Stockholm Arlanda Airport (ARN) — The Complete Master Guide 2026
Four terminals, the 18-minute Arlanda Express, the 92 SEK Pendeltåg back-channel, the SAS-to-SkyTeam shake-up, the new T5 CT scanners, the airport taxi scam to never fall for, and Northern-Lights season survival.
⚡ 2026 Quick Reference — Key Facts at a Glance
340 SEK single, 18 min to Stockholm Central · trains every 10–15 min peak
~92 SEK SL ticket + 147 SEK Arlanda station fee — ~40 min to T-Centralen
119 SEK single — ~45 min to Cityterminalen, every 10–15 min
500–700 SEK (Bolt typically cheaper, both pre-bookable)
~₿449 SEK (Priority Pass / LoungeKey eligible)
449 SEK or 4,300 EuroBonus pts
5–10 min indoors · T5 reached by Sky City passage
2.5 h · 3 h non-Schengen winter (Nov–Feb de-icing)
🏢 1. Terminal Architecture: T2/T3/T4 vs T5
ARN runs four terminals across two physically separate complexes. T2/T3/T4 share the southern building and one connected airside; T5 is the SAS-anchored northern building with its own security and arrivals hall. They are linked by the indoor Sky City passage and a free shuttle. Get the terminal right at the booking stage — wandering between T2 and T5 with luggage takes 12–15 minutes.
🛫 T5 — SAS & SkyTeam Hub (Flagship)
Airlines: SAS (all flights, intra-Schengen + long-haul to North America/Asia), KLM, Air France, Delta, ITA Airways, Aegean, Lufthansa-group code-shares, plus most North American carriers.
Vibe: The widest commercial offering and the longest concourse — Pearl Lounge near Gate C37, SAS Lounge + SAS Gold Lounge airside, the best food selection. Arlanda Express stops directly under Sky City for T5.
🛬 T2 / T3 / T4 — Intra-Schengen + Long-Haul Non-EU
T2: non-Schengen long-haul + select intra-Schengen (Norwegian long-haul, Emirates, Qatar, Turkish, Ethiopian, Singapore intra-EU). T3: small commuter terminal, currently regional. T4: intra-Schengen leisure carriers (Norwegian, Ryanair, easyJet, Wizz, BRA).
Vibe: Tighter footprint than T5. T2 long-haul gates have separate pre-flight controls — allow extra time for non-EU passport queues during the 22:00–01:00 wave.
A free Swedavia shuttle runs every 10–15 minutes in a continuous loop between all four terminals. Pickup signage is well-marked at the kerbside. Walking via Sky City is also possible — roughly 12 minutes end-to-end T2 ↔ T5, fully indoors and step-free.
🛂 2. Schengen, ETIAS & New T5 CT Security
Sweden is in the Schengen Area, so intra-EU departures and arrivals avoid passport control entirely. For non-Schengen travellers (UK, US, India, Africa, Asia), passport queues at T2/T5 are typically 15–35 minutes — but two changes have meaningfully reshaped 2026 operations.
T5 CT Scanners — Live
Swedavia signed with Nuctech in 2024 to deploy 3D CT scanners across T5 security lanes, and rollout is now in production for 2026 travellers. Liquids (still capped at 100 ml per container) and electronics can stay inside the bag at the new T5 lanes. T2/T4 still run the older X-ray machines — read the lane signage before unpacking.
ETIAS Activation Q4 2026
The European Travel Information and Authorisation System (ETIAS) is scheduled to activate in Q4 2026 for visa-exempt non-EU passengers (US, UK, Canada, Australia, Brazil, etc.). It is an online pre-authorisation, not a visa — €7, valid 3 years. Apply 96 hours before departure. Verify ETIAS rollout date on the official European Commission site before travel — start dates have shifted twice already.
Automated EU Border Gates
EU/EEA/Swiss passport holders aged 12+ can use the automated e-gates at T2 and T5 — biometric chip read in under 20 seconds. Non-EU passport holders cannot use the e-gates yet (EES launches in 2026 with the entry/exit fingerprint system, which will eventually open them up).
From late 2026, every non-EU traveller’s arrival and departure at Sweden will be biometric — fingerprint and face capture replace the passport stamp. First arrival takes 5–10 minutes longer; subsequent arrivals are significantly faster because the database recognises you. ARN T2/T5 are among the first wave of Swedavia airports to deploy the kiosks.
🚆 3. Transport: Express, Pendeltåg or Bolt?
There’s no single right answer here — it depends on how much you value 22 minutes of saved time and how much luggage you have. The Arlanda Express is glamorous and fast; the Pendeltåg is roughly 60% cheaper; Flygbussarna is the budget shuttle option; Bolt and Uber both work and are pre-bookable.
⭐ Arlanda Express — Fast & Frequent
Direct non-stop train, 18 minutes to Stockholm Central, runs every 10–15 minutes in peak hours. Two stations at the airport: Arlanda South (T2/T3/T4) and Arlanda North (T5). No ticket inspection on board — buy at machines or via the app before boarding.
340 SEK
420 SEK (Lör/Sön deal)
Free (under 17, with adult)
~04:20 – 01:05 daily
🚉 SL Pendeltåg (Line 40) — The Smart-Local Option
The commuter train is roughly 60% cheaper than the Express but takes ~40 minutes to T-Centralen and connects directly into Stockholm’s SL public-transit network at no extra cost. Operated by SJ AB since March 2024 under contract with SL.
🚌 Flygbussarna — Budget Coach
Express coach service to Cityterminalen (next to Stockholm Central). 119 SEK one-way, ~45 minutes. Departures every 10–15 minutes in peak. Buy in the app for ~20 SEK off, or at the kerbside kiosk. Reliable but slower than rail when traffic congests on the E4.
📱 Bolt & Uber (Rideshare)
Both apps are widely used in Stockholm. Bolt is typically 10–25% cheaper than Uber for the airport run, and both support scheduled pickups up to 72 hours in advance. Pickup zone is the marked rideshare bay outside Arrivals — not the immediate kerbside (where the unofficial taxi hustlers wait).
Sweden’s taxi market is fully deregulated — drivers can charge whatever they print on the yellow window decal, and there are no maximum fares. At ARN this has spawned a notorious tourist trap: men in plain dark suits with unmarked black Mercedes V-class vans, soliciting fares inside the arrivals hall. These are not taxis. They have no meter, no airport ID, and quote 2,000–4,000 SEK for the city run (six times the going rate). Walk past them and head to the official taxi rank, or take rail/Bolt instead. If you do use a kerbside taxi, read the yellow price decal first — Taxi Stockholm, Taxi 020, and Taxi Kurir are the three reputable operators with capped airport fares (~675 SEK to City).
🛋️ 4. Lounges: SAS-to-SkyTeam & The Pearl Network
The lounge map at ARN was rewritten by two events in 2024–2025: SAS’s alliance switch from Star to SkyTeam (effective 1 September 2024), and the closure of the old Pearl Lounge T5 near Gate E1 on 31 March 2025. Both changes mean older guides are out of date — here’s the 2026 reality.
✨ SAS Gold Lounge (T5 airside, after security)
Not for saletier-only access
SAS EuroBonus Diamond/Gold, SkyTeam Elite Plus, SAS Business long-haul
Aligned with SAS departures (~04:30 – 22:30)
Quiet zone with proper recliners + tarmac view
💎 SAS Lounge (T5 airside)
Open to SAS Plus / Business passengers and walk-in. Walk-in 449 SEK or 4,300 EuroBonus points. Hot buffet, decent coffee, narrower than the Gold Lounge but rarely crowded outside the morning rush.
🦪 Pearl Lounge T5 (near Gate C37, post-March 2025)
Operated by Menzies, accepts Priority Pass / LoungeKey / DragonPass. Note the new location near Gate C37 — the old E1 lounge closed permanently on 31 March 2025. Buffet and bar; tighter but functional.
🦪 Pearl Lounge T2 (non-Schengen long-haul)
The right pick for non-EU long-haul departures (Emirates, Qatar, Turkish, Ethiopian). Priority Pass / LoungeKey accepted. Walk-in approximately 449 SEK / €40, but availability is tighter during the 22:00–01:00 long-haul wave.
Older guides direct you to the Pearl Lounge near Gate E1 in T5 — that lounge closed on 31 March 2025. The replacement is at Gate C37, an 8-minute walk away. If you printed an itinerary from a 2023 guidebook, walk further than you expect.
☕ 5. Food & Shopping: Kanelbulle, Köttbullar & Designtorget
If you eat one thing at ARN, eat a kanelbulle — Sweden’s cardamom-laced cinnamon bun, the cornerstone of the national fika ritual. The bake-shop quality at the airport is genuinely good: Nordic Kitchen serves a properly sticky, pearl-sugar-crusted version, and the Fika café in T4 near Gate 38 is the reliable in-Schengen pick. Skip the airport Starbucks — you’re in Sweden for a few hours, drink the cardamom-laced filter coffee that fika is built around.
For Swedish meatballs (köttbullar) with brown gravy, mashed potato, lingonberry jam and pickled cucumber, head to the airside restaurants in T5 — the SAS Restaurant and Stockholm Bar & Bistro both serve a faithful version. Avoid the IKEA-style food court versions; what you want is the proper beef-pork-allspice-and-white-pepper recipe served with an actual gravy reduction.
In Terminal 5, Designtorget (literally “Design Square”) curates a tight selection of independent Swedish designer goods — minimalist textiles, ceramics, kitchen tools, kids’ toys. Prices match Stockholm city rates rather than airport-premium rates, and most products are genuinely manufactured in Sweden. Better gifts than the generic airport “Sweden” tourist tat in arrivals.
💡 6. Insider Tips: Winter Ops, Taxi Scam & Northern Lights
Stockholm winters routinely drop below −10 °C with overnight snow accumulation, and every aircraft on a sub-zero day requires a de-icing pass before pushback. The de-icing pads at ARN can queue 6–12 aircraft deep at peak (07:00–09:00 and 17:00–19:00), adding 20–60 minutes to a scheduled departure. For November–March flights, build a 1-hour traffic buffer on your inbound transport and pack the connection at the destination with at least 90 minutes of layover. The Pendeltåg is unaffected by snow chaos on the E4 highway — strongly preferred when blizzards are forecast.
ARN sees a notable aurora-tourism surge from Asia from September to March, with Japan, Korea, Singapore and India return-leg passengers all packing the T2/T5 long-haul wave. Expect fuller security queues, longer immigration lines, and more crowded lounges from 22:00 to 01:00 in the high winter months. Plan an extra 30 minutes of margin during these months even if you’re Schengen-departing.
Unlike Mumbai or Bangkok, Stockholm tap water is among the best in the world — it comes from Lake Mälaren, lightly mineralised and delicious. Refill your bottle at any airside washroom tap, drinking fountain, or restaurant water tap. Don’t pay 35–50 SEK for sealed bottled water; the tap version is genuinely better.
Sweden consistently ranks among the safest countries in the world for women travelling alone, and the airport reflects that. Arlanda Express runs until 01:05 and Pendeltåg until midnight — both are CCTV-monitored end-to-end. Bolt and Uber are vetted-driver platforms with in-app emergency buttons. The one risk is the unmarked-Mercedes scam taxi (see the transport section) — choose any rail or app-based ride over a kerbside hustler, day or night.
Sweden is one of the most cashless societies on the planet — many ARN restaurants, lounges, and shops do not accept cash at all. Bring a contactless Visa or Mastercard; American Express works most places but not all. Expect Swish as the dominant local payment method, but it requires a Swedish bank account (foreign visitors should plan around it). For onward city use, Bolt/Uber are app-pay; SL transit is contactless tap-on-board on the Pendeltåg.
Both ETIAS pre-authorisation (€7, online, 96-hour lead time) and the EES biometric Entry/Exit System activate during Q4 2026. Visa-exempt non-EU passport holders (US, UK, Canada, Australia, Brazil, Japan, etc.) must have ETIAS approval before they fly. EES will add 5–10 minutes on first arrival as fingerprint and face capture replace the passport stamp. Both rollouts have slipped twice — verify the live status on the official European Commission site shortly before travel.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
📊 2026 Summary Data Table
| Feature | Current Data (2026) |
|---|---|
| IATA Code | ARN |
| Terminals | T2 (non-Schengen) · T3 (regional) · T4 (intra-Schengen LCC) · T5 (SAS / SkyTeam hub). Free inter-terminal shuttle every 10–15 min. |
| Primary Currency | Swedish Krona (SEK / kr) — cashless preferred; cards/Apple Pay accepted, cash refused at many vendors |
| Arlanda Express | 340 SEK single, 18 min, every 10–15 min peak; Lör/Sön weekend deal 420 SEK for 2 adults; children free |
| SL Pendeltåg (Line 40) | ~239 SEK total to T-Centralen (92 SEK SL + 147 SEK Arlanda fee), ~40 min, free transfer to Stockholm metro/bus |
| Flygbussarna Coach | 119 SEK single, ~45 min to Cityterminalen, every 10–15 min |
| Bolt / Uber to City | 500–700 SEK; Bolt typically cheaper; both pre-bookable up to 72 hours in advance |
| SAS Lounge Walk-in | 449 SEK or 4,300 EuroBonus points; Priority Pass / SkyTeam Elite Plus eligible at SAS Gold Lounge (separate) |
| Pearl Lounge T5 | Near Gate C37 (old E1 location closed 31 March 2025); Priority Pass / LoungeKey / DragonPass |
| Security Tech | Nuctech 3D CT scanners on most T5 lanes (liquids/laptops stay in bag); older X-ray remains on some T2/T4 lanes |
| Border Tech | EU e-gates for EEA/Swiss passport holders 12+; ETIAS & EES rolling out Q4 2026 |
| Free WiFi | “Free Swedavia Wi-Fi” — unlimited, no SMS registration; works across all terminals |



