Grantley Adams International Airport

Grantley Adams
International Airport
  • IATA: BGI
  • ICAO: TBPB
  • WMO: 78954[4]
Summary
Airport typePublic
OwnerGovernment of Barbados
OperatorGAIA Inc.
ServesBarbados
LocationSeawell, Christ Church
Hub forInterCaribbean Airways
Elevation AMSL170 ft / 52 m
Coordinates13°04′29″N 059°29′33″W / 13.07472°N 59.49250°W / 13.07472; -59.49250
Websitegaia.bb
Maps

Barbados airport diagram
TBPB
Location within Barbados
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
09/27 11,000 3,353 Asphalt
Statistics (2024)
Passengers2,372,645
Passenger change 23-2412.8%
Aircraft movements40,078
Movements change 23–2424.2%
Source: DAFIF, ACI's 2014 World Airport Traffic Report.

Grantley Adams International Airport (GAIA) (IATA: BGI, ICAO: TBPB) is an international airport at Seawell, Christ Church, Barbados, serving as the country's only port of entry by air.

The airport is the only designated port of entry for persons arriving and departing by air in Barbados and operates as one of the major gateways to the Eastern Caribbean. It has direct service to destinations in the United States, Canada, Central America and Europe. In 2024, the airport was the eighth-busiest airport in the Caribbean region and the second-busiest airport in the Lesser Antilles after Queen Beatrix International Airport on Aruba. GAIA also remains an important air-link for cruise ship passengers departing and arriving at the Port of Bridgetown, and a base of operations for the Regional Security System (RSS), and the Regional (Caribbean) Police Training Centre.

The airport's former name was Seawell Airport before being dedicated posthumously in honour of the first Premier of Barbados, Sir Grantley Herbert Adams in 1976. The airport is in the Atlantic time zone (UTC−4:00) and is in World Area Code region No. 246 (by the US Department of Transportation). It was a hub for now-defunct Barbadian carriers Caribbean Airways (not to be confused with the currently-as of 2025-operating Caribbean Airlines) and REDjet, the home for the charter carrier West Indies Executive Air, and former home to the flight training school Coconut Airways.