Baltimore-Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport (BWI) — The Complete Master Guide 2026
BWI sits between Baltimore and Washington DC — roughly 9 miles south of downtown Baltimore and 30 miles northeast of DC — making it the airport that serves both Mid-Atlantic cities by design. Southwest Airlines accounts for over 70% of BWI’s passenger traffic and operates Concourses A and B exclusively; BWI is one of Southwest’s 13 US operating bases. BWI has a real rail link: MARC Penn Line and Amtrak Northeast Corridor at the BWI Rail Station (free 24/7 shuttle to the terminal), plus the MTA Baltimore Light Rail direct from the terminal. MARC reaches both Baltimore Penn Station ($6, ~25 min) and Washington Union Station ($7, ~31 min). US dollar (USD) — no EES, no ETIAS, no Schengen. Visa-waiver travellers need ESTA. The gateway to Baltimore’s Inner Harbor, Fort McHenry, the Annapolis waterfront, and a short MARC ride down to the DC museums.
📍 ~9 mi S of Baltimore · ~30 mi NE of DC
🚆 MARC + Amtrak + Light Rail
🛂 CBP / ESTA · No EES/ETIAS
⚡ 2026 Quick Reference — Key Facts at a Glance
$6 · ~25 min + free shuttle BWI Rail Station ↔ terminal (24/7)
$7 · ~31 min — 7 days a week (verify weekend schedule)
$15-30+ · faster + reserved seating + Wi-Fi · 7 days a week
$2 one-way direct from BWI terminal to Camden Yards/downtown Baltimore in 30-45 min
$35 flat fare · 20 min (Baltimore City regulated)
$25-40 to Baltimore, $50-80 to DC · surge during weather and peak hours
The Club BWI (Concourse D, Priority Pass) · Minute Suites · USO. NO Delta Sky Club, NO Admirals Club, NO United Club at BWI
USD · CBP + ESTA · No EES, no ETIAS · Mobile Passport Control speeds entry
🏢 1. Concourses A-E & the Southwest Hub Layout
BWI operates a single passenger terminal split into five concourses (A, B, C, D, E). Southwest’s dominance shapes the geography: Concourses A and B are exclusively Southwest (the airline accounts for over 70% of BWI’s passenger volume — this is one of Southwest’s largest operations after Las Vegas, Chicago Midway and Denver). Concourse C mixes Southwest with American and Contour. Concourses D and E handle other US carriers and the limited international service. The airport was renamed Thurgood Marshall in 2005, honouring the Baltimore-born first Black Supreme Court Justice.
🛫 Concourses A + B + C — Southwest Country
A + B exclusively Southwest; Concourse C splits Southwest with American Airlines (Charlotte, DFW, Miami, LaGuardia, Reagan) and Contour Airlines.
Southwest’s BWI operation includes a major maintenance base and crew base; expect 200+ Southwest departures most weekdays. The airline’s gate concentration in A and B means transfers between Southwest flights are fast.
📍 Concourses D + E — Other Carriers + International
Concourse D handles Delta + Delta Connection, United + United Express, Spirit, Frontier, Alaska, Avelo, Breeze, plus international arrivals/departures and the Federal Inspection Service (CBP) hall.
Concourse E is the international gates wing — used by British Airways (London Heathrow), Air Canada, Condor (Frankfurt), Sun Country, and JetBlue (returning July 2026 with Fort Lauderdale service).
Operating airlines at BWI (May 2026)
- Southwest Airlines — the dominant carrier, 70%+ of BWI passenger traffic. One of WN’s 13 operating bases; Concourses A and B exclusively, plus shared C.
- American Airlines + American Eagle — Concourse C; trunk service to Charlotte, DFW, Miami, LaGuardia, Reagan National, Philadelphia, Boston.
- Delta Air Lines + Delta Connection — Concourse D; trunk service to Atlanta, JFK, LaGuardia, Detroit, Minneapolis, Boston.
- United Airlines + United Express — Concourse D; service to Chicago O’Hare, Houston, Newark, Washington Dulles, Denver.
- Spirit, Frontier, Avelo, Sun Country, Breeze — Concourse D; ultra-low-cost domestic.
- Alaska Airlines — limited service from BWI to Seattle, San Francisco, San Diego.
- JetBlue — returning to BWI on 9 July 2026 with 3 daily flights to Fort Lauderdale.
- Contour Airlines — regional Concourse C operations to small US cities.
- International carriers — British Airways (London Heathrow, daily), Air Canada (Toronto), Condor (Frankfurt, seasonal), plus selected Caribbean.
🛂 2. CBP, ESTA & BWI’s Limited International Service
BWI handles US domestic + selected international flights. Border processing is by US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) in the Concourse D / E Federal Inspection Station. Schengen rules do not apply: no EES, no ETIAS, no euro. Currency is the US dollar (USD), €1 ≈ $1.08 (May 2026). Visa-waiver nationals need ESTA. The international footprint is thinner than Dulles or JFK — British Airways’ London Heathrow flight is the main transatlantic, supplemented by Condor (Frankfurt seasonal) and Caribbean carriers.
ESTA — $21, Two-Year Validity
Visa Waiver Program travellers need an ESTA at esta.cbp.dhs.gov — $21, valid 2 years or until passport expiry. Apply at least 72 hours before flight. Beware look-alike scam sites charging $80-100. Canadians and US citizens are exempt.
CBP Kiosks & Mobile Passport Control
BWI international arrivals clear CBP in the Concourse D / E Federal Inspection Station. Global Entry has dedicated kiosks. Mobile Passport Control (MPC) — the free CBP app — handles the customs declaration in advance and is the fastest non-Global-Entry option for visa-waiver travellers.
The London Route — British Airways Daily
British Airways operates a daily nonstop between BWI and London Heathrow — the main transatlantic from BWI. ~7-8 hours eastbound; the route gives BWI traffic an alternative to IAD/DCA for European connections via the oneworld network at LHR.
Who needs what to enter the US via BWI
| Passport | Visa needed? | ESTA required (air)? | Entry process |
|---|---|---|---|
| US citizen | No | No | Domestic — no CBP |
| Canadian (visa-exempt) | No | No (Canadians are ESTA-exempt) | CBP kiosk + officer |
| UK / EU / Australia / NZ / Japan / South Korea / Singapore (VWP) | No | Yes — $21, valid 2 years | CBP kiosk + officer; MPC speeds entry |
| Brazilian / Argentinian / Mexican / Indian / Chinese / South African | Yes — B-1/B-2 visitor visa | No (covered by visa) | CBP officer interview |
| Cuban / Iranian / Syrian / North Korean / Belarusian | Restricted; verify current US policy | No | Specialised processing |
BWI competes with Reagan National (DCA, ~30 mi south) and Dulles (IAD, ~50 mi southwest) for DC-area traffic. BWI is the Southwest option; Reagan is the close-in for legacy carriers; Dulles is the international gateway. For DC visitors: MARC Penn Line from BWI to Union Station is ~31 min and $7 — competitive with a DCA taxi to downtown ($25-35, also ~30 min). For European arrivals into DC, BA’s BWI service plus the MARC connection beats many IAD options.
🚆 3. MARC, Amtrak, Light Rail, Taxi & Rideshare
BWI is one of the rare US airports with a real, useful rail link — both for inter-city Amtrak/MARC service and for local Baltimore Light Rail. The BWI Rail Station is a separate building about 1 mile from the terminal; a free 24/7 shuttle bus runs every 10-15 minutes. The Baltimore Light Rail terminus is integrated with the terminal directly. Rail + the I-695 Beltway are the two practical ways to leave BWI.
⭐ MARC Penn Line — The Default
- BWI Rail Station ↔ Baltimore Penn Station: $6 one-way, 20-35 min. Baltimore Penn Station is in the Mount Vernon neighborhood; walking distance to the Mt Vernon district.
- BWI Rail Station ↔ Washington Union Station: $7 one-way, ~31 min. The fastest non-driving way to DC from BWI.
- Frequency: 7 days a week, every 30-60 min weekdays and weekends. Verify the latest timetable on the MDOT MTA site — schedules revised periodically.
- Tickets: CharmPass mobile app, or vending machines at BWI Rail Station.
- Free 24/7 shuttle bus connects the BWI Rail Station to all terminal levels, every 10-15 min.
🚂 Amtrak Northeast Corridor
- The same BWI Rail Station is served by Amtrak NEC + Acela — Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Wilmington, DC, Richmond.
- Fares: $15-30+ one-way to DC or Baltimore Penn Station, higher for Acela (which doesn’t stop at BWI — only the Northeast Regional services do).
- Benefit: reserved seating, Wi-Fi, more legroom than MARC.
- Use for: longer trips north (Philadelphia, NYC, Boston). For Baltimore or DC specifically, MARC is the better value.
🚋 MTA Baltimore Light Rail — Direct to Camden Yards
- The BWI Light Rail station sits at the terminal — no shuttle needed.
- Route: direct from BWI to downtown Baltimore (Camden Yards), continuing to Mount Royal and Timonium and Hunt Valley.
- Fare: $2 one-way.
- Journey: 30-45 minutes from BWI to Camden Yards depending on wait time.
- Compare to MARC: Light Rail is cheaper ($2 vs $6) but slower (45 vs 25 min) and the route passes through more neighbourhoods. MARC is the express option.
🚕 Taxi & Rideshare
- Baltimore City taxi flat rate: $35 from BWI to Inner Harbor / downtown ($30 in the reverse direction from defined Downtown zone). 20 min via I-695.
- Uber and Lyft typically $25-40 to downtown Baltimore, $50-80 to downtown DC. Pickup along Departures/Upper Level outer curb between Doors 5-12; drop-off Arrivals/Lower Level Doors 5 and 13.
- Surge significant during weather and Camden Yards game nights — check pricing before committing.
🚗 Rental Cars & the I-695 Beltway
All major brands (Alamo, Avis, Budget, Dollar, Enterprise, Hertz, National, Sixt, Thrifty) at a consolidated rental car facility connected by free shuttle. I-695 is Baltimore’s Beltway. I-95 south to Washington (30 mi, ~45 min outside rush, longer in traffic). The Baltimore-Washington Parkway (Maryland Route 295) is the slower scenic alternative south through Patuxent and BWI’s surrounding research/government corridor.
🛋️ 4. The Club BWI + Minute Suites — The Lounge Gap
For an airport its size, BWI has a notable lounge gap: none of American, Delta or United operate a lounge here. The only third-party Priority Pass lounge is The Club BWI in Concourse D. Minute Suites (private nap rooms, also Priority Pass-accessible) is the secondary option. The USO Lounge serves active military. The Centurion Lounge is not at BWI — the regional AMEX presence is at DCA Reagan instead. Plan based on this.
🛋️ The Club BWI — Priority Pass Default
Location: Concourse D near Gate 10.
Access: Priority Pass (1-hour free + $34/hour after — capped guest count subject to availability), LoungeKey, Lounge Club. Day pass starts at $48 for 1 hour.
What’s inside: hot and cold meals, full bar (premium spirits), Wi-Fi, work zones, reading materials, runway view.
😴 Minute Suites — Private Nap Rooms
Location: Concourse D (post-security).
Access: Priority Pass + AMEX Platinum (limited free hours), walk-in day-rate $42/hour or $87 for 3 hours.
What’s inside: private suite with daybed, TV, Wi-Fi, sound-dampening, charging — designed for solo nap or quiet work time.
🎖️ USO Lounge
Location: Concourse D, ticketing level (landside).
Access: active-duty US military and dependents — free.
If you’re flying Southwest out of Concourses A or B (most BWI travellers): The Club BWI is on the other side of the terminal in Concourse D. You can get there post-security via the secure corridor, but it’s a 10-15 minute walk. For tight Southwest connections, plan to use the airside food court — better options on the new A/B walkways than the older C concourse.
🦀 5. Chesapeake Bay Food: Crab Cakes, Old Bay & Natty Boh
Baltimore and the Maryland eastern shore are Chesapeake Bay food country — blue-crab cakes, oysters, rockfish (striped bass), Old Bay seasoning on everything. BWI’s airside food has improved with the Southwest concourse upgrades — the concourses include local-leaning Maryland-themed concepts alongside the national chains. Tenant lineup varies; verify the airport directory before counting on a specific restaurant. But the real eating is in Federal Hill, Fells Point and the eastern shore, 20-40 minutes from the airport.
The proper Maryland crab cake is mostly crab — jumbo lump blue-crab meat, minimal binder, light seasoning, broiled or sautéed (not deep-fried). Phillips Seafood at Inner Harbor (since 1956), Faidley’s at Lexington Market (a Baltimore institution since 1886), and Thames Street Oyster House in Fells Point are the credible Baltimore options for a proper $24-36 crab-cake plate.
Old Bay (created in Baltimore in 1939 by Gustav Brunn at his German-Jewish spice shop after fleeing Nazi Germany) is on every Maryland menu — on crabs, fries, popcorn, cocktails, lemonade, ice cream. The yellow-and-blue tin is iconic. Sold at every BWI gift shop. The cocktail move is to rim a Bloody Mary with Old Bay instead of regular salt — done at any Federal Hill brunch spot.
National Bohemian Beer (Natty Boh) was Baltimore’s hometown lager (founded 1885), brewed in the city until 1979; now contract-brewed but still synonymous with Baltimore. The one-eyed Mr. Boh mascot is on the south face of the Brewers Hill water tower. $4-6 a can at dive bars across town; available at most BWI airside bars. The local craft scene is also strong — Heavy Seas, Union Craft, Diamondback, Flying Dog — with downtown taprooms.
Lake trout in Baltimore is actually whiting — a fried-fish-sandwich tradition at corner stores across East and West Baltimore. Berger Cookies are the Baltimore shortbread-and-fudge classic (since 1835). Pit beef (smoked beef sandwich, served thin-sliced with tiger sauce — Chaps Charcoal Restaurant on Pulaski Highway is the institution) is the Baltimore answer to BBQ. All three travel poorly but are worth seeking out on-ground.
Duty-Free & Souvenir Reality at BWI
🌶️ Old Bay Tins & Crab Boil Kits
$5-15 per tin. The yellow-and-blue Old Bay tin is the most distinctively Baltimore souvenir, $5-7 at every BWI gift shop. Larger crab-boil kits (Old Bay + brushes + mallets + bibs) at $20-40 for the gift box.
🍪 Berger Cookies
$8-15 per box. Berger Cookies (since 1835) — soft shortbread with thick fudge frosting. Baltimore’s signature cookie. Available at the airside gift shops for travel.
⚾ Orioles / Ravens Apparel
$25-60 per cap or shirt. Baltimore Orioles (MLB, orange + black, Cal Ripken Jr legacy) and Baltimore Ravens (NFL, purple + black, Edgar Allan Poe namesake) caps and shirts at the airside team store. The Ravens cap is the more universally recognised; Orioles is the city loyalty.
🥃 McClintock Distilling & Local Spirits
$30-60 per 750ml. McClintock Distilling (Frederick, MD), Sagamore Spirit (Owings Mills, MD — Kevin Plank’s rye-whiskey distillery) are the credible Maryland spirits options. Old-style Maryland rye is the regional heritage.
💡 6. Insider: Inner Harbor, Fort McHenry, Annapolis, DC
Baltimore’s Inner Harbor is the renovated waterfront — the National Aquarium (Pier 3, ~$50 adult, consistently ranked among the best in the US), the Historic Ships in Baltimore (USS Constellation 1854, USS Torsk submarine, Coast Guard Cutter Taney, Lightship Chesapeake — multi-ship combo ticket), Maryland Science Center, the Top of the World observation level at the Baltimore World Trade Center. From BWI: MARC to Penn Station + 10 min walk south, or Light Rail to Camden Yards + 10 min walk east. The single best 2-hour Baltimore layover payload.
Fort McHenry National Monument and Historic Shrine is the star-shaped masonry fort that withstood British bombardment in September 1814 during the War of 1812 — Francis Scott Key, watching from a ship in the harbour, wrote “The Star-Spangled Banner” in response. The flag flying over the fort the next morning is preserved at the Smithsonian National Museum of American History in DC. $15 adult admission, free under 16. From Inner Harbor: 10-min taxi or the seasonal Harbor Connector water taxi.
Annapolis, the Maryland state capital, sits on Chesapeake Bay 30 miles south of Baltimore and 30 miles east of DC. The historic district has 18th-century brick architecture, the Maryland State House (the oldest US state capitol in continuous legislative use, 1779), and the United States Naval Academy (founded 1845, free walking tours with ID, the Visitor Center on King George Street). From BWI: 30-40 min by taxi/rideshare ($50-70) or 60+ min via MTA bus 70.
BWI is a legitimate DC airport. MARC Penn Line to Washington Union Station in ~31 min for $7 — faster than DCA in heavy traffic, dramatically cheaper than Dulles. From Union Station, the Metro (Red Line) reaches the Smithsonian museums (free, world-class), Capitol Hill, the White House, the monuments. For a 5-6 hour BWI layover, DC is feasible — round-trip MARC ~70 min + 90-180 min on the National Mall + buffer. Allow 60-75 min for the return including BWI security.
For early flights: Hyatt Place BWI Airport, Aloft BWI Baltimore Washington Airport, Embassy Suites by Hilton BWI — all 5-10 min from the terminal by free shuttle, $140-280 per night. For a real Baltimore overnight: the Sagamore Pendry Baltimore (Fells Point, waterfront boutique), the Royal Sonesta Harbor Court Baltimore (Inner Harbor), or the Four Seasons Baltimore (Harbor East, top-end). 25-30 min back to BWI by taxi or 35-40 min by MARC + shuttle.
US networks (Verizon, AT&T, T-Mobile, plus prepaid Mint Mobile, Cricket, US Mobile, Visible). EU/UK Roam-Like-At-Home does NOT extend to the US — get a Mint Mobile or US Mobile eSIM for $20-40/month before flying, or use Airalo / Holafly / GigSky. 5G covers BWI and the Baltimore-Washington corridor.
4 hours airside-to-airside: Inner Harbor in Baltimore via Light Rail ($2, 30-45 min each way) or MARC ($6, 25 min each way + free shuttle to BWI Rail Station). National Aquarium ($50, 60-90 min), Historic Ships, lunch at Phillips Seafood for a proper crab cake. Round-trip 60-90 min transit + 2-2.5 hours on-ground = 3.5-4 hours. 5-6 hours: DC via MARC to Union Station ($7, 31 min) + Metro to the Smithsonian becomes feasible. Under 4 hours: stay airside or use the BWI Trail (a 10.7-mile paved loop trail around the airport — yes, really, for runners and cyclists with a layover and gym gear).
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
📊 2026 Summary Data Table
| Feature | Current Data (2026) |
|---|---|
| IATA / ICAO | BWI / KBWI |
| Official Name | Baltimore-Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport (renamed for Thurgood Marshall in 2005) |
| Location | Anne Arundel County, MD — ~9 mi S of downtown Baltimore via I-695; ~30 mi NE of downtown DC |
| Terminal | 1 — five concourses (A, B, C, D, E); A + B exclusively Southwest |
| Currency / Border System | US dollar (USD) / CBP + ESTA — NOT Schengen, NO EES/ETIAS |
| ESTA | $21 — valid 2 years — required for Visa Waiver Program nationals (Canadians + US citizens exempt) |
| MARC Penn Line to Baltimore Penn Station | $6 — 20-35 min — free 24/7 shuttle BWI Rail Station ↔ terminal |
| MARC Penn Line to Washington Union Station | $7 — ~31 min — fastest non-driving route to DC |
| Amtrak Northeast Corridor | $15-30+ — reserved seating + Wi-Fi — same BWI Rail Station |
| MTA Baltimore Light Rail | $2 — 30-45 min direct from BWI to Camden Yards / downtown Baltimore |
| Taxi flat rate to Inner Harbor | $35 (Baltimore City regulated) — 20 min via I-695 |
| Uber / Lyft | $25-40 to Baltimore, $50-80 to downtown DC — surge significant during weather + game nights |
| Lounges | The Club BWI (Concourse D, Priority Pass), Minute Suites (Concourse D), USO (active military). NO Delta Sky Club, Admirals Club, United Club or Centurion at BWI |
| Main carriers | Southwest (70%+ traffic, Concourses A+B exclusive), American (C), Delta (D), United (D), Spirit, Frontier, Avelo, Breeze, Alaska (limited); JetBlue returning 9 July 2026 (Fort Lauderdale) |
| International carriers | British Airways (London Heathrow daily), Air Canada (Toronto), Condor (Frankfurt seasonal), Caribbean |
| BWI Trail | 10.7-mile paved loop trail around the airport — open to runners and cyclists, free |
| Free Wi-Fi | Unlimited, no registration; 5G default outside |
| Closest hotel | Hyatt Place BWI Airport, Aloft BWI, Embassy Suites BWI (all 5-10 min free shuttle) — $140-280 |



