Building for the long haul

Auckland Airport is underway with major projects across transport, terminals and airfield as we build a resilient, fit-for-purpose airport that meets the needs of customers well into the future.

We are excited to announce that the ground floor of the new Transport Hub is now open - the biggest change to Auckland Airport’s international terminal transport system in nearly 50-years. The Transport Hub provides an efficient and modern arrival and departure experience with 320m of undercover kerbside public drop-off and pick-up space, and better public transport connections.

Over the coming months and years, you’ll see a lot more happening around the airport and we’re committed to making sure airport operations continue to run as smoothly as possible. It’s important to us that you always feel well informed about what we’re building and why, and so you’re prepared for any changes before you come to the airport. You’ll find everything you need to know right here. If you have any other questions, please contact us.



The upgrade of Auckland Airport

For more information about our main projects and for project updates please see below

What it means for you and your journey

While we’re making these changes, Auckland Airport may look different each time you arrive. We always want you to feel safe, informed and prepared so bookmark this page for future visits and please remember to plan ahead and allow extra time.

Planning ahead

Preparing for your trip

International departure information: Learn more
International arrival information: Learn more

Flight information

Be sure to check flight times.

Parking

Book your parking well in advance of travelling.

Accessibility

Airport Maps

Transport

TH01 Open Now

Transport Hub

Arriving at the airport

As the airport may look different to the last time you visited watch our arriving at Auckland Airport videos to familiarise yourself before you leave.

The ground floor of the new Transport Hub is now open at the international terminal. Videos for each type of transportation (including buses, taxis, rideshares (eg.Uber), shuttles and rental cars) are here. You can also check out our detailed airport maps.

New Transport Hub at the international terminal

The ground floor of our new Transport Hub has now opened on the doorstep of the international terminal and there is a new road layout. Here is some information to make your experience as smooth as possible.

Drop-off and pick-up

You’ll notice a big change in the public drop-off & pick-up area, which has relocated from the front of the international terminal to the ground floor of the Transport Hub. When you are driving towards the terminal you will now be guided into the Transport Hub. Simply follow the signs to the drop-off & pick-up zone. You’ll drive through, stop to drop-off or pick-up your friends and family and exit from the other end of the Transport Hub. If you need to be picked up, please follow the signs to the middle lanes of the Transport Hub.


Videos for each type of transportation (including buses, taxis, rideshares (eg.Uber), shuttles and rental cars) are here. You can also check out our detailed airport maps.

Travelling between terminals

Catch the inter-terminal bus

A free inter-terminal bus service operates every 15 minutes between 5am and 11pm, with the trip taking approximately ten minutes.
At the international terminal, the bus leaves from Bus Stop B at the Transport Hub, At the domestic terminal, outside Door 2 from Bus Stop C.

Free inter terminal transfer bus

Walk our new ‘Green Line’ between terminals

Stretch your legs and get some fresh air by following our new green line walkway between terminals. We’ve changed the route to keep travellers safe and to make way for construction bringing together domestic jet and international travel.

The 950m walkway is well marked with improved shade and shelter, and, in most places, follows a green line on the footpath. The new route takes about 10 to 15 minutes, depending on your walking speed.

Walk between our terminals following our Green Line

Celebrating walks of New Zealand

We have teamed up with the Department of Conservation (DOC) to showcase Aotearoa New Zealand’s beautiful walks along the new green line walkway.

Displaying some of New Zealand’s most stunning scenery, there are 36 different DOC tracks and locations celebrated along the green line with giant panoramic photos, featuring multi-day walks along the golden bays of the Abel Tasman and through the forests of the Paparoa Track on the West Coast. There are also single-day walks including the Rangitoto Summit Track in Auckland and the Kauaeranga Kauri Trail in the Coromandel.

For more on the featured walks: doc.govt.nz/explore

Find your next adventure with the Department of Conservation


Main projects – transport, airfield, terminals

New Transport Hub to improve journeys to and from the airport

Over the past two years the carpark outside the international terminal has been transformed into a modern, new Transport Hub, with the ground floor now open.

The new facility provides 320m of undercover kerbside drop off and pick up, with separate lanes for public and commercial traffic, creating an efficient and modern arrival and departure experience for those using public transport and scheduled buses, being dropped off or picked up by friends and family, or being dropped off by taxis, rideshares (e,g, Uber) and shuttles. The drop-off and pick-up lanes, designed to handle the 650 vehicles an hour expected at peak, are an important step towards our new integrated domestic terminal, creating the capacity to manage future vehicle volumes.

Better journeys ahead: Auckland Airport Transport Hub opens at international terminal

Auckland Airport’s biggest airfield expansion since opening

The airfield expansion is set to open in late 2025, spanning over 23 rugby fields in size. It is the largest airfield expansion in our airport’s history, and a critical enabler, creating a new area for aircraft parking with a large part of the airfield about to become a construction site for development of the newly integrated terminal. The project adds extra taxiways and six remote stands (parking spots for planes) for aircraft that layover for several hours before departing again, five of these stands will have in-ground jet fuel reticulation, and further into the future, if needed, a second runway.

3+ km of stormwater pipes are going in the ground under the new airfield to capture stormwater flows from more than 100 hectares of land north of the international terminal, directing it away and into an innovative new treatment system. Learn more here >>

Learn more about the airfield expansion >>

A brand-new domestic terminal to be fully integrated into the international terminal - replacing the ageing domestic terminal

Set to open between 2028 and 2029, the new integrated terminal will house domestic and international travel under the same roof for the first time since 1977, via an expansion at the eastern end of the existing international terminal building.

  • The integrated terminal will serve the larger and more efficient domestic jet aircraft flying to and from Auckland to New Zealand’s other main centres, alongside international operations.
  • When it opens it will cut domestic jet to international transfer times down to a five-minute indoor walk.
  • Smart baggage systems will save time and reduce stress at either end of a flight, alongside faster links to transport options.
  • More gates and other facilities to help airlines smooth and speed-up turn-around times.

Learn more about our combined terminal >>

Latest project updates

welcome-msg-flying-plane

Domestic bliss rolls on

Last year Auckland Airport’s domestic terminal bathroom upgrades got underway, and since then three domestic bathrooms have been now signed, sealed and delivered.

Working is currently underway on the men’s bathroom, opposite the baggage reclaim area, as well as the new parent room and gender-neutral bathroom.

During this time there will be clear wayfinding in place to safely direct people to the temporary men’s bathrooms, which will be in place until June.

The new bathrooms provide customers and wider airport users with improved facilities, and are also a nod to the look and feel of the interiors of the future domestic terminal.

The Jean Batten statue is back

It’s great to welcome back one of New Zealand’s greatest aviators, Jean Batten.

The life-like Jean Batten statue has returned to the international terminal, after being temporarily removed for conservation work when construction of the Transport Hub started in mid-2022.

Jean’s outstretched arm has waved welcome and farewell at Auckland Airport for 35 years now, but after that long in the elements it was time for some touch-ups with a metal conservator to get her looking her best again.

She now has a new home between the Novotel and the Transport Hub as part of wider landscaping of the international terminal forecourt to provide a welcoming environment.

Behind the hoardings: inner terminal road snapshot

When the ground floor of the Transport Hub opened in early April, it triggered the closure of the inner terminal road, so work on the new integrated terminal could progress.

The temporary closure of the road, the first time in 50 years, includes future-proofing vital utilities, such as: water, stormwater, sewage, power and telecommunications.

Since the road has been closed, there has been the realignment of the green line, and soon the the stormwater and wastewater utility work will commence.

It’s expected inner terminal road will re-open in 2026, with public transport and commercial pick-up returning.

Transport Hub update: canopies and pedestrian plaza nearing completion

With the ground floor drop-off and pick-up now open at the Transport Hub, the focus is now on completing the parking levels above for a year-end opening date, alongside the landscaping and canopies across the pedestrian plaza and walkways.

All canopies connecting international arrivals to the Transport Hub and across to the temporary Transport Pick-Up Zone are now completed. There’s also been additional wayfinding signage added, with hoardings in place to protect customers from the construction areas.

Planting is also in full swing around the pedestrian plaza, and a number of existing trees have been incorporated into the new landscaping, joined by 22 Pōhutukawa relocated from across the precinct, with a range of native plants creating outdoor spaces with a unique feel of Aotearoa New Zealand.