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Suvarnabhumi Airport

Main airport serving Bangkok, Thailand

"BKK" redirects here. For Bangkok’s other airport which held this code until 2006, see Don Mueang International Airport. For other uses, see BKK (disambiguation).

Suvarnabhumi Airport


ท่าอากาศยานสุวรรณภูมิ
Tha-akatsayan Suwannaphum

Passenger terminal and airport traffic control tower

Airport typePublic
Owner/OperatorAirports of Thailand
ServesBangkok Metropolitan Region
LocationRacha Thewa, Bang Phli, Samut Prakan, Thailand
Opened28 September 2006; 18 years ago (2006-09-28)
Hub for
Focus city for
Operating base for
Elevation AMSL2 m / 5 ft
Coordinates13°41′33″N100°45′00″E / 13.69250°N 100.75000°E / 13.69250; 100.75000
Websitesuvarnabhumi.airportthai.co.th

Airport diagram

BKK/VTBS

Location in Thailand

Show map of Thailand

BKK/VTBS

Location in Southeast Asia

Show map of Southeast Asia
Total passengers62,234,693 20.38%
International passengers50,580,447 26.42%
Domestic passengers11,654,246 0.3%
Aircraft movements357,181 16.15%
Freight (tonnes)1,388,272 19.24%

Sources:AOT[2] Airports of Thailand[3]

Suvarnabhumi International Airport (IATA: BKK, ICAO: VTBS)[4][5] is the main international airport serving Bangkok, the capital of Thailand.[6][7] Located mostly in Racha Thewa subdistrict, Bang Phli district, Samut Prakan province, it covers an area of 3,240 ha (32.4 km2; 8,000 acres), making it one of the biggest international airports in Southeast Asia and a regional hub for aviation. The airport is also a major Cargo Air Freight Hub (20th busiest in 2019), which has a designated Airport Free Zone, as well as road links to the Eastern Economic Corridor (EEC) on Motorway 7.[8]

Etymology

The name Suvarnabhumi is Sanskrit for "land of gold" (Devanagari:सुवर्णभूमि IAST: Suvarṇabhūmi; Suvarṇa[9] is "gold", Bhūmi[10] is 'land'; literally "golden land"). The name was chosen by the late KingBhumibol Adulyadej whose name includes Bhūmi, referring to the Buddhistgolden kingdom, thought to have been to the east of the Ganges, possibly somewhere in Southeast Asia. In Thailand, government proclamations and national museums insist that Suvarnabhumi was somewhere on the coast of the central plains, near the ancient city of U Thong, which might be the origin of the IndianisedDvaravati culture.[11] Although the claims have not been substantiated, the Thai government named the new Bangkok airport Suvarnabhumi Airport, in celebration of this tradition.

History

The airport is currently the main hub for Thai Airways International and Bangkok Airways, as well as the operating base for Thai VietJet Air and Thai AirAsia. It also serves as a regional gateway and connecting point for various foreign carriers connecting to Asia, Oceania, Europe, and Africa.

Suvarnabhumi was officially opened for limited domestic flight service on 15 September 2006, and opened for most domestic and all international commercial flights on 28 September 2006.[12]

The airport is on what had formerly been known as Nong Nguhao (lit. 'Cobra Swamp') in Racha Thewa in Bang Phli, Samut Prakan province, as well as the districts of Bang Kapi, Lat Krabang, Bang Na, and Prawet in the eastern side of Bangkok, about 25 kilometres (16 mi) from downtown. The terminal building was designed by Helmut Jahn of Murphy/Jahn Architects. It was constructed primarily by ITO JV. The airport had the world's tallest free-standing control tower (132.2 metres or 434 feet) from 2006 to 2014[13] and the world's fourth largest single-building airport terminal (563,000 square metres or 6,060,000 square feet).

Suvarnabhumi is the 17th busiest airport in the world,[14]eleventh busiest airport in Asia, and the busiest in the country, having handled 60 million passengers in 2017,[14] and is also a major air cargo hub, with a total of 95 airlines. On social networks, Suvarnabhumi was the world's most popular site for taking Instagram photographs in 2012.[15]

Suvarnabhumi reassigned the IATA airport code, BKK, from Don Mueang after that airport ceased international commercial flights. Motorway 7 connects the airport, Bangkok, and the heavily industrial eastern seaboard of Thailand, where most export manufacturing takes place.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, the airport was temporarily converted to a hospital[16] and vaccination center.[17]

Land purchase, initial early phase of construction

The need for the new airport was recognized in 1973 when 8,000 acres (3,200 ha) of land was purchased 40 km (25 mi) east of Bangkok. The site, known as Cobra Swamp, was drained and named Suvarnabhumi, meaning "realm of gold".[citation needed] On 14 October 1973, student-led protests led to the overthrow of the military government of Prime Minister Thanom Kittikachorn and the project was shelved.[citation needed]

"The Japanese government would end up assisting the new airport project as ODA, and in 1996, the project took a step forward with the signing of a loan agreement between the Government of Thailand and the Japanese government. Then, in 1996, Second Bangkok International Airport Company Ltd. (SBIA) was established as the project implementation organization, and the project got underway."[18]

It was scheduled to finish by 2000.[18]

Airport tests and official opening

The airport was due to open in late 2004. Still, a series of budget overruns, construction flaws, and allegations of corruption plagued the project.

A further delay was caused by the discovery that the airport had been built over an old graveyard. Superstitious construction workers claimed to have seen ghosts there. On 23 September 2005, the Thai airport authority held a ceremony where 99 Buddhist monks chanted to appease the spirits.[19]

Full tests of the airport took place on 3 and 29 July 2006. Six local airlines — Thai Airways International, Nok Air, Thai AirAsia, Bangkok Airways, PBair, and One-Two-Go Airlines — used the airport as a base for twenty domestic flights.[20][21] The first international test flights were conducted on 1 September 2006. Two Thai Airways aircraft, a Boeing 747-400 and an Airbus A300-600, simultaneously departed the airport at 09:19 to Singapore and Hong Kong respectively. At 15:50 the same aircraft flew back and made simultaneous touchdowns on runways 19L and 19R. These test flights demonstrated the readiness of the airport to handle traffic.[citation needed]

On 15 September 2006, the airport started limited daily operations with Jetstar Asia operating three Singapore to Bangkok flights. Bangkok Airways moved to the airport on 21 September. AirAsia and Thai AirAsia followed on 25 September and on 26 September Nok Air moved to Suvarnabhumi Airport. During this initial phase, as well as in the previous tests, the airport used the temporary IATA code NBK.[citation needed]

Suvarnabhumi officially opened at 03:00 on 28 September 2006, taking over all flights from Don Mueang. The first flight to arrive was a Lufthansa Cargo flight LH8442 from Mumbai at 03:05.[22] The first commercial arrival was Japan Airlines at 03:30. The first passenger arrival was Aerosvit flight VV171 from Kyiv at 04:30, and the first cargo departure was Saudi Arabian Airlines flight SV-984 to Riyadh at 05:00.[23] Aerosvit also had the first passenger departure (VV172 to Kyiv) around 05:30.[24]

Initial difficulties

Difficulties were reported in the first few days of the airport's operation. On the first day alone, sluggish luggage handling was common—the first passenger arrival by Aerosvit took an hour for the luggage to start coming out, and some flights did not have their luggage coming out even after four hours. Flights were delayed (Thai Airways claimed that 17 of 19 flights were delayed that day), and there were failures with the check-in system.[25][26] Subsequent problems included the failure of the cargo computer system, and the departure boards displaying the wrong information, resulting in confused passengers (especially as unlike Don Mueang, there were no "final calls" issued).[27]

Months after its opening, issues of congestion, construction quality, signage, provision of facilities, and soil subsidence continued to plague the project, prompting calls to reopen Don Mueang to allow for repairs to be made.[28] Expert opinions varied widely on the extent of Suvarnabhumi's problems as well as their root cause. Most airlines stated that damage to the airport was minimal.[29][30] Then Prime Minister Surayud Chulanont reopened Don Mueang for domestic flights voluntarily on 16 February 2007, with 71 weekly flights moved back initially, but no international flights.[31]

Capacity and safety issues

Tarmac problems

In January 2007, ruts were discovered in the runways at Suvarnabhumi.[32] The east runway was scheduled to close for repairs. Expert opinions varied as to the cause of the ruts.[29] Airport authorities and airline representatives maintained that the airport was still safe and resisted suggestions that the airport should be completely closed and all flights moved back to Don Mueang.[33]

On 27 January 2007, the Department of Civil Aviation declined to renew the airport's safety certificate, which had expired the previous day. The ICAO requires that international airports hold aerodrome safety certificates, but Suvarnabhumi continued to operate because the ICAO requirement had yet to be adopted as part of Thai law.[34]

As of early 2016, tarmac problems persisted at Suvarnabhumi. Soft spots on the tarmac, taxiways, and apron area had not been permanently fixed. Aircraft were getting stuck on the soft surfaces that are the result of sub-standard materials. "The constant resurfacing of the tarmac, taxiways and apron area with asphalt is an unacceptable patchwork solution. We literally need a "concrete" solution", said Tony Tyler, IATA's director general and CEO.[35]

Plans to re-open Don Mueang for domestic flights

In January 2007, Thai Airways announced a plan to move some of its domestic operations back to Don Mueang International Airport due to overcrowding. Three days later, the Ministry of Transport recommended temporarily reopening Don Mueang while repair work on the runways at Suvarnabhumi proceeded. At that time, Thai Airways said it would shift most of its domestic flights back to Don Mueang while keeping flights with high international passenger connections such as Chiang Mai and Phuket at Suvarnabhumi. On 28 March 2009, Thai Airways discontinued all domestic flights from Don Mueang. Bangkok Airways and One-Two-GO Airlines had similar plans, but Bangkok Airways remained at Suvarnabhumi. Thai AirAsia said it would not move unless it could shift both its international and domestic operations, prompting them to stay at Suvarnabhumi for the time being. Nok Air and PBair were undecided, but Nok Air later relocated all flights to Don Mueang, where they operate today.[36][37] As of January 2010, only Nok Air and One-Two-GO operated domestic flights from Don Mueang Airport. PBair have ceased operations altogether. One-Two-GO was integrated into Orient Thai Airlines in July 2010, but continued to operate from Don Mueang Airport until liquidation in 2018. As of 1 October 2012, Air Asia has moved all of its Bangkok operations to Don Mueang International Airport (DMK) from Suvarnabhumi Airport (BKK).[38]

Repair and upgrades

Airports of Thailand found that the cost of fixing 60 identified problems at the airport would be less than one percent of the total airline cost and the problems could be fixed in up to four to five years. Dr Narupol Chaiyut, a member of a committee overseeing service problems at the new airport, estimated that 70 percent of the problems would be fixed in 2007. Twenty of the 60 problems were successfully fixed by February 2007.[39]

Architectural design

Suvarnabhumi Airport's main terminal roof is designed with structural elements and bays placed in a cantilevered, wavelike form to appear to "float" over the concourse beneath. This overall design principle was to express the former essence of the site, from which water had to be drained before construction could begin. The eight composite 2,710-ton trusses supporting the canopy of the main terminal are essentially diagrams of the bending moments acting on them, with the greatest depth at mid-span and over the supports.[41]

The result of Helmut Jahn's vision is a structure with performance materials serve in their total composition and in use more than in their conventional roles. This maximizes daylight use in comfort with substantial energy life-cycle cost savings. The installed cooling system reduced up to 50 percent compared to a conventional system. A translucent membrane with three layers was developed to mediate between the interior and exterior climate, dealing with noise and temperature transmission, while still allowing natural flow of daylight into building along with views of greenery outside.[42]

Airport ranking

The airport was ranked number 48 among the world's top 100 airports in 2020. Other ASEAN airports in 2020 were ranked: Changi Airport, 1; Kuala Lumpur International Airport, 63; Jakarta–Soekarno-Hatta, 35; Hanoi, 87.[43] Suvarnabhumi was ranked 46 in 2019,[44] 38 in 2017[45] and 36 in 2016.[46] According to the Thailand Development Research Institute (TDRI) in 2018, the airport's ranking had not improved over the past six years. Customer complaints included lengthy immigration waiting times, transit day room issues, insufficient numbers of chairs and phone charging points, insufficient English-speaking staff, and poor information displays.[47][48]

As of 18 April 2024, the airport was ranked 58th by the Skytrax World Airport Awards 2024.[49][50][51]

Events

On 25 January 2007, due to work upgrading the taxiways which suffered from small cracks, a few incoming flights were delayed and several flights were safely diverted to U-Tapao International Airport in Rayong Province.[52]

On 26 November 2008, an illegal occupation of the airport took place by People's Alliance for Democracy, closing the departure lounge and blocking exits and leaving almost 3,000 passengers stranded in the main terminal and another 350,000 stranded inside the country, as all flights were grounded. The People's Alliance for Democracy seized the control tower at 12:00.[53] On 2 December 2008, protesters agreed to leave the airport as they had been illegally protesting and permitted the resumption of flights. Security checks, clean-ups, and re-certification once the illegal occupation ended delayed the airport from being fully functional until 5 December 2008.[54]

On 5 January 2019, the airport gained international attention when a Saudi Arabian ex-Muslim, Rahaf Mohammed, fleeing an abusive family that punished children who did not follow their religion, was accosted by Thai authorities at the behest of Saudi Arabia and sent to one of the airport's hotels to await repatriation back to her family and country. Fearing that she could be killed for being a disgrace to her family and religion, she barricaded herself in the hotel room, opened a Twitter account to plead for her freedom, and requested assistance from United Nations agents to get her to the Western world, away from her family, as a resettled refugee. As her pleas for help went viral, Thai agents agreed to let her go to Canada to start a new life withoutIslam.[55]

In January 2021, a motorist drove his car through security gates and onto the tarmac at the airport while it was in use. It was later revealed that the driver had been under the influence of methamphetamine, which was also discovered in the trunk of the car. The driver claimed that he had taken a wrong turn.[56][57]

Predatory irregularities

Petty thieves and confidence men, the majority of them illegal taxi drivers or tour guides, are known to prey on tourists in the arrival hall. They belong to politically well connected criminal groups: Kamnan Samruay, Boonruang Srisang, Sak Pakphanang, the Pattaya Mafia and Phuyai Daeng.[58] Evicting them has proved difficult as they allegedly are well connected. (The head of the Pirap gang is supposedly related to an Airports of Thailand executive, while the Phuyai Daeng has ties to influential civil servants in Samut Prakan.[58])

On 1 October 2010, two hundred armed men occupied the airport's parking area for an hour, blocking the building's entrances and seizing ticket booths to collect fares from motorists.[59] Airport security personnel failed to respond, reportedly because of an internal dispute within the parking management company, the firm contracted to run the parking facilities.[59]

Airport terminal and future expansion

Airport terminal

Costing an estimated 155 billion baht (US$5 billion), the airport has three parallel runways (60 m wide, 4,000 m and 3,700 m long) and two parallel taxiways to accommodate simultaneous departures and arrivals.[60] It has a total of 120 parking bays (51 with contact gates and 69 remote gates), with five of these capable of accommodating the Airbus A380. Suvarnabhumi Airport has 72 jet bridges and 69 non-jet bridges. Additionally, flights are able to park at remote locations on the ramp, from which airport buses transport passengers to and from the terminal. Suvarnabhumi Airport has 18 jet bridges and 6 non-jet bridges for Airbus A380.[citation needed]

The airport's first two runways can accommodate 64 flights per hour. At peak times the runways average 63 flights per hour. In April 2019 the Thai cabinet approved a sum of 21.8 billion baht for the construction of a third runway. Construction was originally planned to start in 2019 and was completed in 2024 due to delays. The third runway (in phased trials) will accommodate a maximum of 30 flights per hour.

The main passenger terminal building, with a capacity of handling 76 flight operations per hour, co-locates the international and domestic terminals, though assigning them to different parts of the concourse. In the initial phase of construction, it was capable of handling 45 million passengers and three million tonnes of cargo per year. Above the underground rail link station and in front of the passenger terminal building is a 600-room hotel operated by Accor under the Novotel brand. The airport's main passenger terminal was, at the time of construction, the world's largest passenger terminal ever constructed in one phase at 563,000 square metres (6,060,000 sq ft). The airport air-traffic control tower was the tallest in the world at 135 metres (443 ft) from 2006 to 2014.[13]

From the opening of Suvarnabhumi in 2006 to early 2017, eight people had fallen to their deaths from upper-floor walkways, prompting the airport to spend 33 million baht in 2013 building glass barriers to prevent people from falling and/or taking their lives.[61]

  • Departures hall

  • Arrivals hall

  • Concourse A at the northeast handles domestic flights only.

  • Concourse E

  • Concourse G

Expansion plans

By mid-2015, the airport was handling more than 800 flights per day, higher than its 600-flight capacity. It has exceeded its capacity of 45 million passengers per year.[62]

Airports of Thailand (AOT) approved an investment budget for the expansion of Suvarnabhumi Airport and construction was expected to be completed by April 2023.[63] The plan was to strengthen Suvarnabhumi Airport's position as a regional aviation hub. Phase Two would raise the airport's capacity to 65 million passengers a year and would be undertaken in parallel with the construction of a new domestic terminal.[64] The new domestic terminal will be intended to accommodate more than 30 million passengers annually.[65]

The two expansion projects are part of the overall airport enlargement that would see Suvarnabhumi raise its annual passenger handling capacity to 125 million passengers, 90 million international and 35 million domestic passengers by 2024 at an estimated cost of 163 billion baht (US$5.25 billion/€3.62 billion). The expansion includes the construction of one additional runway of 3,700 metres (12,100 ft), subsequent enlargement of domestic and international terminals, and improvements to parking bays, car parks, and other airport infrastructure.[66]

In March 2024 Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin said the third runway would open in October 2024, with a long-term target capacity of 150 million passengers.[67] The runway was opened for full aircraft operations on 1 November 2024, increasing the operational capacity from 68 to 94 flights/hour.[68]

Midfield Satellite Concourse 1 (SAT-1)

See also: Suvarnabhumi Airport Automated People Mover

A new midfield concourse called SAT-1 partially opened in September 2023[69] and is expected to fully open from early 2024.[70] It is linked to the current main terminal via an underground automated people mover (APM) system. The new people mover was provided by Siemens using the NeoVAL technology.[71] The new satellite terminal has a total of 28 gates, with eight for the Airbus A380 and Boeing B747-800[72] super jumbo jet.[73] Spanning around 251,400 square meters, it will increase the airport's annual passenger handling capacity from 45 million to 60 million.[72] The SAT-1 terminal was nominated as one of six airport terminals for the Prix Versailles World's Most Beautiful Airports Architectural Award for 2024, which was announced at UNESCO.[74][75]

  • APM vehicle at the SAT-1 terminal stop

  • Thai elephant architecture at SAT-1 terminal

Airlines and destinations

Passenger

AirlinesDestinations
9 AirGuiyang,[76]Haikou
AeroflotIrkutsk,[77]Khabarovsk,[78]Krasnoyarsk,[79]Moscow–Sheremetyevo, Novosibirsk,[79]Saint Petersburg,[80]Vladivostok,[81][82]Yekaterinburg[83]
Air ArabiaSharjah[84]
Air AstanaAlmaty
Air AustralSaint-Denis de la Réunion
Air BusanBusan, Seoul–Incheon[85]
AircalinNouméa, Paris–Charles de Gaulle[86]
Air CambodiaPhnom Penh (resumes 17 February 2025)[87]
Air CanadaSeasonal:Vancouver[88]
Air ChinaBeijing–Capital, Chengdu–Tianfu,[89]Hangzhou,[90]Shanghai–Pudong[89]
Air FranceParis–Charles de Gaulle[91]
Air IndiaDelhi, Mumbai
Air India ExpressAmritsar,[92]Lucknow,[93]Pune,[94]Surat[95]
Air JapanTokyo–Narita[96]
Air MacauMacau
Air PremiaSeoul–Incheon[97]
All Nippon AirwaysTokyo–Haneda, Tokyo–Narita
Asiana AirlinesSeoul–Incheon
Austrian AirlinesVienna
Bangkok AirwaysChiang Mai, Koh Samui, Krabi, Lampang, Luang Prabang, Mae Hong Son, Malé, Phnom Penh, Phuket, Siem Reap, Sukhothai, Trat
Beijing Capital AirlinesChangsha, Hangzhou, Nanjing, Shanghai–Pudong[98]
Bhutan AirlinesKolkata, Paro
Seasonal:Gaya[99]
Biman Bangladesh AirlinesDhaka
British AirwaysSeasonal:London–Gatwick[100][101]
Cambodia AirwaysPhnom Penh
Cathay PacificHong Kong, Singapore[102]
Cebu PacificClark, Manila
Centrum AirTashkent (begins 3 April 2025)[103]
China AirlinesKaohsiung,[104]Taipei–Taoyuan
China Eastern AirlinesBeijing–Daxing,[105]Chengdu–Tianfu,[106]Guangzhou,[106]Kunming, Lanzhou,[107]Nanjing,[106]Shanghai–Pudong,[108]Shenzhen,[107]Taiyuan,[106]Wuhan, Yantai[109]
China Southern AirlinesGuangzhou, Jieyang,[110]Nanning, Shenyang,[111]Shenzhen, Zhengzhou
CondorFrankfurt[112]
DrukairBagdogra, Dhaka, Paro
Eastar JetSeoul–Incheon[113]
El AlTel Aviv[114]
EmiratesDubai–International, Hong Kong
Ethiopian AirlinesAddis Ababa, Hong Kong
Etihad AirwaysAbu Dhabi
EVA AirAmsterdam, London–Heathrow, Taipei–Taoyuan, Vienna
FinnairHelsinki
FireflyPenang[115]
Garuda IndonesiaJakarta–Soekarno-Hatta
Greater Bay AirlinesHong Kong[116]
Gulf AirBahrain
GX AirlinesNanning,[117]Yulin[118]
Hainan AirlinesBeijing–Capital,[119]Haikou[120][121]
HK ExpressHong Kong
Hong Kong AirlinesHong Kong
Hebei AirlinesShijiazhuang
IberojetSeasonal:Madrid[122][123]
IndiGoBengaluru,[124]Bhubaneswar,[125]Chennai,[126]Delhi, Hyderabad,[127]Kolkata, Mumbai,[125]Pune[128]
ITA AirwaysRome–Fiumicino[129]
Japan AirlinesOsaka–Kansai, Tokyo–Haneda, Tokyo–Narita
Jeju AirBusan, Seoul–Incheon
JetstarBrisbane,[130]Melbourne, Perth[131]
Jetstar AsiaSingapore[132]
Jin AirBusan, Seoul–Incheon
Juneyao AirNanjing, Shanghai–Pudong
Kenya AirwaysGuangzhou, Nairobi–Jomo Kenyatta[133]
KLMAmsterdam
Korean AirSeoul–Incheon
Seasonal:Busan[134][135]
Kunming AirlinesKunming
Kuwait AirwaysKuwait City
Lao AirlinesLuang Prabang,[136]Vientiane
Loong AirHangzhou[137]
LOT Polish AirlinesSeasonal charter:Warsaw–Chopin, Katowice–Pyrzowice[138]
Lucky AirChengdu–Tianfu, Kunming
LufthansaMunich[139]
Mahan AirTehran–Imam Khomeini
Malaysia AirlinesKuala Lumpur–International
MIAT Mongolian AirlinesUlaanbaatar[140]
Myanmar Airways InternationalMandalay, Yangon
Myanmar National AirlinesYangon
Nepal AirlinesKathmandu
Norse Atlantic AirwaysOslo,[141]Stockholm–Arlanda (begins 28 October 2025)[142]
Oman AirMuscat
PeachOsaka–Kansai[143]
Philippine AirlinesCebu, Manila
QantasSydney
Qatar AirwaysDoha
Qingdao AirlinesQingdao[120]
Royal Brunei AirlinesBandar Seri Begawan
Royal JordanianAmman–Queen Alia
Ruili AirlinesLijiang[144]
S7 AirlinesIrkutsk,[145]Novosibirsk[146]
SalamAirMuscat[147]
SaudiaJeddah,[148]Riyadh[149]
Scandinavian AirlinesSeasonal:Copenhagen[150]
ScootSingapore
Shandong AirlinesJinan, Qingdao[120]
Shanghai AirlinesShanghai–Pudong,[151]Wenzhou[152]
Shenzhen AirlinesShenzhen, Yuncheng[153]
Sichuan AirlinesChengdu–Tianfu,[154]Haikou
Singapore AirlinesSingapore
Sky Angkor AirlinesPhnom Penh[155]
SpiceJetDelhi, Kolkata
Spring AirlinesChengdu–Tianfu,[156]Fuzhou,[157]Guangzhou,[157]Lanzhou,[158]Shanghai–Pudong, Xi'an
SriLankan AirlinesColombo–Bandaranaike
Starlux AirlinesTaipei–Taoyuan[159]
Swiss International Air LinesZurich
Thai AirAsiaChiang Mai, Hat Yai, Khon Kaen (begins 1 February 2025),[160]Krabi, Phuket, Udon Thani (begins 1 February 2025)[160]
Thai Airways InternationalAhmedabad,[161]Beijing–Capital,[162]Bengaluru, Brussels,[163]Chengdu–Tianfu,[164]Chennai, Chiang Mai, Chiang Rai, Colombo–Bandaranaike,[165]Copenhagen, Delhi, Denpasar, Dhaka, Frankfurt, Fukuoka, Guangzhou, Hanoi, Hat Yai,[166]Ho Chi Minh City, Hong Kong, Hyderabad, Islamabad, Istanbul,[167]Jakarta–Soekarno-Hatta, Kaohsiung,[168]Karachi, Kathmandu, Khon Kaen,[166]Kochi,[169]Kolkata,[170]Krabi, Kuala Lumpur–International, Kunming,[171]Lahore, London–Heathrow, Manila, Melbourne, Milan–Malpensa,[165]Mumbai, Munich,[172]Nagoya–Centrair, Osaka–Kansai, Oslo,[165]Paris–Charles de Gaulle, Penang,[170]Perth,[165]Phnom Penh, Phuket,[166]Sapporo–Chitose,