorca Monastir Montego Bay Mykonos Nosy Be Olbia Palma de Mallorca Patras Rhodes Rovaniemi Samos Santorini Skiathos Tianjin Toronto Pearson Varadero Zanzibar Seasonal charter Lahore 26 Sialkot 27 Norwegian Air ShuttleOsloNouvelairSeasonal charter Djerba 28 Oman AirMuscatQatar AirwaysDohaRoyal Air MarocCasablancaRoyal JordanianAmman Queen AliaRyanairAarhus Alghero Alicante Barcelona Bari Berlin Brindisi Bucharest Cagliari Catania Comiso ends 5 May 2023 29 Dublin Gran Canaria Lamezia Terme London Stansted Madrid Malaga Malta Manchester Naples Palermo Porto Seville Tenerife South Valencia Vienna Seasonal Corfu Heraklion Kos begins 4 June 2023 30 Palma de Mallorca Santorini Zadar begins 4 June 2023 31 SaudiaJeddah Seasonal Medina RiyadhScandinavian AirlinesCopenhagen Oslo Stockholm Arlanda Seasonal Bergen StavangerSingapore AirlinesBarcelona SingaporeSky ExpressAthensSunExpressIzmir Seasonal AntalyaSwiss International Air LinesZurichTAP Air PortugalLisbonThai Airways InternationalBangkok Suvarnabhumi resumes 15 November 2023 32 TunisairTunisTurkish AirlinesIstanbulTwin JetLyon MarseilleUnited AirlinesNewarkSeasonal Chicago O HareUzbekistan AirwaysSeasonal TashkentVuelingBarcelona Paris OrlySeasonal Alicante Bilbao IbizaWizz AirAlexandria Amman Queen Alia Athens Bacau Budapest Catania Giza begins 15 June 2023 33 Jeddah Krakow Kutaisi Lamezia Terme London Gatwick Madrid begins 24 July 2023 34 Marrakesh Marsa Alam Podgorica Prague Pristina Reykjavik Keflavik Sharm El Sheikh Skopje Tallinn Tel Aviv Tirana Vilnius Yerevan Seasonal Corfu Heraklion Lampedusa Olbia Porto Riyadh Skiathos ZakynthosCargo The following airlines operate regular cargo services to and from Malpensa AirlinesDestinationsAmazon Air 35 36 Cagliari Catania Leipzig HalleAsiana Cargo 37 Almaty Seoul IncheonAtlas Air citation needed Amsterdam San JuanCargolux 38 LuxembourgCargolux Italia citation needed Almaty Baku Curitiba Afonso Pena Dallas Fort Worth Dubai International Hong Kong Luxembourg Mexico City New York JFK Novosibirsk Osaka Kansai San Juan Vilnius ZhengzhouCathay Cargo 39 Frankfurt Hong KongDHL Aviation 40 Ancona Athens Bahrain Barcelona Belgrade Brussels Bucharest Budapest Cincinnati Cologne Bonn East Midlands Leipzig Halle London Heathrow London Luton London Stansted Madrid Naples Paris Charles de Gaulle Pisa Seoul Incheon Thessaloniki Vitoria ZagrebEgyptair Cargo 41 CairoEmirates SkyCargo 42 Dubai Al MaktoumEthiopian Airlines Cargo 43 Addis AbabaFedEx Express citation needed Ancona Dubai International Guangzhou Memphis Munich Newark Paris Charles de Gaulle Pisa Shanghai Pudong VeniceKorean Air Cargo 44 Seoul IncheonLufthansa Cargo 45 FrankfurtNippon Cargo Airlines 46 Amsterdam Tokyo NaritaQatar Airways Cargo 47 Doha Munich 48 Saudia Cargo 49 Jeddah RiyadhSilk Way West Airlines 50 BakuTurkish Cargo 51 IstanbulUPS Airlines 52 Cologne Bonn NaplesStatisticsBusiest routes Busiest domestic routes to from Milan Malpensa 2018 53 Rank Rankvar prev year Airport Passengers var prev year Airline s 1 Catania Sicily 1 048 371 10 24 Air Italy AlbaStar Alitalia easyJet Neos Air Ryanair2 Palermo Sicily 673 401 81 54 Air Italy Alitalia easyJet Neos Air Ryanair3 2 Lamezia Terme Calabria 557 529 80 38 Air Italy Alitalia easyJet Ryanair4 1 Naples Campania 359 168 29 13 Air Italy Alitalia easyJet5 1 Olbia Sardinia 324 110 3 16 Air Italy Alitalia Blue Panorama Airlines easyJet Neos Air6 new Rome Fiumicino Lazio 242 114 new Air Italy Alitalia7 1 Bari Apulia 229 529 10 17 Alitalia easyJet8 1 Brindisi Apulia 191 036 6 40 Alitalia easyJet Neos Air9 1 Cagliari Sardinia 158 621 11 38 Air Italy Alitalia easyJet Neos Air10 1 Comiso Sicily 118 181 2 24 RyanairBusiest routes between Milan Malpensa and destinations within the European Union 2018 53 Rank Rankvar prev year Airport Passengers var prev year Airline s 1 Paris Charles de Gaulle France 911 510 15 41 Air France Alitalia easyJet2 1 Amsterdam Netherlands 840 160 12 78 Alitalia easyJet KLM Vueling3 1 Barcelona Spain 819 077 7 88 easyJet Vueling4 1 London Gatwick England 577 011 1 35 easyJet5 1 Madrid Spain 544 472 9 63 Air Europa Alitalia easyJet Iberia Ryanair6 1 Munich Germany 466 052 12 26 Air Dolomiti easyJet Lufthansa7 1 Lisbon Portugal 437 438 1 24 Alitalia easyJet TAP Portugal8 2 Frankfurt am Main Germany 381 004 12 86 Alitalia Lufthansa9 2 Vienna Austria 377 191 25 16 Austrian Airlines Wizz Air10 1 Copenhagen Denmark 362 846 1 63 Alitalia easyJet Scandinavian Airlines11 3 Brussels Belgium 337 104 8 21 Alitalia Brussels Airlines Ryanair12 Prague Czech Republic 304 128 2 76 Alitalia Czech Airlines easyJet13 Athens Thessaloniki Greece 274 995 0 10 Aegean Airlines Alitalia easyJet14 London Heathrow England 248 369 1 40 Alitalia British Airways15 2 Budapest Hungary 239 457 7 32 Wizz Air16 2 Dusseldorf Germany 235 165 23 75 Alitalia Eurowings17 2 Ibiza Spain 225 132 0 69 Alitalia easyJet Iberia Neos Air Vueling18 2 London Stansted England 217 971 2 37 Ryanair19 5 Paris Orly France 206 011 27 61 Aigle Azur Alitalia easyJet Vueling20 Helsinki Finland 195 876 7 24 Finnair21 2 Berlin Schonefeld Germany 183 298 1 19 easyJet22 16 Oporto Portugal 177 852 115 74 Ryanair TAP Portugal23 London Luton England 170 303 2 84 easyJet24 1 Edinburgh Scotland 165 084 4 69 Alitalia easyJet25 2 Malaga Spain 159 629 3 13 easyJet Neos Air Ryanair26 4 Manchester England 152 858 11 26 easyJet Flybe27 1 Stuttgart Germany 151 790 2 51 easyJet Eurowings28 new Berlin Tegel Germany 149 610 new easyJet Ryanair29 1 Luxembourg Luxembourg 147 866 2 72 easyJet Luxair30 1 Warsaw Poland 137 333 3 99 LOT Polish Airlines31 Palma de Mallorca Spain 129 491 13 10 Alitalia easyJet Neos Air32 11 Hamburg Germany 129 223 25 67 Eurowings33 Valencia Spain 128 252 new Ryanair34 4 Sofia Bulgaria 113 709 8 28 Bulgaria Air Ryanair35 3 Bucharest Romania 112 400 1 56 Blue Air Ryanair36 2 Stockholm Arlanda Sweden 109 095 5 88 easyJet Neos Air Norwegian Air Shuttle Scandinavian Airlines37 2 Mykonos Greece 99 491 2 37 easyJet Neos38 5 Cologne Germany 94 148 12 97 Eurowings39 new Alicante Spain 93 742 new easyJet Ryanair Vueling40 4 Menorca Spain 85 662 2 22 easyJet Neos41 Bordeaux France 79 224 9 87 easyJet42 2 Tenerife Spain 77 708 2 64 easyJet Neos Ryanair43 1 Dublin Ireland 71 749 14 54 Aer Lingus44 5 Nantes France 71 259 11 82 easyJet45 new Vilnius Lithuania 67 869 Wizz Air46 3 Riga Latvia 67 589 7 85 airBaltic47 2 Heraklion Greece 61 370 5 31 Blue Panorama Airlines easyJet Neos Air Ryanair48 11 Birmingham England 59 974 29 69 Flybe49 3 Seville Spain 54 643 0 19 Ryanair50 2 Toulouse France 54 436 1 12 easyJet51 4 Lyon France 53 475 1 13 HOP 52 2 Lanzarote Spain 52 420 1 03 easyJet Neos AirBusiest routes between Milan Malpensa and destinations outside the European Union 2018 53 Rank Rankvar prev year City Passengers var prev year Airline s 1 New York JFK New York United States 791 985 15 30 Air Italy Alitalia American Airlines Delta Air Lines Emirates2 Dubai International United Arab Emirates 681 844 3 18 Emirates3 Istanbul Ataturk Turkey 416 778 6 30 Turkish Airlines4 Moscow Sheremetyevo Russia 398 790 6 78 Aeroflot5 Doha Qatar 359 792 14 19 Qatar Airways6 1 Tirana Albania 283 107 6 06 Blue Panorama Airlines Ernest Airlines7 1 Tel Aviv Israel 275 348 0 89 Alitalia easyJet El Al Neos Air8 1 Zurich Switzerland 229 597 5 95 Swiss International Air Lines9 1 Cairo Egypt 215 614 4 03 Air Italy Egypt Air10 1 Hong Kong SAR 176 538 0 38 Cathay Pacific11 6 Miami Florida United States 176 283 36 95 Air Italy American Airlines12 1 Muscat Oman 164 120 8 39 Oman Air13 1 Shanghai Pudong China 148 389 3 64 Air China14 2 Sao Paulo Guarulhos Brazil 147 770 7 22 LATAM Brasil15 9 Bangkok Suvarnabhumi Thailand 145 414 46 34 Air Italy Thai Airways International16 Newark New Jersey United States 145 394 10 31 United Airlines17 9 Abu Dhabi United Arab Emirates 143 445 34 96 Etihad Airways18 3 Casablanca Morocco 133 982 0 94 Jetairfly Royal Air Maroc19 1 Tokyo Narita Japan 130 477 1 84 Alitalia20 2 Beijing Capital China 124 394 20 47 Air China21 2 Oslo Norway 118 130 2 72 Norwegian Air Shuttle Scandinavian Airlines22 1 Kyiv Ukraine 116 101 7 75 Ukraine International Airlines23 3 Tunis Tunisia 113 614 2 29 Tunisair24 1 Singapore Singapore 112 287 11 23 Singapore Airlines25 new Sharm El Sheikh Egypt 108 124 new Air Cairo Air Italy Neos Air26 Saint Petersburg Russia 103 460 16 46 Rossiya Airlines27 8 Marsa Alam Egypt 102 956 79 19 Air Cairo Neos Air28 3 Havana Cuba 92 704 5 36 Blue Panorama Airlines Neos29 2 Delhi India 92 583 11 36 Air India Air Italy30 2 Marrakesh Morocco 88 805 7 17 easyJet31 2 Toronto Canada 75 347 25 90 Air Canada Air Italy32 3 Istanbul Sabiha Gokcen Turkey 69 684 0 88 Turkish Airlines33 3 Seoul Incheon South Korea 68 056 1 89 Korean Air34 3 Belgrade Serbia 65 439 1 81 Air Serbia35 3 Tehran Iran 62 207 0 24 Iran Air Mahan Air36 new Moscow Domodedovo Russia 61 429 new Air Italy37 new Moscow Vnukovo Russia 60 114 new Utair38 new Addis Ababa Ethiopia 56 481 new Ethiopian Airlines39 new La Romana Dominican Republic 53 448 new Neos Air40 new Zanzibar Tanzania 52 810 new Blue Panorama Airlines Neos Air41 new Dakar Senegal 51 104 new Air ItalyMovements by country European Union countries with passenger movements from to Milan Malpensa Airport 2018 Rank Rank var prev year Country Passengers 20181 Italy 4 093 2212 Spain 2 559 8523 1 Germany 1 805 4914 1 UK 1 717 6315 France 1 396 5106 Netherlands 841 7737 Greece 652 3238 Portugal 644 1479 2 Austria 377 54810 Denmark 367 15611 2 Belgium 337 64812 Czech Republic 304 87813 Hungary 240 12814 1 Poland 232 14715 1 Finland 198 83816 Luxembourg 147 86617 Romania 119 02118 Bulgaria 114 08019 Sweden 109 46520 1 Lithuania 75 76821 1 Ireland 71 74922 1 Estonia 36 93723 1 Cyprus 34 71424 Malta 10 198General statistics Years Movements variation Passengers variation Cargo tons variation2000 249 107 13 3 20 716 815 22 1 301 045 4 62001 236 409 5 1 18 570 494 10 4 323 707 7 52002 214 886 9 1 17 441 250 6 1 328 241 1 42003 213 554 0 6 17 621 585 1 362 587 10 52004 218 048 2 1 18 554 874 5 3 361 237 13 12005 227 718 4 4 19 630 514 5 8 384 752 6 52006 247 456 8 7 21 767 267 10 9 419 128 8 92007 267 941 8 3 23 885 391 9 7 486 666 16 12008 218 476 18 5 19 221 632 19 5 415 952 14 52009 187 551 14 2 17 551 635 8 7 344 047 17 32010 193 771 3 3 18 947 808 8 432 674 25 82011 190 838 1 5 19 303 131 1 8 450 446 4 12012 174 892 8 4 18 537 301 4 414 317 82013 164 745 5 8 17 955 075 3 1 430 343 3 92014 166 749 1 2 18 853 203 5 469 657 9 12015 160 484 3 8 18 582 043 1 4 511 191 8 82016 166 842 4 19 420 690 4 5 548 767 7 42017 178 953 7 3 22 169 167 14 2 589 719 7 52018 194 515 8 7 24 725 490 11 5 572 774 8 2 92019 234 054 20 3 28 846 299 16 7 558 481 5 2 52020 92 432 60 5 7 241 766 74 9 516 739 6 7 5Graphs are temporarily unavailable due to technical issues Annual passenger traffic at MXP airport See Wikidata query Transport linksRail Main articles Malpensa Aeroporto Terminal 1 railway station and Malpensa Aeroporto Terminal 2 railway station Malpensa Express at Milan Cadorna station platform 1 Connection between Terminal 1 and its railway station The airport is served by two train stations one in each terminal Malpensa Express Main article Malpensa Express Malpensa Express is a direct train connection between Terminal 2 Terminal 1 and Milan s city centre As of 2019 its service is based on a clock face timetable with four services per hour in both directions two run between the two airport terminals and Milan Cadorna station the other two between the two airport terminals Milan Garibaldi and Milan Centrale stations All services call at Busto Arsizio Nord Saronno connections for Como Novara and Varese and Milan Bovisa stations 54 The journey time ranges between 30 and 50 minutes depending on the type of service and the number of stops Other train services TiLo operate services to Bellinzona in Switzerland 55 Milan s Suburban Line S10 Milano Rogoredo Milano Bovisa ran to Malpensa Airport Aeroporto from June 2010 56 Trains called at Ferno Busto Arsizio Castellanza Rescaldina Saronno Milano Bovisa Milano Lancetti Milano Porta Garibaldi M2 M5 Milano Repubblica M3 Milano Porta Venezia M1 Milano Dateo and Milano Porta Vittoria The service was terminated in October 2012 The Malpensa Varese Mendrisio CH Lugano CH line provides a direct connection between Malpensa Airport Aeroporto and the south eastern part of Switzerland There are plans to connect Gallarate Station and Milan s Centrale Station FS which is currently a terminus station with no through tracks to allow more convenient access to high speed international lines Bus Malpensa Shuttle and Malpensa Bus Express connect the airport to Milan Central station Trenitalia s National Railway hub and for Milan s Metro network The shuttle bus calls at Terminals 1 and 2 Busto Arsizio and Milan Fair on request Journey time is 60 70 minutes A free 24 hour shuttle bus provides access to Terminal 2 from Terminal 1 The bus leaves every 7 minutes Journey time is 15 20 minutes Malpensa Airport has a direct coach connection with Milan s Linate Airport From March 2018 both Terminals are connected to major cities in Northern Italy This service is provided by BusItalia Fast a society participated by Trenitalia and the Italian Rail Co and connects the airport with Aosta Aosta Valley Novara Santhia Turin Piedmont Sanremo Savona Ventimiglia Liguria once a day Padua Venice Marco Polo Airport Verona Veneto Trieste Friuli Venezia Giulia twice a day Genoa Liguria three times a day 57 Road Malpensa Airport is accessible by a four lane motorway to the A8 connecting Switzerland to Milan and by a five lane motorway to the A4 connecting Turin Torino Verona Venice and Triest Trieste Local access to the airport is provided by the State Road SS336 from Busto Arsizio and by the State Road SS336dir from Magenta References GmbH DVV Media Group 14 February 2017 FedEx Express opens new Malpensa hub ǀ Air Cargo News Aircargonews net Archived from the original on 12 March 2017 Retrieved 10 March 2017 Excel 2022 xls PDF assaeroporti com Retrieved 22 March 2023 Official website of Milan Malpensa airport flights parking and services www milanomalpensa airport com Archived from the original on 24 March 2022 Retrieved 20 March 2022 Milan Malpensa Airport MXP www airportmalpensa com Archived from the original on 31 March 2022 Retrieved 20 March 2022 EAD Basic Ead eurocontrol int Archived from the original on 5 October 2013 Retrieved 7 November 2010 Ceresa Gabriele 15 February 2023 Malpensa torna tra i primi 10 aeroporti al mondo per Paesi serviti con voli diretti MALPENSA24 in Italian Archived from the original on 22 February 2023 Retrieved 22 February 2023 Statistiche Dati di Traffico Aeroportuale Italiano Assaeroporti in Italian Archived from the original on 8 December 2013 Retrieved 21 February 2023 Milan Malpensa Airport Review and History Archived from the original on 23 February 2015 Retrieved 2 June 2015 Ryanair Airliner World 7 November 2015 Malpensa Terminal 2 rail link contract awarded Railway Gazette 10 September 2014 Archived from the original on 4 April 2015 Retrieved 28 March 2015 How to catch a train to Milan city from Malpensa Airport Terminal 2 Milanfinally com Archived from the original on 14 November 2016 Retrieved 17 December 2016 a b Milan Malpensa Airport Avventure Bellissime Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 27 March 2015 Coronavirus Emergency FAQ Archived from the original on 13 April 2022 Retrieved 21 March 2022 Directions and Parking Archived from the original on 21 January 2015 Retrieved 6 April 2015 Destinazioni Milano Malpensa Milan Malpensa Airport Archived from the original on 8 December 2021 Retrieved 8 December 2021 Voli in partenza da Malpensa Milano Malpensa Airport Archived from the original on 7 August 2022 Retrieved 1 August 2022 AeroItalia iniziera a volare sul Mar Rosso Voli da Bologna Milano Roma e Verona 30 July 2022 Archived from the original on 1 August 2022 Retrieved 1 August 2022 Network Summer 2023 OLB PDF geasar it 16 March 2023 https www airmoldova md news records ro air moldova anunta restructurarea accelerata a companiei ECCO I VOLI DELLA SUMMER 2023 A CAGLIARI Here s the services for Summer 23 from to Cagliari PDF sogaer com in Italian 14 March 2023 L Aereoporto di Cagliari presenta la sua programmazione estiva Cagliari Airpost shows up its 2023 summer schedule Italiavola com in Italian 14 March 2023 EASYJET NS23 NETWORK ADDITIONS 11DEC22 Aeroroutes 12 December 2022 Archived from the original on 12 December 2022 Retrieved 12 December 2022 Archived copy Archived from the original on 20 May 2019 Retrieved 10 March 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Milan Airports Aeroporti Milano Facebook com in Italian 11 April 2023 Prenotazione voli Malpensa Hammamet Flights Malpensa, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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