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We’ve found out which airports are closest and furthest to their respective cities and how Dublin compares to other European destinations. Alamy Stock Photo

The European airports that are closest to - and furthest from - the cities they serve

How does Dublin Airport compare with other European cities? Not too badly, it turns out.

BUYING A CHEAP airline ticket to travel around Europe can be more expensive than expected: it can cost you time.

The use of secondary airports is a common practice among major low-cost airlines, such as Ryanair, WizzAir or Vueling, as it allows them to reduce operating costs – but sometimes, the customer ends up paying the difference in on-the-ground transport fees or spending the start of their holiday sitting on a bus for over an hour.

And in some cases, even a city’s primary airport can be located at a surprising distance from the city itself, or an airport can be physically close but with an extended travel time due to poor transport infrastructure.

A European journalism network called Pulse that includes The Journal Investigates has used Google Maps to estimate the average travel times by car, public transport and on foot from the main and secondary airports of cities with more than 500,000 inhabitants, as well as the capitals of the member states of the European Union, to central points of these cities.

We’ve found out which airports are closest and furthest to their respective cities and how Dublin stacks up compared to elsewhere in Europe.

The best and the worst

The network analysed the estimated travel times for three Wednesdays in March and April, considering both peak hours (8am in the morning) and off-peak hours (3pm in the afternoon) to reflect variations in travel times depending on traffic and the availability of public transport.

The worst airport for city centre transfers is Frankfurt-Hahn Airport, which is a 125km drive lasting an hour and a half to Frankfurt. That time rises to two hours and 25 minutes when using public transport.

lautzenhausen-germany-july-27-2018-terminal-of-frankfurt-hahn-airport-hhn-in-germany Frankfurt-Hahn Airport is 125km from Frankfurt city centre Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo

France’s Beauvais-Tillé is 86 kilometres from the Eiffel Tower in Paris, while Stockholm-Skavsta is 107 kilometres from the old town of the Swedish capital.

In Belgium, the “Brussels-South” airport in Charleroi is 60 kilometres outside of Brussels centre. One passenger who travelled through the airport recently described deciding against taking a taxi because of a high fare price and instead taking the bus, which took an hour and a quarter and a transfer to reach the Grand Place in the heart of the city.

“It makes no sense for the airport to be called Brussels-South if it’s so far away,” he said.

In contrast, for a quick trip to the city centre, Bremen in Germany takes the cake. Its airport is just 3.9 kilometres from the Market Square, known for its traditional Christmas market, and can be covered in just 12 minutes by car or in 13 minutes using streetcar line 6.

The proximity of Bremen Airport to the old town is due to several factors. Its early construction, in 1913, facilitated its location in the immediate vicinity of the city centre. Although it was rebuilt after World War II, its relatively small size and its specialisation in domestic and European flights have obviated the need for major expansions that would have required its relocation.

Similarly, in Bulgaria, Sofia airport is located within the urban ring road of the Bulgarian capital and is only 12 minutes by car from St. Alexander Nevsky Cathedral, the city’s main tourist attraction.

However, despite its location, serious traffic jams on Sofia’s main boulevard, “Tsarigradsko Shosse” (literally meaning “The Road to the Tsar City”) which follows the ancient Roman road to Constantinople, now Istanbul, can lengthen the journey by up to an hour.

This is because this road also provides access to residential areas where more than 300,000 people live and to Business Park Sofia, a business centre that houses hundreds of offices.

For this reason, many regular airport passengers prefer to travel by metro, which has a station next to Terminal 2 that takes about 27 minutes to reach the centre – but public transport does not operate at night, leaving taxis as the main option between 11.30pm and 5am.

The airport maintains a concession agreement with a single authorised cab company, with prices of around €10 to the centre and up to €20 to more distant areas, in an effort to avoid scams, as some unofficial cabs have charged between €50 and €100 to unsuspecting travellers.

In Ireland, connections between Dublin Airport and Dublin city centre aren’t quite as long or as cumbersome as the likes of Frankfurt-Hahn or Brussels-South, but certainly don’t have the convenience of Bremen either.

terminal-2-dublin-airport-ireland The exterior of Dublin Airport's Terminal 2 Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo

The journey from Dublin Airport to O’Connell Bridge in the centre of the city is about 15km and takes between 25 minutes to 45 minutes by car.

The direct Dublin Express bus takes about half an hour to get to the Eden Quay stop, give or take some time in traffic, and costs €9.

The cheaper options provided Dublin Bus generally take a little longer – around 45 to 50 minutes – to navigate from the airport to the city centre.

As anyone who has travelled through it will know, there’s no rail or light rail links at Dublin Airport.

The proposed MetroLink, a partly underground rail line that would run between Charlemont and Swords, has the potential to cut the travel time between the airport and city centre – but is still a long way off.

Italy’s public transport plight

Italy is one of the countries with the greatest deficiencies in public transport connections between airports and urban centres.

Milan’s largest airport, Milan Malpensa, is 46 kilometres from the city centre and is only connected to it by a slow local train, ironically called the Malpensa Express.

Likewise, Milan Bergamo, the second busiest airport in terms of traffic around Milan, also has no rail connection with the capital of Lombardy, so passengers must rely on the shuttle bus service provided by companies such as Terravision or Flixbus.

Milan Linate, on the other hand, is the only Italian airport connected to the urban metro network, thanks to the inauguration of its link to line 4 in November 2022. 

bergamo-italy-04-29-2022-view-from-hotel-nh-orio-al-serio-towards-milan-bergamo-airport-orio-al-serio-international-airport Milan Bergamo, one of three airports that services Milan city Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo

Since the end of 2020, Bologna airport has had a direct connection to the main train station with the Marconi Express. However, the line has been plagued by technical problems since its introduction, and the service, priced at €12.80 each way, is still quite expensive in relation to the quality offered: the two carriages are very small and fill up easily, and queues are often long.

None of the Italian cities connected by high-speed trains have a station directly connected to their airports, unlike, for example, Paris-Charles de Gaulle, Amsterdam-Schiphol or Frankfurt am Main, nor are there plans to introduce this type of service in the future.

In addition to the shortcomings in public transport, air traffic in Italy is characterised by the location of the operational base of low-cost airlines in smaller airports, with the consequent strain on travelers.

Spanish destinations

In the six Spanish cities studied – Madrid, Barcelona, Valencia, Seville, Zaragoza and Malaga – it is possible to get from the airport to the city centre by car in less than half an hour.

The shortest journey times are recorded in Malaga and Zaragoza, where the distance can be covered by car in just 17 minutes.

On the other hand, public transport from the airports of Seville and Zaragoza to the centre of these cities is slightly slower than the average for the European cities analysed, with a time of around 50 minutes. Both cities have no rail connection to their airports and transfers are made by a special bus service.

The lack of rail connection with the Seville airport is a source of controversy between the central, local and regional administrations. The deadline for the presentation of a study by the Ministry of Transport on the railway connection between Seville-Santa Justa station and Seville airport expired on 10 March, although the Minister of Transport, Óscar Puente, assured in his X account that it will see the light “soon”.

seville-city-view-from-cathedral-tower-showing-bullring The city of Seville in Spain Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo

Regulation (EU) 2024/1679, in force since July 2024, obliges member states to ensure that airports with more than four million passengers are connected to rail, metro, streetcar or zero-emission public transport by the end of 2050 “unless there are geographical or physical weight limitations that prevent such a connection”. Seville airport recorded 8.1 million passengers in 2023.

The shortest travel times by public transport in Spain were recorded in Madrid and Valencia, thanks to their connection with the metro. Passengers arriving at Adolfo Suárez Madrid-Barajas and Valencia International Airport can reach Puerta del Sol and Plaza del Ayuntamiento, respectively, in just half an hour, only six minutes later than by car.

In 2023, Adolfo Suárez Madrid-Barajas airport was third in the European Union in terms of passenger traffic, with 60.1 million people transported, behind only Paris-Charles de Gaulle (67.4 million) and Amsterdam-Schiphol (61.9 million), according to Eurostat. Josep Tarradellas Barcelona-El Prat airport ranked fifth in Europe, with 49.8 million passengers, and Palma de Mallorca airport came in eleventh place.

Public transport over cars

Amsterdam-Schiphol is one of only four European airports where public transport offers a faster connection to the city centre than private vehicles. This is also the case at the airports of Leipzig/Halle (Germany), Munich-Franz Josef Strauss (Germany) and Stockholm-Arlanda (Sweden).

A traveller can reach the centre of Leipzig, specifically the Market Square, in about 19 minutes from Leipzig/Halle Airport by public transport, compared to the 23 minutes it takes on average by taxi, traveling on the S5 and S5X commuter train lines. However, it all depends on what time you arrive; trains run every half hour.

In addition, Schiphol Airport is served by a railway station offering up to eight trains per hour per day, with reduced frequency at night, to Amsterdam Central Station, as well as connections to other major urban centres in the country. This makes rail transport a convenient option to avoid the congestion and delays of road traffic.

a-regional-sprinter-train-boards-at-schiphol-airport-station-amsterdam-netherlands A platform at Schiphol Airport's train station Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo

The other two airports where public transport saves time – Stockholm-Arlanda and Munich-Franz Josef Strauss International Airport – are characterised by their moderate distance from the city centre – 46 and 37 kilometres, respectively – and the usual road traffic congestion on the city’s access roads.

However, these alternatives also have drawbacks. In Munich, rail service to the airport is limited to commuter trains (S-Bahn S1 and S8), and in Stockholm, the Arlanda Express is fast, but its high price – €31 for a one-way ticket – makes it an expensive alternative, especially for those traveling in groups or looking for cheaper options.

But having the airport close to the urban centre does not always offer advantages for everyone, and in many cities it is the subject of controversy for environmental reasons, noise, gentrification or excessive tourism.

For example, the Portuguese government announced in November 2024 a ban on night flights between 1am and 5am at Lisbon’s Humberto Delgado airport. This measure followed the approval in September of a unanimous motion among the political groups in Lisbon’s Municipal Chamber to reduce the number of movements per hour and to reject any increase in the airport’s capacity.

In Spain, the expansion of the Josep Tarradellas Barcelona-El Prat airport is also generating controversy because of its environmental impact on the La Ricarda lagoon, protected by the Natura 2000 Network, a European distinction that safeguards the conservation of natural habitats and fauna and flora. The Catalan Minister of Territory, Sílvia Paneque, assured on 14 February that the work of the technical commission in charge of clarifying the airport expansion proposal would culminate “in the next few weeks”.

The controversies reflect the need to rethink the role of airports in urban development and their impact on sustainability.

This article was produced as part of PULSE, a European initiative coordinated by OBCT that supports transnational journalistic collaborations. José Ramón Pérez (El Confidencial, Spain) developed this article and accompanying graphics. Lorenzo Ferrari (OBCT), Krasen Nikolov (Mediapool, Bulgaria) and Davide Madeddu (Il Sole 24 Ore, Italy) contributed to its production.

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    Mute sakk sa
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    Apr 6th 2025, 8:43 AM

    Renovation needed at terminal 1
    Toliets , floor, ventilation, deep cleaning, bag belts, light looks like mental institutions and the run way grass

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    Mute Thomas Meaney
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    Apr 6th 2025, 9:58 AM

    @sakk sa: correct. Dub airport is 3rd world stuff. 3rd world compared to other European airports.

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    Mute Jp Cleary
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    Apr 6th 2025, 11:12 AM

    @sakk sa: Correct. Was there last week around 11.30 pm….nothing open except Costa.

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    Mute Fran Ken
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    Apr 6th 2025, 10:20 AM

    It may take 25 minutes to get from Dublin Airport to O’Connell Bridge. But it will take you one hour to find public transport to take you there.
    Unless you’re familiar with it, finding transport (other than a cab) in Dublin Airport is chaotic. Why no metro??

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    Mute eoin fitzpatrick
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    Apr 6th 2025, 11:33 AM

    @Fran Ken: I mean you just walk out to the buses. The airlink has gotten me to the point in less than 20 minutes through the tunnel.

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    Mute Ann Reddin
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    Apr 6th 2025, 5:50 PM

    @Fran Ken: Aircoach and the 16 bus stop are right outside the the terminal. Also if you have a late flight and the traffic is light, it doesn’t take half an hour to get from the city centre to the airport, I’ve done it countless times and takes 20 minutes.

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    Mute Vincent Alexander
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    Apr 6th 2025, 7:55 PM

    @eoin fitzpatrick: When one is familiar with the bus stop locations, transport is good but signage is bad. Skip the Irish bit and give and give clear directions in English.

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    Mute Ben dover
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    Apr 6th 2025, 8:39 AM

    We are still obsessed with Metro connections to city centre! Lots of cities have good and cheap bus connections running 24/7 – thats all Dublin needs. If thats not enough, extend the luas from cabra to finglas but keep going, its only about 6kms further.

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    Mute Brian Molloy
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    Apr 6th 2025, 9:29 AM

    @Ben dover: ye can forget about the metro,the rest of the country needs half decent roads

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    Mute Kevin O'Hara
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    Apr 6th 2025, 9:39 AM

    @Ben dover: we have an airport with 34 million arrivals. It’s chaos trying to get a taxi or wait in the rain to get on a 41 or 16, that often ‘disappear’ from the departure board. We need a metro to unlock north Dublin for housing as well as serving the airport, throwing on a few extra buses doesn’t cut it.

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    Mute David Linehan
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    Apr 6th 2025, 12:00 PM

    @Kevin O’Hara: exactly. It’s more than just the airport that needs a metro. Huge areas like Swords, Santry, Whitehall etc. are in dire need, Swords especially, of a good public service. 40,000 plus people in Swords and all they have is 1 Dublin bus service (technically two but it’s as rare as hens teeth) and an expensive and very slow private service in the swords “express”. The North County Dublin population is ever expanding too. A luas isn’t suffice to handle huge numbers at peak times.

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    Mute Niall English
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    Apr 6th 2025, 12:33 PM

    @Kevin O’Hara: talking nonsense. plenty of adequate bus services are taxis the many many many times I have arrived to Dublin airport.

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    Mute Jack Dermody
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    Apr 6th 2025, 12:49 PM

    @Ben dover: someone please explain to me why not just extend the DART to Dublin Airport… It would have wat cheaper years ago but looks still mostly green fields today, simple gut and cover most of the way

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    Mute Jerry LeFrog
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    Apr 6th 2025, 2:24 PM

    @Jack Dermody: your idea makes sense at first glance, but a DART extension now would further increase traffic at Connolly Station, which is already overused. It would create even more delays to the North DART+Drogheda+Belfast route.
    The best solution would be a Metro line from Swords to Heuston via airport, Ballymun, Santry, Glasnevin, GPO, Stephen’s Green and The Liberties.
    Then bore a 2nd and 3rd line to create a real network.
    Failing that, a Luas along the same route, joining the existing Green line after the Mater.

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    Mute David Linehan
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    Apr 6th 2025, 5:52 PM

    @Niall English: I would love to know what time(s) you’re arriving into Dublin airport. Plenty of occasions I’ve ditched the idea of a taxi with the queues 40/50 people plus deep. Can be left waiting 25 mins for a Dublin bus to town. It’s the usual Irish mindset, no forward thinking. We’re growing rapidly as a population. Roads are maxed out, Whitehall is a carpark at rush hour as is the m50. We pretend to be a modern city without the modern infrastructure. A metro isn’t just for now. Reminds me of the time the m50 was built. All the experts said 3 lanes each side, the powers that be didn’t listen. Less than 10 years later they had to construct a 3rd lane due to demand.

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    Mute Graham Carrick
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    Apr 6th 2025, 7:01 PM

    @David Linehan: just use Freenow or Uber from the specified area. Takes 2 mins.

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    Mute David Linehan
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    Apr 6th 2025, 10:10 PM

    @Graham Carrick: do we have them now at the airport? I know plenty around Europe have designated uber, freenow, bolt, pick up points. No brainer, saves the hassle alright

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    Mute mcleixlip
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    Apr 6th 2025, 9:00 AM

    Frankfurt Haan is simply not in Frankfurt. It’s the “Ryanair definition”. Frankfurter Flughafen on the other hand is awesome, less than 20 min on a train to the centre of the city.

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    Mute Ian Forbes
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    Apr 6th 2025, 9:30 AM

    You didn’t mention the airport at Nice. Very close, but don’t take a cab for that couple of miles trip because it is a rip-off!

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    Mute Pat Barry
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    Apr 6th 2025, 9:23 AM

    If you’re going to Paris, CDG airport with EasyJet from Belfast might be a good option.

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    Mute thomas molloy
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    Apr 6th 2025, 10:44 AM

    It’s a relief that the “ it’s all FF or FG’s fault” people are not up yet.

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    Mute Robert Clifford
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    Apr 6th 2025, 12:41 PM

    It’s not 15km from the airport to town.

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    Mute William Jennings
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    Apr 7th 2025, 1:55 AM

    I actually really enjoyed reading this article because it offered a balanced viewpoint about Dublin Airport. There’s no denying that it has plenty of problems, but the ease of access is something that we have that other airports around Europe do not have. It’s only 12km from Dublin Airport into Dublin City itself and barring bad traffic, you’re going to be in Temple Bar in 20 minutes. I’ve been to many countries across Europe and not many of the airports have the luxury of being so close to the cities that they serve. There are plenty of ways that Dublin Airport can be improved though. For a start, the anti-market passenger cap needs to be lifted immediately. Terminal 1 needs modernisation and an increase in facilities to cater to travellers who have to stop for a connecting flight there.

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    Mute j m m
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    Apr 6th 2025, 2:50 PM

    The imminent ‘Dublin-City’ Airport will double as a social aspect clean up when the now defunct o connell street becomes a runway… deadly, wha?

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