Country profile

Air travel in Panama

Every airport and active airline registered in Panama, ranked by scheduled-route activity. Use this page to find the country's main hubs, see which carriers run the domestic network, and click through to route detail.

13Airports
1Active airlines
117Departures on file

Panama is one slice of a global network covering 6,071 airports across 235 countries. The OpenFlights dataset puts 13 airports inside this country with valid IATA codes, served by 1 active airlines registered locally. Together those airports show 117 distinct scheduled departures in the routes table. That figure is a rough proxy for how well-connected the country's airports are, even though it's not a literal count of flights.

Airports below are sorted by scheduled-route volume, so the country's main hubs sit at the top. Smaller regional airports follow, including the seasonal-only and domestic-only fields. Each row links through to a dedicated airport page with destinations served and the airlines operating there.

Airports in Panama

Showing 13 of 13 airports, ranked by departures on file.

Airports and airlines in this country
IATAAirportCityDepartures
PTY Tocumen International Airport Panama City 106
PAC Marcos A. Gelabert International Airport Panama 4
BOC Bocas Del Toro International Airport Bocas Del Toro 2
DAV Enrique Malek International Airport David 2
CHX Cap Manuel Niño International Airport Changuinola 1
JQE Jaqué Airport Jaqué 1
PUE Puerto Obaldia Airport Puerto Obaldia 1
BLB Panama Pacific International Airport Howard 0
SYP Ruben Cantu Airport Santiago 0
CTD Alonso Valderrama Airport Chitré 0
ONX Enrique Adolfo Jimenez Airport Colón 0
PLP Captain Ramon Xatruch Airport La Palma 0
RIH Scarlett Martinez International Airport Rio Hato 0

Airlines based in Panama

Active carriers with a two-letter IATA code registered in this country.

Airports and airlines in this country (section 2)
IATAAirlineCallsign
CM Copa Airlines COPA

Reading this page

The departures column counts the number of distinct routes filed in the OpenFlights schedule from each airport. A hub with hundreds of departures is a major connecting point; a regional field with a single-digit count typically supports a small number of feeder flights to the nearest hub. The list does not weight routes by frequency or seat capacity, so two airports with similar departure counts can carry very different passenger volumes in practice.

For the most current operational picture, cross-reference an airport page with the airline's own website. The underlying dataset is community-maintained and reflects scheduled-route relationships rather than a live timetable.

Country pages on AeroRoute Guide are short on purpose. They answer one travel-planning question: which airports and carriers are worth knowing in Panama. If you're routing a trip, start at the top of the airports table and work down. If you're researching a specific airline, jump from the airlines table to the carrier profile for its full destination map. Cross-links between countries, hubs, and routes mean a single click usually moves you from a high-level overview into operational detail. When the data shows zero registered carriers, the country isn't unreachable. It almost always means scheduled service comes from foreign airlines based elsewhere, and those flights show up on the relevant airport pages.