Sri Guru Ram Dass Jee International Airport (ATQ) — The Complete Master Guide 2026
Amritsar’s airport is the front door for one of the largest Punjabi diaspora corridors on earth. People fly in from Birmingham, London and the Gulf — and connect in from Toronto and beyond — to reach a single building 11 km from the Golden Temple, then most of them never look at the airport again. That is a mistake, because ATQ has its own quirks — a single integrated terminal where the international and domestic halves behave like different airports, a prepaid-taxi counter that quietly saves you from the first scam of the trip, and an immigration hall that, as of late 2025, can clear an Indian or OCI passport in seconds while everyone else queues. This guide covers the building, the entry rules, the ground transport actually worth using, the lounges that exist versus the ones the internet thinks exist, the food, and the two reasons most people are here at all: Harmandir Sahib and the Wagah border. Prices are in Indian rupees (INR) first; conversions use the late-May 2026 mid-market rate of roughly ₹95.8 to US$1 and ₹111.4 to €1. Treat every fare and fee as a “verify on the day” figure — India’s airport-side pricing drifts.
⚡ 2026 Quick Reference — Key Facts at a Glance
Detail
ATQ / VIAR
Sri Guru Ram Dass Jee International Airport, Amritsar, Punjab
Airports Authority of India (AAI)
One integrated building (~40,000 m²), split international + domestic
~11 km / 25–30 min by road
~30 km / ~60 min by road
Indian rupee (INR, ₹); ~₹95.8 = US$1, ~₹111.4 = €1 (late May 2026)
India e-Visa (apply at indianvisaonline.gov.in) for most; no general visa-on-arrival
₹350–500 (~US$3.70–5.20) from the arrivals counter
Primus (domestic departures), The Airr Lounge & Bar (international departures)
30 minutes free, then paid top-up
Single, 3,657 m, CAT III-B ILS (fog-capable)
₹240-crore expansion to lift capacity 2.5M → 5.5M passengers/year
FTI-TTP e-gates live since September 2025 (Indian passport + OCI only)
📋 Table of Contents
- 🏢 The Single Terminal and the Expansion That’s Coming
- 🛂 Visa, Currency, Immigration and Health
- 🚆 Ground Transport — Taxi, App-Cab, and Why There’s No Train
- 🛋️ Lounges — What’s Real and What the Internet Invented
- 🍽️ Food and Duty-Free — Kulcha, Lassi, and the Airport Markup
- 💡 The Two Reasons You’re Here — Golden Temple and Wagah
- 🔧 Practical Notes — Connectivity, Currency, Safety
- ❓ Frequently Asked Questions
- 📊 2026 Summary Data Table
🏢 The Single Terminal and the Expansion That’s Coming
ATQ runs everything through one integrated terminal of about 40,000 square metres. There is no Terminal 1 / Terminal 2 split in the physical sense that some booking sites imply — what people call “Terminal 1” and “Terminal 2” online usually means the domestic wing and the international wing of the same building. They share a roof, a forecourt and a security spine, but they have separate departure halls, separate lounges and separate retail, and you cannot wander between them airside. If you’re connecting from an international arrival onto a domestic flight, you clear immigration and customs, exit to the public concourse, and re-enter through domestic departures. Budget for that walk and re-screen.
The hardware is more capable than the passenger numbers suggest. The single runway (16/34) is 3,657 metres and carries a CAT III-B instrument landing system fitted in 2016–17, which means ATQ keeps operating in the dense winter fog that shuts smaller north-Indian airports for hours at a time between December and January. The terminal has four jetbridges, 30 check-in counters and 26 immigration counters — generous for the airport’s size, and the reason international arrival queues here move faster than at Delhi on a bad night.
The history is older than the building. Aviation on this site dates to 1930 under British rule; the current arrivals hall opened in September 2005 and the integrated terminal was completed by February 2009. The airport took its present name — honouring Guru Ram Das, the fourth Sikh Guru and the founder of Amritsar — in November 2010. The official spelling on Air India’s own airport page and on Priority Pass is “Jee,” which is what you’ll see on signage; “Ji” turns up in some references but is the same name.
The genuine 2026 story is capacity. AAI has approved a roughly ₹240-crore (about US$25 million) expansion to push annual handling capacity from 2.5 million to 5.5 million passengers, with peak-hour throughput rising from 1,600 to 2,000. Amritsar handled close to 2.94 million passengers in the year to March 2026, so the airport is already brushing its design ceiling at peaks — which is why the international hall can feel cramped when two Gulf widebodies and a UK flight push out within the same evening window. Until the new capacity lands, the practical advice is unchanged: arrive three hours before an international departure, not two.
Who flies here, and where to. ATQ punches above its size on international links for a tier-2 Indian city, and the reason is the diaspora. The anchor long-haul carrier is Air India, which runs the direct services to the United Kingdom — Birmingham and London (the London end has used Heathrow and Gatwick at different times, so confirm your airport against the current schedule). On the Gulf, Qatar Airways flies Doha year-round, while IndiGo, SpiceJet and Air India Express cover Dubai and Sharjah with a mix of year-round and seasonal frequencies. Southeast Asia is the growth story: Malaysia Airlines runs Kuala Lumpur, Scoot (Singapore Airlines’ low-cost arm) flies Singapore, and AirAsia and Thai Lion Air add further regional capacity — four Asian carriers expanded their ATQ schedules for the winter 2025–26 season. Domestically, IndiGo, Air India and SpiceJet link Delhi, Mumbai and other metros. Around nine airlines serve the airport in total. The practical takeaway: if you’re coming from the UK or the Gulf there’s a realistic direct option; from North America or Australia you’ll connect, usually through Delhi or a Gulf hub.
🛂 Visa, Currency, Immigration and Health
The visa. Most foreign visitors need a visa arranged before arrival — India has no general visa-on-arrival, and the only nationalities entering visa-free are Nepalese and Bhutanese citizens. For everyone else the practical route is the e-Visa, applied for online at the official portal, indianvisaonline.gov.in. Apply only there; the dozens of lookalike “india-evisa” domains are agents charging a markup for the same government product. The e-Tourist visa comes in tiers: a 30-day double-entry visa, a one-year multiple-entry, and a five-year multiple-entry. As of 2026 the headline fees sit around US$10–25 for the 30-day (India runs a discounted April–June window where the 30-day drops to US$10), about US$40 for the one-year, and about US$80 for the five-year — but the five-year price is nationality-specific and several countries pay far more (UK passport holders, for instance, pay a much higher five-year rate). Check your own nationality’s figure on the portal, and note the card-payment surcharge of roughly 3–4% on top. Citizens whose nationality isn’t eligible for the e-Visa use the regular paper/sticker visa through an Indian mission. The e-Visa for Amritsar must list ATQ as a designated arrival airport — it is one, so this is rarely a problem, but verify your e-Visa’s “permitted ports of entry” before you fly.
No health form. The Air Suvidha online health declaration that COVID-era travellers had to file no longer exists for general arrivals. There is no airport health gate for ordinary tourists in 2026, and no mandatory vaccination for entry from most countries (a yellow-fever certificate is only required if you’re arriving from or transiting a yellow-fever-risk country — a documentary check, not a jab anyone needs for a straightforward UK or Gulf routing).
Currency. The rupee is a partly closed currency: you cannot legally buy meaningful amounts of INR outside India, and there’s no parallel/black-market exchange to worry about the way there is in some economies. You arrive with little or no rupees and get them here. Notes in circulation are ₹10, ₹20, ₹50, ₹100, ₹200, ₹500 and the ₹2,000 note, though the ₹2,000 has been largely withdrawn since 2023 and you’ll rarely see one — don’t accept one as change. Use the ATMs in the arrivals concourse rather than the airport currency-exchange desks, whose rates are the worst you’ll see all trip. Cards work widely in the city; UPI (India’s instant-payment system) runs everything locally but generally needs an Indian bank account, so as a visitor you’ll lean on cash and cards. Carry small notes — ₹10s, ₹20s and ₹50s — for autorickshaws, the langar donation box, and the Wagah tourist bus.
Faster immigration, but not for everyone. Since September 2025, ATQ runs the FTI-TTP (Fast Track Immigration – Trusted Traveller Programme) with eight automated e-gates, four on arrivals and four on departures. It clears biometric passages in seconds — but it is free and restricted to Indian passport holders and OCI (Overseas Citizen of India) cardholders who pre-register online. The scheme was rolled out to Amritsar alongside Lucknow, Thiruvananthapuram, Trichy and Kozhikode, and registration involves submitting biometrics once (at the airport or an FRRO office) for validity up to five years. Foreign-passport visitors still use the staffed immigration counters — which at Amritsar move faster than at Delhi on a busy night thanks to 26 immigration positions in a single hall. If you hold an Indian or OCI document and fly this route often, registering for FTI-TTP is the single biggest time-saver at ATQ. A practical note for the large diaspora flying in: a foreign passport without OCI does not qualify, so a UK or Canadian passport holder of Punjabi origin still queues unless they hold the OCI card.
🚆 Ground Transport — Taxi, App-Cab, and Why There’s No Train
Start with the honest part: there is no rail link, no metro and no reliable scheduled public bus to ATQ. The airport sits northwest of the city off the Amritsar–Attari road, and the city’s bus network doesn’t run a dependable airport service. Anyone telling you to “take the local bus from the terminal” is improvising. Your real choices are the prepaid taxi, an app-cab, or a pre-booked car. Here’s how they compare.
Prepaid taxi (the default). A government prepaid taxi counter sits just outside the arrivals hall. You pay a fixed fare at the desk, get a slip, and hand it to the driver — no on-road negotiation, which is the whole point. The fare to the Golden Temple area or the city centre runs roughly ₹350–500 (US$3.70–5.20) for the ~11 km, 25–30 minute trip. This is the option to use on your first arrival, especially at night: the price is set, the driver is logged, and you skip the touts who work the exit. Confirm the slip shows your destination before you leave the counter.
Ola / Uber (cheapest when surge is off). Both ride-hailing apps operate at ATQ and will usually undercut the prepaid taxi for the same city run — often ₹250–400 (US$2.60–4.20) to the centre when there’s no surge. The catch is the pickup: app-cabs can’t always wait at the kerb directly outside arrivals and may route you to a designated pickup zone a short walk away, and at quiet hours (late-night arrivals) driver availability thins out and prices spike or cars simply don’t come. The prepaid counter doesn’t have that failure mode. Use apps in daylight with a working local data connection; fall back to prepaid otherwise.
Pre-booked private car / hotel transfer. Hotels and transfer operators quote fixed point-to-point rates, typically ₹600–900 (US$6.30–9.40) for an airport-to-Golden-Temple sedan, more for a larger vehicle. You pay a premium over the prepaid taxi for a named driver waiting with a sign and a known car. Worth it if you’re arriving late, travelling with luggage and family, or nervous about a first arrival; otherwise the prepaid taxi does the same job for less.
Autorickshaws (the three-wheelers) are everywhere in the city but are not the move from the airport itself — they don’t reliably queue at arrivals, and for the airport run a four-wheeler is faster on the highway stretch. Save the autos for short hops around the walled city once you’re based near the temple, where ₹50–150 (US$0.50–1.60) covers most rides if you fix the price before getting in.
Moving around the city once you’re based. The old walled city around the Golden Temple is compact and best done on foot; the precinct immediately around the shrine is pedestrianised. For anything beyond walking distance, autorickshaws are the local workhorse — agree the fare before you get in (₹50–150 for short hops, more for cross-city), since the meters are theoretical. E-rickshaws (battery three-wheelers) cover the same short runs even more cheaply and are common around the temple approaches. Ola and Uber both run in the city for longer trips and remove the haggling, which is why many visitors default to them. There’s no city metro and the local bus network is for residents, not tourists.
One local restriction worth knowing: drivers cannot take vehicles into the immediate pedestrianised zone around Harmandir Sahib. Whatever you book will drop you at the edge of the temple precinct — a short, well-signed walk to the entrance. A driver who claims he can get you “right to the door” is either going to overcharge you or drop you in the same place as everyone else and call it a favour.
🛋️ Lounges — What’s Real and What the Internet Invented
ATQ’s lounge situation is a small case study in why you should verify before you trust a lounge-finder app. Two lounges are confirmed active in 2026, split across the two halves of the terminal:
Primus Lounge — domestic departures. This is the lounge for domestic flyers. It accepts Priority Pass, takes a range of premium Indian credit cards (the HDFC and Axis reserve-tier cards among them), and admits walk-ins for a fee of roughly ₹800–1,200 (US$8.40–12.50) per person. Standard Indian-airport lounge fare: hot buffet, coffee and soft drinks, seating, washrooms, charging. Diners Club access is also listed here.
The Airr Lounge & Bar — international departures. This is the lounge on the international side, again on the Priority Pass network. Same broad model — buffet, bar, seating airside after you’ve cleared emigration — and the relevant one if you’re on a Gulf, UK, or Southeast Asia departure and want somewhere to sit before boarding.
What’s absent or doubtful. A Plaza Premium Lounge appears in some directories for ATQ, but its operational status is contested — some current reviews report it no longer trading. Don’t bank on it; if your card or membership is steering you toward Plaza Premium specifically, verify it’s open before you rely on it, and treat Primus / The Airr as the dependable pair. More to the point for premium-cabin flyers: ATQ has no dedicated airline flagship lounge — no Air India Maharaja Lounge, no Qatar Airways Al Mourjan-style space here. Whatever your ticket class, the contract lounges above are what you get. If you’re connecting through a Gulf or European hub on the same itinerary, that’s where the serious lounge experience lives, not at Amritsar.
🍽️ Food and Duty-Free — Kulcha, Lassi, and the Airport Markup
The terminal has the usual Indian-airport line-up: a Costa Coffee or two, packaged-snack counters, and a couple of sit-down options on each side. It’s functional, not a reason to arrive early, and it carries the standard airport markup — expect to pay two to four times city prices. A coffee that’s ₹120 in town is ₹300-plus airside; a basic meal that’s ₹150–250 at a city dhaba runs ₹500–700 inside the terminal.
The food you actually came to Punjab for is in the city, and it’s cheap. The regional signatures:
- Amritsari kulcha — a stuffed, crisp-baked flatbread, the local obsession, eaten with chole (chickpea curry) and a dab of butter. A plate at a city dhaba is ₹80–150 (US$0.85–1.60).
- Lassi — the thick sweet yoghurt drink, served in a heavy steel tumbler; ₹50–100 in town.
- Sarson da saag with makki di roti — mustard greens with cornflour flatbread, the winter dish.
- Langar — the free communal vegetarian meal served around the clock at the Golden Temple, eaten cross-legged on the floor in one of the world’s largest free kitchens. It costs nothing; a donation is customary, not required.
Three long-running, verifiable city institutions if you want a named anchor rather than a guess. Bharawan Da Dhaba near the Town Hall is a vegetarian dhaba trading for over a century, known for chole kulche, sarson da saag and makki di roti — busy, plain, and the kind of place locals actually eat. Kesar Da Dhaba in the old city was founded in 1916 and relocated to Amritsar from Sheikhupura after Partition; it’s known for its dal (slow-cooked overnight), parathas and thalis, and a meal here runs a fraction of airport prices. Brothers Dhaba, on the Golden Temple outer road within a few minutes’ walk of the shrine, is the reliable kulcha-and-dal-makhani stop closest to the temple. All three are a short ride from the temple precinct. The one rule worth stating plainly: skip the terminal food and eat in the walled city. The gap in both quality and price is enormous — a ₹600 airport meal buys two people a full dhaba lunch with change for lassi.
Duty-free at ATQ is modest. There’s a small international duty-free on the departures side with the standard liquor, tobacco and confectionery, but selection and pricing are unremarkable next to Delhi or a Gulf hub — if you want seriously discounted spirits, buy them at your connecting hub, not here. The thing actually worth carrying out of Amritsar isn’t in the duty-free at all: it’s the local food. Amritsari warian (sun-dried spiced lentil dumplings), papad, pinni (a ghee-and-flour sweet) and phulkari embroidered textiles are the regional buys, and you get them far cheaper and better in the old-city bazaars (Hall Bazaar, the lanes around the temple) than in any terminal shop. On the customs side, India’s inbound duty-free allowance lets arriving passengers bring a limited quantity of alcohol (currently up to 2 litres) and a small tobacco allowance; the limits change, so check current AAI/customs figures before loading up at your departure hub. There’s no airport-side restriction on carrying Punjabi sweets or sealed food out of India, but confirm your destination country’s import rules — fresh and dairy items are often barred on arrival elsewhere.
💡 The Two Reasons You’re Here — Golden Temple and Wagah
Harmandir Sahib (the Golden Temple), ~11 km / 25–30 min. This is the centre of Sikhism and the centre of Amritsar, a gold-leafed shrine sitting in the middle of the Amrit Sarovar (the sacred pool that gives the city its name and means “pool of nectar”). Entry is free and open to all faiths, day and night. The etiquette is simple and enforced: cover your head (cloths are handed out free at the entrance, or buy a bandana from a nearby stall for ₹10–20), remove and deposit your shoes at the free shoe-counter, and wash your feet through the shallow water channel before stepping onto the marble. No shorts or bare shoulders; no alcohol or tobacco anywhere in the complex; photography is fine around the pool but not inside the inner sanctum. The complex is most affecting before dawn and after dark when the gold is lit and doubled in the still water. Allow at least two hours to do it properly — longer if you join the slow queue across the causeway into the inner shrine, which can run an hour or more at peak times.
The langar here is worth experiencing in its own right: the temple kitchen serves a free vegetarian meal to anyone, around the clock, seated cross-legged in long rows, with volunteers cooking, serving and washing tens of thousands of steel plates a day. You take a plate, sit, eat, and hand it back; a donation is welcome but never asked for. It’s one of the largest free community kitchens in the world and a faster, more honest read of the place than any guide. Right beside the temple, Jallianwala Bagh — the walled garden where British troops fired on an unarmed crowd in 1919, killing hundreds — is a five-minute walk and free to enter; the bullet-marked walls and the memorial well are preserved. Budget 30–45 minutes, and treat it as the sober counterweight to the temple.
Layover math for the Golden Temple. Round trip from ATQ is ~22 km and ~50–60 minutes of driving with traffic, plus a minimum two-hour security and check-in buffer for a return international departure, plus the time at the temple itself. To visit honestly on a layover you need at least a 5-hour gap, and realistically 6 to be relaxed about it. Anything under 5 hours, stay airside.
Wagah–Attari border ceremony, ~30 km / ~60 min. Every evening, India and Pakistan run a synchronised flag-lowering retreat ceremony at the only road crossing between the two countries — high-stepping border guards, a roaring crowd, and a piece of geopolitical theatre that’s been performed for decades. It’s free to attend; you only pay for transport. The ceremony starts in the late afternoon and shifts with the season — earlier in winter (roughly 4:15–4:30 pm), later in summer (roughly 5:15–5:30 pm) — and times move, so check locally on the day. Seating fills well before the start and security screening at the venue is slow, so plan to be there at least 90 minutes early: in practice that means leaving Amritsar around 2:30–3:00 pm in winter, a bit later in summer.
Getting there: a double-decker tourist bus runs from the city for around ₹350 (US$3.70), with an open-air top deck; a shared/return autorickshaw runs about ₹800 (US$8.40) for a small group; a private car is roughly ₹1,800 (US$18.80) return. Summer heat at Wagah is brutal (Amritsar pushes past 40°C in May–June), so winter visits are far more comfortable.
Layover math for Wagah. This is not a layover option for anything under a full day. The round trip is ~60 km, the ceremony plus crowd egress eats 2–3 hours, the venue is congested, and you still owe a 2-hour airport return buffer. Realistically you need 7–8+ hours and a margin for traffic, and even then it’s tight — treat Wagah as a thing you do on a night in the city, not on a connection.
Other sights worth the time if you’re staying. The Partition Museum, housed in the old Town Hall a short walk from the Golden Temple, is the serious one — a documentary record of the 1947 Partition told through survivor testimony and objects, and worth 1–2 hours. Gobindgarh Fort, a restored 18th-century fort near the city centre, runs sound-and-light shows and food stalls in a single ticketed complex and works well for an evening. Ram Tirath temple, about 11 km west of the city, ties to the Ramayana tradition and draws a big crowd at its November fair. The Maharaja Ranjit Singh Museum and the Durgiana Temple (a Hindu temple built on the Golden Temple’s architectural model) fill out a full city day. None of these is a layover proposition — they’re for travellers basing themselves in Amritsar for a night or more.
A realistic one-night plan from the airport. Land, take the prepaid taxi to a hotel near the temple (₹350–500), drop bags, and walk to Harmandir Sahib in the late afternoon. Eat kulcha or a thali at a city dhaba (₹100–250). Leave for Wagah around 2:30–3:00 pm if it’s winter, watch the ceremony, return to the old city for the evening, and see the Golden Temple again after dark when it’s lit. Next morning, the Partition Museum or Jallianwala Bagh before your flight. That sequence covers everything most visitors come for inside 24 hours, and none of it needs a car you own.
🔧 Practical Notes — Connectivity, Currency, Safety
Wifi. The terminal offers free wifi for 30 minutes, after which you top up at the help desk or selected retail outlets for a small fee (on the order of ₹20/hour). It’s enough to summon a cab or send an arrival message; it’s not enough to work on. Connect, do your essential tasks, then move.
SIM / data. Don’t count on buying a tourist SIM inside the terminal — counter availability at ATQ is unreliable, and reports of an arrivals telecom desk are mixed. The two networks that matter nationally are Airtel and Jio; both have strong Punjab coverage. The dependable play is to buy a prepaid tourist SIM in the city (you’ll need your passport and visa, and a passport photo helps), or arrange an eSIM before you fly so you land already connected. Tourist SIM activation in India can take a few hours, so an eSIM bought in advance is the smoother option for a short visit.
Tipping. Not obligatory the way it is in the US, but appreciated: round up the taxi fare, ₹50–100 to a porter, and 5–10% at a sit-down restaurant if service isn’t already added. At the Golden Temple, tipping doesn’t apply — donations go in the box, not to an individual.
Safety and scams. Amritsar is, by Indian-city standards, comfortable and welcoming, and the temple area is heavily policed and busy at all hours. The risks are the ordinary ones: at the airport exit, ignore unsolicited “taxi sir?” touts and use the prepaid counter; at the temple, hold onto valuables in dense crowds and politely decline self-appointed “guides” who attach themselves and then demand a fee. Around Wagah, the crush before the ceremony is the main hazard — keep your group together and your bag in front of you. The ₹2,000-note withdrawal means anyone trying to give you one in change is best refused.
Water and heat. Drink bottled or filtered water only; the tap water isn’t safe for visitors, and the langar serves clean drinking water inside the temple. The bigger health factor is heat — May and June regularly exceed 40°C, which turns a midday Wagah trip or a daytime temple visit into an endurance test. The marble around the Golden Temple pool gets fiercely hot underfoot in summer (remember you’re barefoot in the precinct), so go early morning or after sunset in the hot months. Winter (November–February) is the comfortable season for sightseeing, with dense morning fog the only operational downside — and ATQ’s CAT III-B instrument landing system handles that better than most regional airports, so winter delays here are less common than at fog-prone smaller fields nearby.
Power and practicalities. India runs on 230V with Type C, D and M plugs (the round-pin European-style and the larger three-round-pin Indian sockets); UK and US visitors need an adapter, which you’re better off bringing than buying airside. Charging points exist in the departure halls but are not abundant, so arrive with a charged phone and a power bank. ATMs in the arrivals concourse dispense rupees on most international cards; tell your bank you’re travelling so the card isn’t blocked on a Punjab withdrawal. Keep a printout or screenshot of your e-Visa approval — immigration will want to see it, and the free 30-minute airport wifi is not something to rely on for pulling it up at the counter.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
📊 2026 Summary Data Table
| Feature | Detail (2026) |
|---|---|
| IATA / ICAO | ATQ / VIAR |
| Full name | Sri Guru Ram Dass Jee International Airport |
| City / region | Amritsar, Punjab, India |
| Operator | Airports Authority of India (AAI) |
| Terminal | One integrated terminal (~40,000 m²), international + domestic wings |
| Runway | Single, 3,657 m, CAT III-B ILS (fog-capable) |
| Distance to Golden Temple | ~11 km / 25–30 min |
| Distance to Wagah border | ~30 km / ~60 min |
| Currency | Indian rupee (INR, ₹); ~₹95.8 = US$1, ~₹111.4 = €1 (late May 2026) |
| Entry system | India e-Visa (indianvisaonline.gov.in); visa-free only for Nepal/Bhutan |
| e-Visa fees | ~US$10–25 (30-day), ~US$40 (1-year), ~US$80+ (5-year, nationality-dependent) |
| Health form | None (Air Suvidha discontinued) |
| Prepaid taxi to city | ₹350–500 (US$3.70–5.20), fixed at arrivals counter |
| Ola / Uber to city | ₹250–400 (US$2.60–4.20), surge-dependent |
| Private transfer | ₹600–900 (US$6.30–9.40) to Golden Temple |
| Rail / metro / public bus | None to the airport |
| Lounges | Primus (domestic dep.), The Airr Lounge & Bar (intl dep.); Priority Pass; walk-in ₹800–1,200 |
| Airline flagship lounge | None |
| Airlines (sample) | Air India, Air India Express, IndiGo, SpiceJet, Qatar Airways, Malaysia Airlines, AirAsia, Scoot, Thai Lion Air |
| Key international routes | Birmingham, London, Dubai, Sharjah, Doha, Singapore, Kuala Lumpur |
| Free wifi | 30 min free, then paid top-up (~₹20/hr) |
| Fast immigration | FTI-TTP e-gates (Sept 2025); Indian passport + OCI only |
| 2026 expansion | ₹240 crore; capacity 2.5M → 5.5M/year; peak-hour 1,600 → 2,000 |
| Passengers (yr to Mar 2026) | ~2.94 million |
| Wagah ceremony | Free; ~4:15–4:30 pm winter / ~5:15–5:30 pm summer (verify locally) |
| Tap water | Not safe for visitors — bottled/filtered only |
| Best season | November–February (heat 40°C+ in May–June; winter fog handled by CAT III-B) |



