Khartoum International Airport (KRT) — The Complete Master Guide 2026
Khartoum International is not a normal airport in 2026, and a guide that pretended otherwise would be useless. It sat closed to scheduled traffic for almost three years — from April 2023, when Sudan’s civil war reached the runway, until February 2026 — and it reopened into a country that the United States, the United Kingdom and France all tell their citizens not to enter. The terminal handles a handful of flights a day, took drone fire as recently as May 2026, and operates with no functioning Western embassy in the city to help you if something goes wrong. This guide covers what is actually verified to be running, the border rules that apply, and the honest answer to whether a layover here makes any sense. The short version of that last point is no. The longer version is below.
⚡ 2026 Quick Reference — Key Facts at a Glance
Khartoum International Airport (KRT / HSSK)
Inside the city, roughly 4 km from central Khartoum (Blue/White Nile confluence)
Reopened to scheduled flights Feb 2026 after ~3-year war closure; ~4 flights/day capacity
US Level 4 “Do Not Travel” · UK FCDO advises against all travel · France MEAE formally advises against
Sudanese pound (SDG). ≈ 600 SDG to US$1, ≈ 700 SDG to €1 (May 2026)
~4 km; taxi / pre-arranged transfer the only sensible option
Sudan visa required (e-visa or embassy); visa-on-arrival at Khartoum only if arranged in advance
Sudan Airways, Kuwait Airways, Badr Airlines, Tarco Aviation
No verified post-reopening lounge operation — assume none
Certificate required only if arriving from a yellow-fever-endemic country
📋 Table of Contents
- 🛬 1. The Reopening: What Is Actually Running in 2026
- 🛑 2. The Travel Advisory — Read This Before Anything Else
- 🛂 3. Sudan’s Border Rules: Visa, Yellow Fever & the Khartoum-Only Caveat
- 🚕 4. Getting From the Airport to the City
- 🛋️ 5. Lounges: What the Honest Answer Is
- 🌍 6. Layover Reality: The Advisory Is the Verdict
- 🔧 Practical Notes — Connectivity, Currency, Border
- ❓ Frequently Asked Questions
- 📊 2026 Summary Data Table
🛬 1. The Reopening: What Is Actually Running in 2026
Khartoum International closed on 15 April 2023, in the opening days of the war between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF). The airport sat on a front line; it was fought over, struck repeatedly, and left without civilian service for almost three years. The SAF regained control of greater Khartoum in 2025, and engineers spent months repairing the damage before any aircraft returned.
The reopening came in dated stages, and those dates are the spine of this guide:
- 1 February 2026 — the first scheduled flight since the war landed. Sudan Airways flew it, a domestic connection from Port Sudan carrying about 160 passengers. (One unannounced Badr Airlines flight had touched down in October 2025, but nothing scheduled followed it until February.) Tickets on that first Sudan Airways service started around US$50. Airport officials described the field as ready for up to four scheduled flights a day — a deliberately modest number that tells you the operation’s scale.
- 28 April 2026 — the first direct international commercial flight in three years arrived, a Kuwait Airways service bringing roughly 300 Sudanese nationals home from Kuwait.
- 4 May 2026 — a long-range drone attack struck several sites across Khartoum State, including the airport. Two missiles landed in the airport’s eastern section near Obeid Khatim Street, causing what was described as minor damage to an administrative building. Sudanese authorities blamed the RSF and accused outside states of enabling the strike. Airspace over Sudan was briefly closed to international traffic, then reopened within days; Badr Airlines and Tarco Aviation resumed flights shortly afterward.
So the picture in 2026 is a working but fragile airport: a short list of carriers, a few flights a day, and an operating environment where a strike can suspend service for a stretch with little notice. The carriers confirmed flying here since the reopening are Sudan Airways, Kuwait Airways, Badr Airlines and Tarco Aviation. Anything beyond that list is not confirmed, and schedules should be treated as provisional rather than fixed — check directly with the carrier close to any travel date.
🛑 2. The Travel Advisory — Read This Before Anything Else
Three governments whose advisories most readers of this guide will fall under all place Sudan at their highest warning tier, and they did so as recently as this spring:
- United States — Level 4, “Do Not Travel.” The State Department renewed the Sudan advisory on 15 May 2026, citing armed conflict, crime, kidnapping, terrorism, civil unrest, landmines and health risks. The US Embassy in Khartoum suspended operations in April 2023 and has not reopened, so the US government cannot provide routine or emergency consular services inside Sudan.
- United Kingdom — FCDO advises against all travel to Sudan because of the ongoing conflict. The British Embassy in Khartoum is closed, there are no British consular staff in the country, and the FCDO states plainly that its ability to help is severely limited.
- France — MEAE (France Diplomatie) formally advises against travel to the whole of Sudanese territory, in an advisory last updated 12 March 2026, with the Darfur states, Kordofan and the border zones flagged as the most dangerous.
This is not boilerplate. Greater Khartoum still has fighting and aerial attacks; power cuts run 12–18 hours a day across the capital and water shortages are widespread. The practical consequence for any traveller is that if you are robbed, injured, detained or caught in an attack, there is no embassy in the city to call. That absence shapes every other section of this guide.
🛂 3. Sudan’s Border Rules: Visa, Yellow Fever & the Khartoum-Only Caveat
These are Sudan’s own national entry rules — there is no regional free-movement bloc that lets a foreign visitor skip a visa here, and no European entry system of any kind applies.
Visa
Nearly every foreign visitor needs a Sudanese visa arranged before arrival. The two routes are an e-visa / electronic travel authorisation through the Sudanese authorities, or a sticker visa from a Sudanese embassy or consulate. A visa on arrival is technically possible, but only at Khartoum airport and only if it is arranged in advance — it is not a turn-up-and-pay counter, and it is not available at land borders at all. Carry printed copies of your visa or authorisation; do not rely on showing it on a phone. Passports need at least six months’ validity.
The honest framing: visa mechanics matter far less here than the advisory in Section 2. A visa gets you through the immigration desk; it does nothing about the reason three governments tell you not to be standing at that desk.
Yellow fever
This is the precision point worth getting right, because the lazy assumption (“it’s Africa, you need the jab”) is wrong here. Sudan requires a yellow-fever vaccination certificate only if you are arriving from a country with risk of yellow-fever transmission (or, by the usual rule, transiting such a country for more than 12 hours). It is not a blanket requirement for every arrival. If your itinerary passes through an endemic country, the International Certificate of Vaccination or Prophylaxis is checked at the health desk before passport control; a certificate, once issued, is valid for life under current WHO rules. Confirm your own routing against the current requirement before you travel, since these lists are revised periodically.
Documents and cash
Arrive with printed visa or authorisation, any required vaccination certificate, and enough hard currency for your first days. ATMs are unreliable for foreign cards, and the cash economy (see Section 7) makes US dollars or euros in cash the practical reserve.
🚕 4. Getting From the Airport to the City
Khartoum International has an unusual geography for an international airport: it sits inside the city, roughly 4 km from the centre, near the confluence of the Blue and White Nile. By distance, the centre is a 15-minute drive in clear conditions.
That closeness is the only easy thing about the trip, and the closeness is also pre-war infrastructure that should not be over-trusted. Before 2023 the standard advice was a short taxi ride, with a 10-minute walk to Africa Street to flag a shared minibus as the cheap alternative. Those minibuses and that street still exist as geography, but in 2026 the sensible — and realistically the only advisable — option is a taxi or a private transfer arranged in advance, ideally booked through your carrier or whatever accommodation has confirmed you. A pre-arranged car removes the negotiation and the exposure that come with sorting transport on the spot in a conflict-affected capital.
The trap to name is the unsolicited driver: anyone approaching you inside or just outside the terminal offering a ride is the standard overcharge-and-uncertainty risk at any airport, and it carries more weight here because there is no consular backstop if a ride goes wrong. Agree the fare and the destination before you get in, in writing if you can. A specific fare in Sudanese pounds is not quoted in this guide because a reliable current figure could not be verified, and a confident-but-wrong number would be worse than none — settle it with your driver against the day’s cash rate.
🛋️ 5. Lounges: What the Honest Answer Is
There is no verified, currently-operating lounge at Khartoum International in 2026, and no confirmed Priority Pass, LoungeKey or DragonPass acceptance at the airport since the reopening. Whatever lounge facilities existed before April 2023 cannot be assumed to have survived the fighting or to be running on a four-flights-a-day operation, and no reliable post-reopening source confirms one is open. Plan for a bare-bones terminal: assume no lounge access, and do not buy a lounge-pass product expecting to use it here. If that changes as the airport rebuilds, it will be worth re-checking — but as of this guide, the answer is none.
🌍 6. Layover Reality: The Advisory Is the Verdict
For most airports this section weighs distance against layover length. Here, distance is irrelevant, because the verdict is set by the advisory, not the map. The United States, the United Kingdom and France all tell their citizens not to travel to Sudan at all. A transiting traveller leaving the terminal to look at the city is doing exactly what those advisories warn against, in a place with no embassy to help if it goes wrong.
Geographically, Khartoum sits where the Blue Nile and the White Nile meet to form the main Nile — the confluence is the city’s defining feature, and in peacetime the riverfront, the national museum and the markets were the obvious sights. None of that is the point in 2026. With active conflict in and around greater Khartoum, daily power and water shortages, and the May 2026 strike on the airport itself, leaving secured airport grounds to sightsee is not appropriate for a transiting passenger, regardless of how many hours the connection runs. If you are passing through KRT on a confirmed itinerary, the realistic plan is to stay within the airport and your onward flight. This guide will not manufacture a half-day excursion that the security reality does not support.
🔧 Practical Notes — Connectivity, Currency, Border
Currency. The Sudanese pound (SDG) is the local money, and it is weak: roughly 600 SDG to the US dollar and about 700 SDG to the euro as of May 2026. Years of war have pushed Sudan into a heavily cash-based economy, and parallel (street) exchange rates can diverge from the official one. Foreign cards are unreliable, and ATMs in the terminal may refuse them. Bring cash in US dollars or euros, change only what you need, and be aware that bureau-de-change and informal exchange both carry a markup — agree the rate before you hand anything over.
Connectivity. Do not assume working Wi-Fi, reliable mobile data or steady power. The capital runs on 12–18 hours of daily outages, and the airport’s connectivity on a skeleton operation is not something to count on. Sort any communications you need — a roaming plan, offline maps, contact details for your carrier — before you arrive, not after.
Border. Re-read Sections 2 and 3 together before any travel. The visa is the easy part; the advisory is the part that should drive the decision. There is no European entry scheme here, no regional visa-waiver bloc that helps a foreign visitor, and no consular safety net from the US, UK or France inside the country.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
📊 2026 Summary Data Table
| Item | Detail |
|---|---|
| IATA / ICAO | KRT / HSSK |
| Distance to centre | ~4 km; airport sits inside the city |
| Operational status | Reopened Feb 2026 after ~3-year war closure; ~4 flights/day |
| Reopening timeline | 1 Feb 2026 first scheduled (domestic) · 28 Apr 2026 first international (Kuwait Airways) · 4 May 2026 drone strike, brief airspace closure, resumed |
| Travel advisory | US Level 4 (renewed 15 May 2026) · UK FCDO against all travel · France MEAE formally advises against (12 Mar 2026) |
| Consular support | US & UK embassies in Khartoum closed; no routine consular help in-country |
| Visa | Required; e-visa or embassy; VOA at Khartoum only if pre-arranged; none at land borders |
| Yellow fever | Certificate only if arriving from an endemic country |
| Currency | SDG; ≈ 600/US$1, ≈ 700/€1 (May 2026); heavily cash-based |
| Payment | Cash (USD/EUR) the reliable reserve; foreign cards and ATMs unreliable |
| Airport transfer | Taxi / pre-arranged transfer; ~15 min drive; decline unsolicited drivers |
| Confirmed carriers | Sudan Airways, Kuwait Airways, Badr Airlines, Tarco Aviation |
| Lounges | None verified operating since reopening |
| Layover verdict | Do not leave the airport; advisory overrides distance |



