Calgary International Airport (YYC) — The Complete Master Guide 2026
Calgary International Airport sits 17 km northeast of downtown Calgary in the city’s northeast quadrant, and is WestJet’s single global hub — Canada’s third-busiest airport by passenger volume. There is no rail link to YYC (the Green Line LRT extension to the airport is planned but unfunded for now); Bus 100 connects to the Blue Line CTrain at Saddletowne, and Route 300 BRT runs direct to downtown along Centre Street. Canada uses Canadian dollars (CAD). US CBP preclearance is operational on the transborder concourse with strict 2-hours-before metering. WestJet, Air Canada, Porter and Flair are the active Canadian carriers — Lynx Air ceased operations in February 2024 and is no longer at YYC. The gateway to the Calgary Stampede (3-12 July 2026) and the Rocky Mountains: Banff is 90 minutes’ drive west; Lake Louise is two hours.
📍 ~17 km NE of downtown Calgary
🚌 Bus 100 / Route 300 · CAD 4
🛂 eTA + PIK kiosks · No EES/ETIAS
⚡ 2026 Quick Reference — Key Facts at a Glance
CAD 4 adult · 45-55 min direct to downtown along Centre Street — Calgary Transit standard fare
CAD 4 adult · transfer to Blue Line for LRT downtown — 75 min total via transfer
CAD 40-50 (~€27-33) · 25-30 min via Deerfoot Trail (Hwy 2)
CAD 60-75 · ~2 hours · Banff Airporter, Brewster Express, Mountain Park — daily service from terminal
Canadian dollar (CAD) — CAD 1.50 ≈ €1 (May 2026); cards everywhere; NOT US dollar
Aspire ×2 + Maple Leaf + WestJet Elevation — Priority Pass works at Aspire, walk-in day passes available
Daily 4:30 a.m. – 8:00 p.m. · 2h-before metering enforced — clear US in Calgary, arrive as domestic
3-12 July 2026 at Stampede Park — book hotels months ahead; airport surge on first and last weekend
🏢 1. Single Terminal & the Concourse System
YYC operates a single passenger terminal with four concourses labelled A, B, C, and D, plus the dedicated US Transborder hall for CBP preclearance. The 2016 international expansion added Concourse D and tripled non-US international capacity. Walk times across the terminal are long by Canadian standards — the new Concourse D gates are 15-20 minutes from the main check-in hall, and YYC has an internal moving-walkway corridor between the older concourses and Concourse D to help.
🛫 Four Concourses Plus Transborder
Layout: Concourse A (Porter, Flair, smaller carriers), Concourse B + C (WestJet domestic, Air Canada domestic, US transborder), Concourse D (non-US international). WestJet and Air Canada can use any of the three main concourses depending on the route.
The cowboy hat: the iconic terminal feature is the giant white plastic cowboy hat that hangs over the central rotunda — a YYC trademark since the 1980s renovation.
📍 Northeast Quadrant — Not Downtown
YYC sits in Calgary’s northeast at the intersection of Airport Trail and Deerfoot Trail (Highway 2), 17 km northeast of downtown. The terminal is operated by the Calgary Airport Authority on land that was the original Trans-Canada Air Lines airport built in 1939.
Route 300 + Bus 100 connections: both pick up at the same Domestic and International terminal stops on the lower level.
Operating airlines at YYC (May 2026)
- WestJet / WestJet Encore — YYC is WestJet’s single global hub. The largest carrier here by far; full domestic network, Caribbean/Mexico/southern US, Europe (Dublin, London, Paris, Rome, Edinburgh, Amsterdam, Frankfurt — varies seasonally), Tokyo via 787 Dreamliner.
- Air Canada / Air Canada Express / Air Canada Rouge — focus city; Star Alliance trunk routes to Toronto, Montreal, Vancouver, plus Europe (Frankfurt, London) and Asia connections via partner.
- Porter Airlines — growing presence at YYC; Concourse A operations.
- Flair Airlines — Canadian ULCC operating from Concourse A; domestic and selected US/Mexico routes.
- United, American, Delta — US trunks (Chicago, Denver, Dallas, Houston, San Francisco, Phoenix, Las Vegas, Seattle, Salt Lake City, Minneapolis).
- British Airways, KLM, Lufthansa, Air France — European trunks (varies by season).
- Aeromexico, WestJet partner — Mexico City and resort destinations.
- Sunwing, Air Transat — leisure-charter to Caribbean and Mexico.
🛂 2. CBSA Kiosks, eTA & US Preclearance Metering
YYC is a Canadian airport. Border processing is by the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA); EES and ETIAS do not apply. Canada is not in Schengen or the EU. Prices are in Canadian dollars (CAD), not euros or US dollars (CAD ≈ €0.66 / USD 0.74, May 2026).
eTA — CAD 7, Five-Year Validity
Visa-exempt non-Canadians flying into Canada need an Electronic Travel Authorization (eTA) at CAD 7, valid up to 5 years or until passport expiry. Apply online at canada.ca/eTA — most approvals within minutes. US citizens are eTA-exempt. Required for air arrivals only.
PIK Kiosks & CBSA Declare App
YYC international arrivals are processed at CBSA Primary Inspection Kiosks (PIK). Scan passport, answer customs questions on-screen, take a photo, receive a receipt. The CBSA Declare app lets you submit the declaration up to 72 hours in advance and skip some of the queue.
US Preclearance + 2-Hour Metering
Full US CBP preclearance on the transborder concourse, daily 4:30 a.m. – 8:00 p.m. The wrinkle at YYC: access to US security + CBP is metered at 2 hours before scheduled departure — turning up earlier won’t get you through (except for travellers with mobility aids, families with small children, or accessibility needs). Late evening US flights past 8 p.m. don’t get preclearance.
Who needs what for short visits to Canada via YYC
| Passport | Visa needed? | eTA required (air)? | PIK kiosk on arrival |
|---|---|---|---|
| Canadian / Canadian PR | No | No | Yes (or CBSA Declare app bypass) |
| US citizen | No | No (eTA-exempt) | Yes |
| UK / EU / EEA / Swiss / Australian / NZ / Japanese / South Korean | No (visa-exempt) | Yes — CAD 7 | Yes |
| Brazilian / Mexican / Argentine / Chilean | Visa-exempt or eTA-eligible (verify on canada.ca) | Yes — CAD 7 | Yes |
| Indian / Chinese / South African / Russian | Yes — Temporary Resident Visa | No (covered by visa) | Yes (linked to visa) |
YYC actively encourages US-bound passengers to download the Mobile Passport Control app before arrival to speed up CBP preclearance — file your declaration, scan your passport at the kiosk on-site, and skip the longest queue. Combined with the 2-hour metering, this is the fastest path through US preclearance at Calgary.
🚌 3. Route 300 BRT, Bus 100, Taxis & the Banff Shuttle
There is no rail link to YYC. The Green Line LRT extension to the airport has been proposed for years but is unfunded as of 2026 — don’t expect a train. Public transit is the Route 300 BRT (direct downtown along Centre Street) and Bus 100 (to Saddletowne CTrain Blue Line for indirect LRT). Both Calgary Transit standard fare CAD 4 adult. For the Rockies, the dedicated Banff Airporter and Brewster Express shuttle services run direct from the terminal.
⭐ Route 300 BRT — Direct to Downtown
- Calgary Transit’s BRT bus from YYC’s Domestic and International terminal stops to downtown via Centre Street.
- Journey: roughly 45-55 minutes to downtown depending on Deerfoot/Centre Street traffic.
- Fare: CAD 4 single adult, CAD 2.65 youth (Calgary Transit standard, as of January 2026).
- Frequency: every 30 minutes (verify current schedule before travel — Calgary Transit revises BRT frequencies seasonally).
- Tickets: vending machines at both terminal bus stops accept debit, credit, cash; or buy at the 7-Eleven on the Arrivals level.
🚏 Bus 100 — The CTrain Connector
- Route 100 connects YYC to Saddletowne CTrain (Blue Line) and the North Pointe Bus Terminal.
- Journey: approximately 75 minutes to downtown including the CTrain transfer (Saddletowne → 7 St SW downtown).
- Fare: CAD 4 single (covers the bus and the CTrain on a 90-minute transfer).
- Useful for: travellers heading to northeast Calgary, the University of Calgary area, or anywhere along the Blue Line.
🚕 Taxis & Rideshare
- Airport taxi metered fare: roughly CAD 40-50 to downtown, 25-30 min via Deerfoot Trail. Calgary has regulated metered taxis from Checker, Associated, Mayfair, United and a few smaller fleets.
- Uber and Lyft: both active at YYC; dedicated rideshare pickup outside the Domestic and International terminals. Typical CAD 30-45 in normal demand; significant surge during Stampede week.
- The downtown trip is short. If you have luggage, a cab or rideshare is usually worth the CAD 25-30 premium over Route 300 + a transfer.
🏔️ Banff Airporter, Brewster Express & Mountain Park
For the Rocky Mountains, three dedicated shuttle operators run direct from YYC. The trip is roughly 90 minutes to Banff (130 km) or 2 hours to Lake Louise (183 km) via Highway 1 (Trans-Canada).
- Banff Airporter: CAD 69 one-way to Banff, multiple daily departures. Pickup outside the Arrivals level.
- Brewster Express: CAD 75 one-way to Banff. Operated by Pursuit, includes onward connections to Jasper.
- Mountain Park Transport: CAD 60 starting rate to Banff or Lake Louise. Smaller operator, often cheaper but less frequent.
- All run daily year-round; book at the airport or in advance. Service is more frequent in summer (Stampede + Rockies peak) and winter (ski season).
🚗 Rental Cars & the Trans-Canada
Avis, Budget, Enterprise, National, Hertz, Discount, Thrifty, Alamo, plus Routes Car Rental (cheaper local) — all in the airport parkade. For the Rockies trip, picking up a car at YYC is the most flexible option. Highway 1 (Trans-Canada) is the western route to Banff/Lake Louise; Highway 22 south to Highway 3 leads into the Crowsnest Pass and southern BC. Winter driving requires snow tires by law in Alberta on highways into BC; rental companies usually pre-install them November-March.
🛋️ 4. Four Lounges: Aspire, Maple Leaf, WestJet Elevation
YYC has the strongest airside lounge selection of the Canadian airports in this guide series — four functioning lounges across the terminal as of May 2026. The Air Canada Maple Leaf Lounge near Gate 50 (Concourse C) is the established Star Alliance option, the two Aspire Lounges (operated by Swissport) take Priority Pass and DragonPass, and the WestJet Elevation Lounge serves WestJet status and premium-cabin travellers — a real perk given YYC is WestJet’s global hub.
✈️ Air Canada Maple Leaf Lounge — Gate 50
Location: Concourse C, near Gate 50 (Departures level).
Access: Air Canada Business Class, Aeroplan Super Elite, Aeroplan 50K with same-day Star Alliance international flight, Star Alliance Gold with same-day Star Alliance flight. Day-pass available.
What’s inside: runway views, hot and cold food, full bar, showers, Wi-Fi, work zones.
🛋️ Aspire Lounges (×2) — Priority Pass Default
Operator: Swissport. Two Aspire Lounges at YYC — locations on Concourses A/B and the International concourse.
Access: Priority Pass, DragonPass, walk-in day pass (~CAD 65 / ~€44). Wi-Fi, snacks, alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages, comfortable seating.
🍁 WestJet Elevation Lounge — Hub Perk
Access: WestJet Business Class on same-day international flights, WestJet Rewards Platinum/Gold tier members. Day-pass for purchase varies by availability.
A perk of YYC being WestJet’s single global hub — the airline runs its flagship lounge here, with stronger food and beverage than the WestJet Elevation at other Canadian airports.
Priority Pass at YYC works at the two Aspire Lounges, not the Maple Leaf or WestJet Elevation. Walk-in day passes at Aspire are typically CAD 60-70. If you’re flying WestJet and you’re a Rewards member, check your Elevation eligibility before defaulting to Aspire — the WestJet lounge is often less crowded and the food is comparable.
🥩 5. Alberta Food: Beef, Bison & Caesar Cocktails
Calgary is in the middle of Alberta’s cattle country — Alberta beef is the regional flagship, and the city’s food culture runs through the ranch economy. The airside food court at YYC includes a couple of credible Alberta-beef options (the Earls Kitchen + Bar outpost, a couple of full-service pubs, and several food-truck-style stands). But the real Calgary eating experience is in 17th Avenue’s Mission/Beltline restaurants and the Inglewood/East Village neighbourhoods — 25-30 minutes from the airport.
Alberta produces about 40% of Canada’s beef. Calgary steakhouses like Caesar’s Steakhouse (founded 1972 on Fourth Avenue SW), Modern Steak, and Vintage Chophouse work with Alberta-finished cattle. Expect CAD 55-90 (~€37-60) for a steak entrée downtown. At YYC the Earls Kitchen serves a Cab Sav-glazed Alberta sirloin at CAD 38 (~€25), the credible airside option.
Wild bison and ranched bison are increasingly common on Calgary menus — leaner than beef, distinctive flavour, sourced from Saskatchewan and northern Alberta ranches. Most downtown pubs do a bison burger at CAD 22-32; the YYC airside pubs usually have a version too. Try Native Tongues Taqueria downtown for bison al pastor — a Calgary fusion that travels well across Alberta.
The Bloody Caesar — vodka, clamato juice, hot sauce, Worcestershire, celery salt rim — was invented at the Calgary Inn (now Westin Calgary) in 1969 by bartender Walter Chell. Canada’s national cocktail by sales volume, and the iconic Calgary drink. Order one at any YYC airside bar; at Caesar’s Steakhouse downtown they do the full ceremony with a pickled bean and a peppered rim. Typical price CAD 14-18.
Ginger beef was invented in Calgary — at the Silver Inn restaurant on Centre Street in the 1970s by chef George Wong. Crispy fried beef in a sweet-spicy ginger glaze; Silver Inn on Centre Street is still operating and is the original, with dozens of other Calgary Chinese restaurants doing their own credible versions. CAD 18-26 for a plate downtown. YYC doesn’t really do ginger beef airside — wait for Calgary if you have a layover.
Duty-Free & Souvenir Reality at YYC
🥃 Eau Claire Distillery & Alberta Craft
CAD 50-90 (~€33-60) per 750ml. Eau Claire Distillery (Turner Valley, AB, south of Calgary) makes a Single Malt and a Three Point gin from Alberta-grown barley. Authentic local product. Available at YYC duty-free alongside Crown Royal and the standard Canadian whiskies.
🤠 Smithbilt White Hats
CAD 75-180 (~€50-120) per hat. Smithbilt Hats has been making hats in Calgary since 1919; in 1946 Mayor Don Mackay started handing white Smithbilt hats to visiting dignitaries and the tradition stuck — the white hat is now Calgary’s official civic gift. Pure wool felt, hand-shaped. The YYC duty-free carries the basic Smithbilt; the original shop in inner-city Calgary does the proper sizing and shaping. The credible Calgary souvenir.
🦬 Bison Jerky & Maple Products
CAD 15-25 (~€10-17) per pack. The airport carries Alberta-sourced bison and beef jerky from a rotating roster of small Prairie producers. Travels well, distinctively Albertan. Maple syrup at YYC is generic Quebec product — for better small-producer maple, shop independent retail downtown.
🏔️ Indigenous Art & Crafts
From CAD 50. The YYC duty-free carries Indigenous-artist authenticated work — Blackfoot Confederacy (Siksika, Piikani, Kainai), Stoney Nakoda, and Tsuut’ina pieces. Look for the official Indigenous Tourism Alberta certification mark. Skip airport reproductions for the real pieces.
💡 6. Insider: Stampede, Banff Day-Trip, the Cowboy Hat
The Calgary Stampede is the city’s defining annual event — 10 days of rodeo, chuckwagon racing, the midway, free pancake breakfasts across the city, the Stampede Parade, and concerts. 3-12 July 2026 at Stampede Park, accessible from downtown via the Red Line CTrain (Erlton/Stampede or Victoria Park/Stampede stations). Single-day grounds admission roughly CAD 22; rodeo and Grandstand show tickets extra at CAD 60-160. Hotel prices in Calgary triple during Stampede week — book months ahead, and expect YYC surge during the first and last weekend.
Banff National Park, Canada’s first national park (1885), is 130 km west of YYC via Highway 1. Banff townsite is 90 minutes’ drive; Lake Louise is 2 hours. Park entry fee CAD 11 adult per day (free with the Canada Strong Pass June 19 – September 7 2026). The Banff Gondola, the Cave and Basin National Historic Site (the hot springs that started the national park system), and the Lake Louise lakeshore are the headline experiences. Tour shuttles (Banff Airporter, Brewster, Mountain Park) make Banff a day-trip viable from a YYC long layover, but only with 10+ hours airside-to-airside. Lake Louise day-trips from YYC are tight at 11+ hours.
The Calgary Tower (1968, 191 m, the city’s iconic observation deck) on Centre Street offers downtown views with a glass-floor section over the street; admission CAD 22 adult. Heritage Park Historical Village in the southwest is Canada’s largest living-history museum — a recreated turn-of-the-century prairie town with operating steam railway and the SS Moyie sternwheeler. CAD 35 adult. Worth a day if you’re not climbing in Banff.
YYC is the access airport for the SkiBig3 (Banff Sunshine, Lake Louise Ski Resort, Mt Norquay), plus Nakiska (1988 Olympic mountain, 90 min from YYC) and the Kicking Horse resort in BC (3 hours). The ski shuttles match the summer shuttle operators; SkiBig3 runs its own bundled passes. Winter at YYC means snow tires, sub-zero windchill on the apron, and de-icing delays — allow extra buffer for early-morning departures December-February.
The Calgary Airport Marriott In-Terminal connects directly to the terminal via a covered walkway — CAD 220-340 (~€145-225) per night, the cleanest play for very early departures. Delta Calgary Airport and Hilton Garden Inn Calgary Airport are 5 min shuttle, slightly cheaper. Downtown: the Westin Calgary (where the Caesar cocktail was born), Fairmont Palliser (1914 château hotel, the Calgary institution), Hotel Le Germain Calgary (boutique downtown). Route 300 or a 25-30 min taxi back to YYC in the morning.
Canadian networks (Rogers, Bell, Telus, Freedom Mobile, Public Mobile, Lucky Mobile, Fido) sell prepaid SIMs at retail downtown and at most YYC airside kiosks. US visitors with T-Mobile or AT&T typically get Canadian roaming included; verify with your carrier. EU/UK Roam-Like-At-Home does NOT extend to Canada — get a Canadian SIM or an eSIM (Airalo, Holafly). 5G covers Calgary and Banff townsite but drops to LTE/3G in the mountain valleys.
Distance is the constraint. 4-hour layover: stay airside — round-trip transit to downtown is too tight. 5-6 hours: downtown Calgary (Stephen Avenue, the Calgary Tower, lunch in 17th Avenue or Inglewood) is doable. 10+ hours: Banff day-trip becomes feasible via the shuttle — 4 hours’ transit + 4-5 hours in Banff townsite. Add 30-45 min for US preclearance metering if connecting onward to the US. Lake Louise needs an overnight, not a layover.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
📊 2026 Summary Data Table
| Feature | Current Data (2026) |
|---|---|
| IATA / ICAO | YYC / CYYC |
| Official Name | Calgary International Airport |
| Location | Northeast Calgary at Airport Trail + Deerfoot Trail — ~17 km NE of downtown |
| Terminals | 1 passenger terminal, four concourses (A / B / C / D) + US Transborder hall |
| Annual passengers | ~17M pre-pandemic — Canada’s 3rd-busiest airport |
| Currency / Border System | Canadian dollars (CAD) / CBSA + PIK + eTA — NOT Schengen, NO EES/ETIAS |
| eTA | CAD 7 — valid up to 5 years — required for visa-exempt non-Canadian air arrivals (US citizens exempt) |
| US Preclearance | Daily 4:30 a.m. – 8:00 p.m. + 2-hour metering enforced; Mobile Passport Control app speeds entry |
| Route 300 BRT | CAD 4 — 45-55 min to downtown via Centre Street |
| Bus 100 | CAD 4 — to Saddletowne CTrain Blue Line for indirect rail downtown (~75 min total) |
| CTrain LRT to airport? | No — Green Line extension proposed but unfunded as of 2026 |
| Taxi to downtown | CAD 40-50 metered — 25-30 min via Deerfoot Trail |
| Banff shuttle | Banff Airporter (CAD 69), Brewster Express (CAD 75), Mountain Park (CAD 60) — ~2 h, 130 km |
| Lounges | Two Aspire Lounges (Priority Pass + DragonPass), Air Canada Maple Leaf (Gate 50), WestJet Elevation |
| Main carriers | WestJet (single global hub), Air Canada (focus city), Porter, Flair; Lynx ceased operations Feb 2024 |
| 2026 calendar event | Calgary Stampede — 3-12 July 2026 at Stampede Park (airport surge weekends) |
| Free Wi-Fi | Unlimited, no registration; 5G default outside |
| Closest hotel | Calgary Airport Marriott In-Terminal (covered walkway from terminal) — CAD 220-340 |



