Recent from talks
Contribute something
Nothing was collected or created yet.
FAA airport categories
View on WikipediaThe United States Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has a system for categorizing public-use airports (along with heliports and other aviation bases) that is primarily based on the level of commercial passenger traffic through each facility. It is used to determine whether an airport is eligible for funding through the federal government's Airport Improvement Program (AIP). Fewer than 20% of airports in the U.S. qualify for the program, though most that do not qualify are private-use-only airports.[1]
At the bottom end are general aviation airports. To qualify for the AIP, they must have at least 10 aircraft based there but handle fewer than 2,500 scheduled passengers each year. This means that most aircraft are small and are operated by individuals or other private entities, and little or no commercial airline traffic occurs. Nearly three-quarters of AIP-funded airports are of this type.
Most of the remaining airfields that qualify for funding are commercial service airports and are more dependent on regularly scheduled commercial airline traffic. This is subcategorized into primary airports, which handle more than 10,000 passengers each year, and nonprimary airports, which handle between 2,500 and 10,000 passengers annually.[2] These categories account for over 15% of AIP-funded airports in the U.S.
A third major category contains reliever airports, which are essentially large general-aviation airports located in metropolitan areas that serve to offload small aircraft traffic from hub airports in the region. These account for the remaining 10% of AIP-funded airports.
Subcategories
[edit]Primary airports are further subcategorized based on the number of passenger boardings as a fraction of the national total. The categories are:[2]
- Nonhub primary – airports handling over 10,000 but less than 0.05% of the country's annual passenger boardings
- Small hub primary – airports with 0.05–0.25% of the country's annual passenger boardings
- Medium hub primary – airports handling 0.25–1% of the country's annual passenger boardings
- Large hub primary – airports handling over 1% of the country's annual passenger boardings
For reference, there were 899,663,192 boardings at commercial airports in 2018,[3] making the dividing lines 449,832, 2,249,158, and 8,996,632 boardings per year.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "The Federal Aviation Administration's Take on Airports". General Aviation Flying. Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association. Archived from the original on September 27, 2007.
- ^ a b "Airport Categories". Federal Aviation Administration. Retrieved October 20, 2024.
- ^ "Passenger Boarding (Enplanement) and All-Cargo Data for U.S. Airports". Federal Aviation Administration. Retrieved 2019-11-22. Includes a categorized list of all commercial airports with categories and boarding statistics.
FAA airport categories
View on GrokipediaOverview
Purpose and Scope
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) establishes airport categories to fulfill its statutory responsibility under 49 U.S.C. § 47102 for developing and maintaining a safe, efficient, and integrated system of public-use airports that supports the national air transportation network. This categorization framework prioritizes safety by enforcing standardized infrastructure and operational protocols, enhances efficiency through optimized capacity and connectivity, and promotes accessibility to ensure equitable service for commercial, cargo, and general aviation activities across the United States. By aligning with the Department of Transportation's goals of safety, economic strength, equity, climate stewardship, and operational excellence, the system guides infrastructure investments to meet evolving aviation demands while minimizing environmental impacts.[4][5] The scope of FAA airport categories is explicitly limited to public-use airports documented in the National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems (NPIAS), which identifies 3,287 existing facilities and projects 5 additional nonprimary airports by fiscal year 2029, totaling 3,292 airports under the 2025–2029 planning period. Public-use airports, defined as those available for unrestricted access by the general public regardless of ownership, contrast sharply with the approximately 14,852 private-use airports that remain outside this framework unless they qualify for public designation based on accessibility and service criteria. The NPIAS serves as the comprehensive federal blueprint for these airports, estimating development needs over a 20-year horizon while focusing on near-term priorities within the 5-year report cycle.[4][5] Through categorization, the FAA influences key aspects of airport management, including eligibility for federal grants via the Airport Improvement Program (AIP) and Bipartisan Infrastructure Law funding, adherence to safety standards like runway safety areas and lighting, and operational requirements such as aircraft rescue and firefighting capabilities. This approach ensures targeted resource allocation to sustain infrastructure integrity and public service without prescribing granular details on individual airport roles or metrics.[4][5]Key Definitions and Legislation
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) defines a commercial service airport as a publicly owned airport in a state that has at least 2,500 passenger boardings (enplanements) each calendar year and receives scheduled passenger service.[1] This definition, codified in 49 U.S.C. § 47102(7), distinguishes these airports from non-commercial facilities by emphasizing their role in scheduled air carrier operations.[6] A primary airport, in contrast, refers to a subset of commercial service airports that collectively account for 99 percent of the nation's annual passenger enplanements, with each individual primary airport having at least 10,000 enplanements per year.[7] These airports are further subdivided by hub status—large, medium, small, or nonhub—based on their share of total U.S. enplanements, as outlined in 49 U.S.C. § 47102(16).[8] This categorization ensures that federal resources prioritize facilities handling the majority of commercial air traffic. The legislative foundation for FAA airport categorizations stems from the Federal Aviation Act of 1958, which established the FAA as an independent agency to regulate civil aviation safety and airspace use, laying the groundwork for standardized airport oversight.[9] Building on this, the Airport and Airway Improvement Act of 1982 (as amended) created the National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems (NPIAS) and the Airport Improvement Program (AIP), mandating the inclusion of qualifying public-use airports in a national system based on their service levels and enplanement data to guide federal funding and development.[10] Terminology has evolved to better reflect diverse airport roles, particularly for general aviation facilities. In 2012, the FAA's report General Aviation Airports: A National Asset updated classifications by introducing categories such as national, regional, local, basic, and unclassified for nearly 3,000 general aviation airports, using criteria like location, based aircraft, and operations to highlight their contributions beyond commercial service.[11] This framework refined earlier NPIAS groupings, emphasizing economic and community impacts without altering primary commercial definitions.[12]Primary Commercial Service Airports
Hub Size Classifications
Primary commercial service airports, which account for at least 10,000 annual passenger enplanements, are further subdivided by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) into hub size categories based on their proportion of total U.S. commercial enplanements.[1] These classifications help prioritize infrastructure investments, funding allocations, and planning within the National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems (NPIAS).[8] The FAA recalculates these categories annually using certified enplanement data from the previous calendar year.[1] As of calendar year 2023 data used in the 2025–2029 NPIAS, there are 31 large hubs, 33 medium hubs, 74 small hubs, and 252 nonhub primary airports, for a total of 390 primary commercial service airports.[13] The categories are defined as follows:| Hub Category | Enplanement Threshold | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Large Hub | At least 1% of total U.S. annual enplanements (9,448,913 based on 944,891,353 total in 2023) | Represents major national and international gateways handling the highest traffic volumes. There are 31 such airports.[1][13] |
| Medium Hub | 0.25% to 0.999% of total U.S. annual enplanements (2,362,273 to 9,448,912 based on 2023 total) | Serves as regional connectors with significant but not dominant traffic. There are 33 such airports.[1][13] |
| Small Hub | 0.05% to 0.249% of total U.S. annual enplanements (472,445 to 2,362,272 based on 2023 total) | Focuses on local and regional service with moderate passenger volumes. There are 74 such airports.[1][13] |
| Nonhub Primary | At least 10,000 but less than 0.05% of total U.S. annual enplanements (10,000 to 472,444 based on 2023 total) | Includes smaller commercial airports providing essential air service to communities. There are 252 such airports.[1][13] |
Criteria for Primary Designation
The designation of an airport as a primary commercial service airport by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) hinges on achieving at least 10,000 annual passenger enplanements, as defined under 49 U.S.C. § 47102(16).[15] This threshold ensures that primary airports collectively account for approximately 99 percent of all U.S. passenger enplanements, focusing federal resources on facilities handling the vast majority of commercial air traffic.[8] Enplanements are calculated as the total number of revenue passengers boarding aircraft at the airport, including both originating passengers and those making connections or transfers, based on data reported by air carriers.[16] The FAA conducts an annual review to determine primary status, utilizing enplanement data submitted by U.S. air carriers through the Department of Transportation's Air Carrier Activity Information System, primarily derived from Form 41 reports.[17] To qualify, an airport must also be publicly owned and receiving scheduled passenger air service, aligning with the statutory definition of a commercial service airport under 49 U.S.C. § 47102(7), which requires a minimum of 2,500 annual enplanements for any commercial service designation.[15] This process allows for dynamic updates to airport categories each year, reflecting changes in air traffic patterns and ensuring eligibility for Airport Improvement Program (AIP) funding and inclusion in the National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems (NPIAS).[2] Historical adjustments to designations have responded to significant disruptions in air travel. Following the September 11, 2001, attacks, a sharp decline in passenger volumes led to several airports falling below the 10,000-enplanement threshold and losing primary status in subsequent annual reviews, illustrating the FAA's reliance on current-year data to adapt classifications amid traffic shifts.[17] During the COVID-19 pandemic, the FAA temporarily mitigated similar risks by basing 2021 NPIAS classifications on 2019 enplanement data rather than the drastically reduced 2020 figures, preventing unwarranted demotions for airports affected by the crisis; this approach was extended through waivers and policy guidance from 2020 to 2022 to stabilize funding entitlements.[18] In contrast, non-primary commercial service airports maintain scheduled passenger service but record between 2,500 and 10,000 annual enplanements, qualifying them for limited AIP support while excluding them from the full suite of primary designations.[15] Once designated as primary, airports may be further subdivided by hub size—such as large, medium, or non-hub—based on their share of national enplanements, though this scaling occurs separately from initial qualification.[1]Non-Primary Airports
Cargo Service Airports
Cargo service airports are public-use airports that, in addition to any other air transportation services that may be available, are served by aircraft providing air transportation of only cargo with a total annual landed weight exceeding 100 million pounds. Landed weight refers to the weight of aircraft transporting only cargo in intrastate, interstate, and foreign air transportation, as determined by FAA regulations. These airports support freight operations critical to national logistics, and an airport may simultaneously qualify as both a commercial service and a cargo service airport if it meets the respective criteria.[1] Within the non-primary category, cargo service airports are those that fall below the 10,000 annual passenger enplanement threshold for primary designation but play a significant role in freight logistics, often handling substantial volumes such as over 100 million pounds of cargo annually. These facilities focus on cargo-only operations without relying on passenger traffic, enabling efficient handling of goods for industries like manufacturing and distribution. For instance, Perot Field Fort Worth Alliance Airport (AFW) in Texas exemplifies a non-primary cargo service airport, classified as general aviation with minimal enplanements (1,628 passenger enplanements in 2021) yet ranking among the top 20 U.S. cargo airports by handling over 2.4 billion pounds of landed weight in 2021, primarily serving FedEx and other freight carriers.[19][20] The criteria for cargo service airport designation are based on annual landed weight data collected through the FAA's Air Carrier Activity Information System (ACAIS), which aggregates reports from air carriers via Form 5100-108 for all-cargo operations. This excludes weights from passenger-cargo combination flights, focusing solely on dedicated freight aircraft to ensure the airport's primary purpose aligns with cargo handling. While many prominent cargo hubs like Memphis International Airport (MEM), FedEx's global superhub, and Louisville Muhammad Ali International Airport (SDF), UPS's primary freight base, are classified as primary due to their passenger volumes alongside massive cargo throughput (MEM handled approximately 23 billion pounds in 2023), non-primary cargo service airports fill essential gaps in regional supply chains.[21][22] These non-primary cargo service airports are increasingly vital amid e-commerce expansion, facilitating rapid distribution of goods across the U.S. In calendar year 2023, U.S. airports collectively processed nearly 199 billion pounds of all-cargo landed weight, underscoring the sector's scale and its support for just-in-time delivery models. Funding through the National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems (NPIAS) aids infrastructure improvements at these airports to accommodate growing freight demands.[22][2]Reliever and General Aviation Airports
Reliever airports are facilities designated by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) to alleviate congestion at commercial service airports by accommodating general aviation traffic and enhancing community access to non-commercial air transportation.[1] These airports play a critical role in distributing general aviation operations away from busier hubs, thereby improving overall system efficiency and safety. The FAA has identified over 250 reliever airports as part of its efforts to manage airspace demands, with many located near major metropolitan areas.[23] A prominent example is Teterboro Airport (TEB) in New Jersey, which serves as a key reliever for the New York City region by handling a high volume of business and private jet traffic.[24] General aviation (GA) encompasses the operation of civilian aircraft for purposes other than scheduled commercial passenger or cargo transport, including personal, business, instructional, and recreational flying.[12] In 2012, the FAA classified GA airports into five categories—national, regional, local, basic, and unclassified—based on factors such as the number of based aircraft (aircraft regularly stationed at the airport) and annual operations (takeoffs and landings). These classifications help prioritize infrastructure needs and safety improvements for the diverse GA network. The criteria emphasize the airports' roles in supporting varying levels of activity, from international business flights to local training and emergency services.| Category | Key Criteria for Based Aircraft | Key Criteria for Operations |
|---|---|---|
| National | More than 200 average based aircraft, including 11+ jets | At least 5,000 instrument operations; 20+ international flights; 500+ interstate departures |
| Regional | More than 90 average based aircraft, including 1+ jet | At least 1,000 instrument operations; 10+ domestic flights over 500 miles |
| Local | 15+ based aircraft (average 37) | At least 10 instrument operations; 2,500+ passenger enplanements |
| Basic | 10+ based aircraft or 4+ helicopters (average 10) | Not applicable; focused on location-specific roles like remote access or emergency support |
| Unclassified | Varies, often low or no based aircraft | Varies, typically low activity requiring further assessment |
