Kahului Airport

Kahului Airport

Kahua Mokulele o Kahului
Summary
Airport typePublic
Owner/OperatorHawaii Department of Transportation
ServesMaui
Opened1952 (1952)
Hub for
Elevation AMSL54 ft / 16 m
Coordinates20°53′55″N 156°25′50″W / 20.89861°N 156.43056°W / 20.89861; -156.43056 (Kahului Airport)
Websitewww.hawaii.gov/ogg
Maps

FAA airport diagram
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
02/20 6,998 2,133 Asphalt
05/23 4,980 1,518 Asphalt
Helipads
Number Length Surface
ft m
H1 124 38 Asphalt
Statistics (2024)
Aircraft operations119,610
Passengers7,087,116
Total cargo (tons)56,239
Source: Kahului Airport Federal Aviation Administration

Kahului Airport (IATA: OGG, ICAO: PHOG, FAA LID: OGG) is the main airport of Maui in the state of Hawaii, United States, located east of Kahului. It has offered full airport operations since 1952. Many flights into Kahului originate from the Daniel K. Inouye International Airport in Honolulu; the Honolulu–Kahului corridor is one of the heaviest-trafficked air routes in the US, ranking 13th in 2004 with 1,632,000 passengers.

The FAA/IATA airport code OGG pays homage to aviation pioneer Bertram J. "Jimmy" Hogg, a Kauai native who worked for what is now Hawaiian Airlines, flying aircraft ranging from eight-passenger Sikorsky S-38 amphibians to Douglas DC-3s and DC-9s into the late 1960s.

It is included in the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems for 2021–2025, in which it is categorized as a medium-hub primary commercial service facility.