Catania Fontanarossa Airport (CTA) — The Complete Master Guide 2026
Catania-Fontanarossa sits 5 km south of Catania centre, in the shadow of Mount Etna, and is Sicily’s busiest airport. Two terminals (A main; C used exclusively by easyJet Schengen), AMT Alibus the practical city link in 25 minutes for €4, EES live since 10 April 2026. The Etna eruption ash periodically closes runways — a uniquely Catanese travel variable. Ryanair and Wizz Air dominate; ITA Airways covers domestic; Lufthansa Group + Turkish handle the long-haul connection routings.
📍 5 km S of Catania centre
🚌 Alibus · 25 min · €4
🛂 EES Live · ETIAS Q4 2026
⚡ 2026 Quick Reference — Key Facts at a Glance
25 min · €4 direct to Catania Centrale + city centre — every 20-25 min, 05:00-24:00
15-20 min · €15-25 · door-to-door, often the better choice for short trips
Taormina / Syracuse / Etna — Etna Trasporti, AST, Interbus from CTA, €5-15
15 min Alibus + train — Trenitalia regional + Frecciargento to Italian mainland
Periodic — eruptions can close runways for hours; always check status before departure
€30-35 walk-in · Priority Pass + LoungeKey + DragonPass
A main + C easyJet-only · A handles 90%+ traffic; check boarding pass
Fully live since 10 April 2026 — biometric on first entry, fingerprint-only thereafter
🏢 1. Two Terminals: A Main + C easyJet & the Etna Reality
CTA is structured around a main terminal and a smaller secondary terminal. Terminal A handles the vast majority of flights — all of Ryanair, Wizz Air, ITA Airways, Lufthansa, KLM, Turkish Airlines, plus charter operators. Terminal C is used exclusively by easyJet for Schengen departures, opening seasonally in summer. Walking time from check-in to the furthest gate is 6-8 minutes — compact by capital-airport standards.
🛫 Terminal A — The Main Building
Layout: single check-in concourse on Level 1, security and airside on Level 2, two pier branches sharing a common departure lounge.
EES booths: in the non-Schengen arrivals zone, installed for the 10 April 2026 launch.
Airlines: Ryanair, Wizz Air, ITA Airways, Lufthansa, Swiss, Austrian, KLM, Turkish, Vueling, Aer Lingus, charter operators.
🛬 Terminal C — easyJet Schengen-Only
Used exclusively by easyJet for Schengen departures (London Gatwick + Luton, Berlin, Amsterdam, Paris CDG, plus selected European routes).
Opens seasonally — typically May through October, when easyJet Schengen volume peaks.
Connection to Terminal A: 5-minute covered walkway. Both terminals share landside check-in and arrivals.
If you’re arriving from another Schengen country (Rome, Milan, Madrid, Paris, Frankfurt, Amsterdam, Munich), there is no passport check — walk straight from the gate to baggage. EES applies only to non-Schengen arrivals: UK, US, Türkiye, the Maghreb, North Africa.
Mount Etna sits 30 km north of CTA and is Europe’s most active volcano. Eruption ash periodically closes the airport runways, particularly when wind blows from the north. The last major closure (March 2025) shut CTA for 18 hours. Always check the airport’s operational status (cataniaairport.com or Twitter/X @CTAirport) before departure, particularly during summer eruption seasons. Travel insurance with volcanic-ash cover is worth €15-30 for a Sicily trip.
Operating airlines (May 2026)
- Ryanair — by far the largest carrier at CTA. Routes to UK (Stansted, Manchester, Edinburgh), Ireland (Dublin), Italy (Rome, Milan, Bologna, Venice, Naples), Germany (Berlin, Cologne, Munich, Frankfurt), Netherlands (Eindhoven), Belgium (Brussels-Charleroi), France (Paris Beauvais, Marseille), Spain, plus extensive Mediterranean.
- Wizz Air — Eastern Europe focus: Tirana, Sofia, Bucharest, Budapest, Krakow, Wrocław, plus Western European secondary cities.
- ITA Airways — domestic Italy: Rome FCO daily, Milan, Bologna, Venice, Verona. Onward to mainland connections.
- easyJet — UK and Mediterranean, Terminal C in summer.
- Lufthansa — daily Frankfurt + Munich for Star Alliance onward.
- Swiss, Austrian — daily Zurich, Vienna.
- KLM — daily Amsterdam.
- Turkish Airlines — daily IST main, with onward Asian network.
- Aer Lingus — Dublin connections.
- Vueling — Spanish budget routes.
🛂 2. EES Live, ETIAS Pending & the Schengen Reality
Italy has been a Schengen founder since 1990 and the EES (EU Entry/Exit System) launched across the bloc on 10 April 2026, with CTA’s non-Schengen border zone retrofitted with biometric booths in Q1 2026. CTA volumes are moderate by Italian standards — EES adds 10-15 minutes during peak UK summer arrivals, less off-season.
EES — Fully Operational Since 10 April 2026
All non-EU passport holders are now biometrically registered on first entry: 4-finger fingerprint scan + facial photo. UK Saturday morning waves are the worst-queue scenario — Ryanair runs dense schedules.
ETIAS — Coming Q4 2026
The €7 pre-travel authorisation for visa-exempt nationals (UK, US, Canada, Australia, Japan, Brazil, etc.) launches in autumn 2026. Apply on the official EU portal — beware €70 third-party scam sites.
VAT Tax-Free Refund
Non-EU residents buying €70+ at participating shops: get the Tax-Free stamp at the CTA Customs counter (Terminal A landside) before security, then process refund via Global Blue / Planet kiosks airside.
Who needs what for short visits
| Passport | Visa needed | EES applies? | ETIAS from Q4 2026? |
|---|---|---|---|
| EU / EEA / Swiss | No — freedom of movement | No | No |
| UK | No (90/180 visa-free) | Yes — biometric capture | Yes |
| USA / Canada / Australia / NZ | No (90/180 visa-free) | Yes — biometric capture | Yes |
| Brazil / Mexico / Argentina / Israel / Japan / South Korea | No (90/180 visa-free) | Yes — biometric capture | Yes |
| Tunisia / Morocco / India / China / Russia / South Africa | Yes — Schengen visa required | Yes — biometric capture (linked to visa) | No (covered by visa) |
If you’ve already spent 60+ days in Schengen countries in the past 180, EES will flag this on entry at CTA. The system is much harder to game than the old paper-stamp regime. Sicily attracts a large UK retiree population on long-stay visits, so the 90/180 rule is now actively enforced via EES — overstays generate automatic alerts.
🚌 3. AMT Alibus, Direct Resort Buses, Bolt & Train Pivot
CTA has no rail link — Catania’s railway network runs through Catania Centrale 5 km away. The AMT Alibus is the dominant public-transport option, supplemented by direct private buses to Sicilian resort destinations and the Bolt/Uber ride-hail.
⭐ AMT Alibus — The Default
- Direct from CTA to Catania Centrale (rail station) and city centre — 25 minutes.
- Runs every 20-25 minutes, 05:00-24:00 daily.
- Single ticket €4 — buy at the airport ticket machine, on the bus from the driver, or via the AMT app. Some Ryanair flights distribute pre-printed tickets.
- Stops include Catania Centrale (rail station), Piazza Stesicoro, and Piazza Borsellino in the city centre.
- Free WiFi onboard. Comfortable, air-conditioned.
🚐 Direct Buses to Sicily Resorts
Most CTA travellers don’t stay in Catania itself — they’re heading to Taormina, Syracuse, or the Etna villages. Direct buses run from CTA to most major Sicilian destinations.
- CTA → Taormina: 1h15m via Etna Trasporti, €8-12, hourly during day.
- CTA → Syracuse (Siracusa): 1h30m via AST or Interbus, €6-10, several daily.
- CTA → Nicolosi (Etna gateway): 1h via AST, €5-8 — for hiking access to the volcano.
- CTA → Modica + Ragusa: 2h-2h30m, €10-15, 4-5 daily.
- Tickets at the AST/Interbus desk inside CTA arrivals, or via Omio/GetByBus apps.
🚕 Bolt / Uber / FreeNow / Taxi
- Bolt dominates Italian ride-hail. Pickup at the dedicated zone outside arrivals. €15-25 to Catania centre, 15-20 min depending on traffic.
- Uber — limited supply, often more expensive than Bolt in Sicily.
- Official taxi rank — €25-30 to Catania centre, metered.
- Avoid the unmarked drivers in arrivals offering “fixed price” rides — illegal and frequently 2x the proper rate.
🚆 Train Pivot via Catania Centrale
Catania Centrale (15 minutes’ Alibus ride from CTA) connects to the Sicilian rail network. Trenitalia runs regional services to Syracuse, Messina, Taormina-Giardini, Agrigento, Palermo — though Sicilian regional rail is slower than the bus alternatives. The Frecciargento high-speed service from Messina to Rome via the train ferry crosses Strait of Messina for €60-100 in 8h45m — useful only for travellers wanting train transit to mainland Italy without the flight.
🛋️ 4. VIP Lounge: CTA’s Single Premium Option
CTA has one third-party lounge — the VIP Lounge, in Terminal A airside. It’s the only Priority Pass option in eastern Sicily.
🛋️ VIP Lounge — €30-35 Walk-in / Priority Pass
Location: Terminal A airside, after security, on the upper level.
Walk-in: €30-35 / 3 hours.
Priority Pass / LoungeKey / DragonPass: all accepted with standard partner conditions.
What’s inside: Sicilian breakfast offerings (cornetti, granita, ricotta cannoli mini-portions), espresso bar with proper Italian pulls, full open bar (Sicilian wines, Marsala, Limoncello, Etna craft beer), Wi-Fi.
✈️ Star Alliance + Wizz Priority
Star Alliance Gold (Lufthansa, Swiss, Austrian, Turkish): free VIP Lounge access with boarding pass.
Wizz Priority Boarding: €8-15 add-on at booking — front-of-queue boarding lane only, not lounge access.
Ryanair Plus: €18-30 fare bundle includes priority boarding but NOT lounge access at CTA.
By European-airport-lounge standards, the VIP Lounge is mid-tier — but the food and drink offer is genuinely Sicilian (granita and brioche at breakfast is the give-away), and the runway view onto Etna in the distance is uniquely Catanese. Worth the Priority Pass swipe; worth €30-35 walk-in if you have a 3+ hour wait or arrive on a delayed Ryanair flight.
🍝 5. Sicilian Food: Arancini, Pasta alla Norma, Cannoli & Marsala
Sicily’s food is distinctly Mediterranean-meets-Arabic — citrus, almonds, eggplant, durum wheat, and ricotta defining a cuisine quite different from mainland Italian. The CTA airside food court is competent — better than most non-hub Italian airports — and properly Sicilian. The real Catanese eating happens 20 minutes away in Piazza Università or the Pescheria fish market, but the airport offers a credible Sicilian snapshot.
Football-sized fried rice balls stuffed with ragù (meat-and-tomato), butter (al burro), or spinach — the iconic Sicilian street food. Available at the airside Caffé Catania or Bar Etna for €3-5 each. Eat them at room temperature, not piping hot — that’s the proper Sicilian way. The Catanese cone-shape arancini distinguishes from Palermo’s round version.
Pasta with fried eggplant, tomato sauce, fresh basil, and ricotta salata (salted ricotta). Available at the airside food court for €12-16. Named after Bellini’s opera “Norma” — Catania’s pride. The aubergine + ricotta combination is what makes it distinctly Catanese rather than generic Italian.
Crushed-ice fruit slush (lemon, almond, coffee, mulberry, pistachio) served with a soft brioche. €4-7 at the airport café. The Sicilian breakfast tradition — eat the brioche dipped in the granita, drink the rest. Distinctive to summer mornings on the island; CTA stocks year-round.
Crisp tube pastries filled with sweet ricotta + chocolate chips + candied orange (cannoli, €3-5 each); spongecake-and-marzipan cassata (€6-12 a slice). Available at the airport pastry counter — fresh daily. The cannoli are filled to order, not pre-filled at proper Sicilian pasticcerie; check your CTA branch is doing it right.
Duty-Free — What’s Worth Buying
🍷 Etna Wine
€15-50 per 750ml. Etna DOC wines (Etna Rosso, Etna Bianco) from volcanic-soil vineyards on the slopes of the volcano. Distinct, mineral-driven, often compared to Burgundy. Producers: Pietradolce, Tenuta delle Terre Nere, Frank Cornelissen, Planeta. Skip the supermarket “Sicilian wine” for the proper Etna DOC range.
🥃 Marsala
€15-50 per 750ml. Sicily’s fortified wine from Marsala on the western coast. Vergine Stravecchio (10+ year aged) is the dry connoisseur version at €30-60; Florio and Pellegrino are the export-quality producers. Distinctive nutty oxidative character.
🍋 Limoncello + Pistachio Cream
€10-25 per 700ml. Sicilian Limoncello uses local lemons (Femminello di Siracusa, Interdonato di Messina). Bronte pistachio cream at €12-20 per jar from Etna’s volcanic-slope groves — the world’s best pistachios according to many chefs.
🌶️ Sicilian Olive Oil
€12-30 per 500ml. Distinct intensely-fruity oil from the Nocellara del Belice and Tonda Iblea varieties. Frantoi Cutrera and Olio Verde are the standout producers. Sicilian olive oil is more peppery and grassy than Tuscan.
Skip the airport “Sicily souvenir” Trinacria flag merchandise — the Catania street markets have far better prices. Skip the supermarket-grade Marsala that sells for €5-8 — buy proper Vergine or Riserva. Skip the export “cannoli kit” packages — fresh ricotta-filled cannoli don’t survive the flight. Skip the airport branded olive oil unless properly sourced.
💡 6. Insider: Etna, Taormina, Syracuse & the Eruption Risk
Etna sits 30 km north of CTA — Europe’s most active volcano (3,329m). Direct AST bus from CTA (and Catania centre) to Nicolosi village + Rifugio Sapienza visitor centre takes ~1h15m, €5-8. From Rifugio Sapienza, the cable car (Funivia dell’Etna) reaches 2,500m for €30 (or 4WD Jeep tours to 3,000m for €60-90). Plan for cold layers even in summer — temperatures drop 25-30°C from sea level. Active eruption viewings are managed via the local volcano observatory; check before booking summit hikes.
Taormina is 1h15m by direct bus from CTA for €8-12 (Etna Trasporti). The Greek-Roman theatre with views of Etna, the Corso Umberto pedestrian street, the cliffside hotel terraces. The 2025 White Lotus Season 2 effect has pushed prices up 30-50% from pre-show levels — book restaurants and hotels well ahead. Day-trip from CTA is workable: 09:00 bus, lunch on Corso Umberto, theatre visit, 18:00 bus back.
Syracuse is 1h30m by direct bus from CTA for €6-10 (AST or Interbus). The UNESCO-listed Ortygia island old town, the Greek archaeological park (Neapolis), the Cathedral built into the Temple of Athena. For Greek-Sicilian heritage, Syracuse is more concentrated than the Taormina experience and generally less crowded with non-Italian tourists.
Hotel options near CTA: the Romano Palace Luxury Hotel is 5 min from the airport (€110-160/night). For an early flight, a hotel beats sleeping in CTA — the airport doesn’t have great quiet zones and the food court closes 23:00. If you have 6+ hours overnight, take Alibus to Catania Centrale and stay at NH Catania Centro or Excelsior Grand Hotel (€80-130) — better sleep, better breakfast, much better walking access to dinner.
EU/EEA visitors: your home plan covers Italy free under Roam Like At Home — do nothing.
UK/US/non-EU visitors: TIM, Vodafone, and WindTre kiosks landside in arrivals. €15-25 for 30 GB EU-roaming plan, valid 30 days. Bring passport. Tourist eSIM 10 GB / 28 days runs €15-25 — Airalo or Holafly before landing for €5-10 less.
5G: default across Catania and the airport; spotty in rural Sicily.
If you have a 6+ hour CTA layover, the Etna wine country is 45 minutes north of the airport by car. The volcanic-soil vineyards of Castiglione di Sicilia, Linguaglossa, and Randazzo are home to Pietradolce, Tenuta delle Terre Nere, Frank Cornelissen — boutique producers that have made Etna DOC one of Italy’s most exciting wine appellations. Cellar visits €15-30 per person with tasting. Better than a third VIP Lounge cappuccino if you’re wine-curious.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
📊 2026 Summary Data Table
| Feature | Current Data (2026) |
|---|---|
| IATA / ICAO Code | CTA / LICC |
| Official Name | Catania-Fontanarossa Vincenzo Bellini Airport |
| Distance to Catania centre | 5 km — Alibus in 25 min for €4; Bolt 15-20 min for €15-25 |
| Terminals | Two — Terminal A (main, all carriers) + Terminal C (easyJet Schengen-only, seasonal) |
| Annual Passengers | ~10M (2024); Sicily’s busiest airport |
| Currency / Schengen / EES | EUR / Schengen since 1990 / EES live since 10 April 2026 |
| AMT Alibus to centre | €4 — 25 min — every 20-25 min, 05:00-24:00 |
| Direct Resort Buses | Taormina 1h15m €8-12 / Syracuse 1h30m €6-10 / Nicolosi (Etna) 1h €5-8 |
| Bolt to centre | €15-25 — 15-20 min |
| VIP Lounge | €30-35 walk-in / 3h — Priority Pass + LoungeKey + DragonPass |
| Main Carriers | Ryanair (largest), Wizz Air, ITA Airways, easyJet, Lufthansa, Swiss, Austrian, KLM, Turkish |
| Direct Long-Haul | No direct US/Asia/Australia — connect via Lufthansa (FRA/MUC), KLM (AMS), Turkish (IST) |
| Etna Eruption Risk | Periodic ash closures during summer eruption seasons; check operational status before departure |
| Free WiFi | Unlimited, no registration; 30-50 Mbps reliably; 5G default outside |
| Closest Hotel | Romano Palace Luxury Hotel (5-min from airport), €110-160/night |



