Auckland Airport terminals are quiet as hundreds of flights canceled

The Americans are back at Auckland Airport

New Zealand: October will not only be the busiest school holiday period at Auckland Airport since 2019 – it will also see the return of two airline powerhouses, United Airlines and American Airlines.

Scott Tasker, General Manager of Customer and Aero Commercial, said it was an exciting way to bookend the month, with the restart of United Airlines on the San Francisco route at the beginning of the school holidays and the end-of-month American Airlines launch from its Dallas Fort Worth mega-hub providing greater connectivity between New Zealand and North America.

“We’ve also got Air New Zealand’s Chicago non-stop connection restarting, so all these great services coming on stream across October are adding nearly 14,000 seats, or around 20% seat capacity, month-on-month between New Zealand and North America, taking overall capacity to close to 82,000 seats,” said Mr Tasker.

Over the October school holidays, around 13,000 travellers are heading to the United States, making it the second most popular destination behind Australia. Overall, more than 600,000 passengers are expected to fly, either domestically or internationally, in and out of Auckland Airport this school holiday.

“Capacity gets another bump with the return of Air Canada in early November, and when you add in the existing Air New Zealand services to Los Angeles, Honolulu, Houston, San Francisco, Vancouver and New York, plus the Hawaiian Airlines connection to Honolulu, there really are plenty of great options for travellers connecting between here and North America.”

Come November, Auckland will have five airlines – Air New Zealand, American Airlines, United Airlines, Hawaiian Airlines, and Air Canada – operating direct flights to eight destinations – Honolulu, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Houston, Dallas, Chicago, New York, and Vancouver – making it the most connected Australasian city to North America.

Trans-Tasman capacity also benefits from new connections with China Airlines flying to Taipei via Brisbane from 2 October and AirAsia X bringing onboard services to Kuala Lumpur with a Sydney touchdown from early November.

“By the time the Christmas holidays roll around, we’ll have 23 international airlines flying to 35 destinations, which is roughly 70% of where we were in terms of capacity at the same time in 2019.

While some overseas markets are back at or close to 100%, our capacity recovery trajectory is close to the likes of Singapore and Australia,” said Mr Tasker.

For a smoother journey, be prepared

“There’s definitely going to be some busy periods across the day during the October school holidays but while queues may form, they should move pretty quickly,” said Mr Tasker.

“The Family Lane at border processing, which was popular last school holidays, is back again for the October break. It’s operating at Customs and Aviation Security screening for international departures, and MPI biosecurity screening at international arrivals, so hopefully that helps take some of the stress out of getting through those essential border processes with children.”

The recently updated Covid-19 protocols mean mask wearing is no longer a requirement for anyone in the airport terminals, international travellers don’t need proof of vaccination, and self-testing on arrival isn’t required although international passengers will be offered a free antigen test before leaving the arrivals area.

“In the terminal, the options for shopping and dining are growing daily, but if you have a favourite store or place to grab a bite to eat check the Auckland Airport website before you travel for the latest on what’s open and when.”

Outside the terminal, work is underway on constructing the Transport Hub, with a new covered public pick-up/drop-off expected to open in late 2023. All public parking at the terminal (short and long term) has relocated to Car Parks D and E – a covered 5- to 10-minute walk from the terminal. Drop offs areas are unchanged, including those for taxis, rideshares, SkyDrive bus or the AirportLink bus connection from Puhinui Station.

“And if you’re travelling through the terminals over the school holidays make sure you pack a smile for the staff working hard to get you to your final destination.”

What’s new:

  • Air Chathams Auckland-Norfolk Island, 1 / week from 1 September
  • Air New Zealand Auckland-JFK, New York, 3 / week from 17 September

Coming soon:

  • China Airlines Auckland-Brisbane-Taipei, 3 / week from 2 October
  • United Airlines Auckland-San Francisco, 3 / week from 4 October, increasing to 7 / week from 31 October
  • Air New Zealand Auckland-Chicago, 3 / week from 30 October
  • American Airlines Auckland-Dallas, 7 / week from 30 October
  • AirAsia X Auckland-Sydney-Kuala Lumpur, 3 / week from 2 November
  • Air Canada Auckland-Vancouver, 3 to 5 / week from 12 November
  • Emirates Auckland-Dubai (non-stop), 7 / week from 1 December

October school holiday travel in numbers

  • Top international destinations: Australia, United States, Fiji
  • Top domestic destinations: Wellington, Christchurch, Queenstown
  • Three busiest days for international arrivals: Sunday 2 October, Sunday 16 October, Sunday 9 October
  • Three busiest days for international departures: Friday 7 October, Saturday 15 October, Sunday 16 October
  • Three busiest days for domestic arrivals: Sunday 2 October, Sunday 9 October, Sunday 16 October
  • Three busiest days for domestic departures: Sunday 2 October, Friday 7 October, Friday 14 October