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Airports in Porto, Portugal

1 airport in this metropolitan area

About Porto

Porto, officially the Ancient, Very Noble, Ever Loyal and Undefeated City of Porto, also known in English as Oporto, is the second largest city in Portugal, after Lisbon. It is the capital of the Porto District and one of the Iberian Peninsula's major urban areas. Porto city proper, which is the entire municipality of Porto, is small compared to its metropolitan area, with an estimated population of 252,687 people in a municipal area of 41.42 km2 (16 sq mi). As of 2025, the Porto metropolitan area has around 1.8 million people in an area of 2,395 km2 (925 sq mi), making it the second-largest urban area in Portugal. It is recognized as a global city with a Gamma + rating from the Globalization and World Cities Research Network. Source: "Porto" by Wikipedia contributors (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Porto), licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/). Edit history on the linked Wikipedia page.

Overview

Porto, Portugal is served by 1 airport tracked in this guide: Francisco de Sá Carneiro Airport (OPO). Together they handle inbound and outbound flying for the metropolitan area, and each one links through to a full guide on this site with terminal, lounge, layover and ground-transport pages.

Choosing the right airport

Because Porto has a single primary airport, all scheduled commercial traffic funnels through one terminal complex. That keeps ground transport simple, but it also means peak banks can get crowded. Aim to arrive a little earlier than usual when local school holidays or major events are on the calendar, and check the airport's published live-wait page before you leave the house if your route is on a known busy bank.

Ground transport

Ground transport between central Porto and its airports normally includes licensed taxis with published rank fares, ride-hail apps with dedicated pickup points, public transport (bus, metro or rail) into the city centre, and rental car desks landside. For an early morning departure, a pre-booked airport transfer or an airport-hotel stay the night before is usually the most reliable option. Cash-only taxis still operate in parts of Portugal, so carrying a small amount of local currency is a sensible backup even if you plan to pay by card.

Layover tips

If you are visiting Porto, it often makes sense to combine the airport visit with a short stay nearby. Look at hotel clusters within a 15-minute drive of arrivals if you have an overnight layover, and check luggage storage options at the airport if you want to head into the city centre between flights. Most major airports now have a left-luggage office airside or landside, although prices and hours vary widely.

When to fly through Porto

When you fly through Porto matters more than you might think. The morning bank between roughly 6am and 9am is the busiest at most airports, with a second peak in the late afternoon as long-haul flights time their arrivals into evening connection banks elsewhere. If your dates are flexible, a midday departure usually means shorter security lines and a calmer terminal. The shoulder seasons either side of the local holidays tend to be the cheapest and the least crowded.

Airport list