Alicante–Elche Miguel Hernández Airport (ALC) — The Complete Master Guide 2026
Alicante is the gateway to the Costa Blanca, and the numbers show it: the airport handled a record 18.38 million passengers in 2024 and tracked higher through 2025, making it one of Spain’s busiest and overwhelmingly a leisure operation. Ryanair dominates with eighteen based aircraft, easyJet reopened a full base here in 2026, and Jet2 carries the British package trade — together they pour holidaymakers toward Benidorm, Torrevieja and the beaches. It sits about 10 km southwest of Alicante city, near Elche. For the traveller the key facts are the C-6 bus into town, the Schengen border under EES, the lounge, and how much of Alicante you can see between flights. This guide covers each.
⚡ 2026 Quick Reference — Key Facts at a Glance
Alicante–Elche Miguel Hernández Airport (Aeropuerto de Alicante-Elche)
ALC / LEAL
~10 km southwest of Alicante
C-6 (TAM), ~€4.60, ~20 min to Plaza Puerta del Mar, every 20 min, 24/7
ALSA to Benidorm, Dénia, Jávea, Murcia
~€20–25, ~15 min
Euro (€) — Spain is in the eurozone
Yes. EES live; ETIAS pending Q4 2026
Sala VIP Costa Blanca (airside) — Priority Pass / Amex
Ryanair, easyJet (base), Jet2, Vueling, TUI, Norwegian
One passenger terminal
📋 Table of Contents
- 🏢 1. Single Terminal & the Costa Blanca Volume
- 🛂 2. EES Live, ETIAS Pending & the Schengen Reality
- 🚌 3. The C-6 Bus, the TRAM Connection & Benidorm Coaches
- 🛋️ 4. Sala VIP Costa Blanca: the Lounge
- 🍽️ 5. Alicante Food & Turrón Before You Fly
- 💡 6. Insider: Alicante, the Explanada & the Layover Math
- 🧭 7. Practical Notes Before You Go
- ❓ Frequently Asked Questions
- 📊 2026 Summary Data Table
🏢 1. Single Terminal & the Costa Blanca Volume
Alicante runs one large passenger terminal, opened in 2011, which absorbs its 18-million-plus annual traffic better than the older building ever could. The layout is conventional — landside check-in with the C-6 bus stop and the ALSA coach bays outside, security, then a long airside spine with the shops, bars and the lounge. The thing to plan for is the seasonal peak: this is a beach airport, and from late spring through October the British, Dutch, Scandinavian and German charter and low-cost traffic loads it hard, with the security queues at their worst on summer Saturday and Sunday mornings. Treat the published two-hour check-in advice as a minimum in those windows. Most arrivals are heading onward to the coast rather than into Alicante itself, which shapes the transport choices below.
🛂 2. EES Live, ETIAS Pending & the Schengen Reality
Spain is in the Schengen Area and uses the euro, so the large majority of arrivals — flights from elsewhere in Schengen — clear with no passport control at all.
For non-EU arrivals, the Entry/Exit System (EES) became fully operational at the Schengen external border on 10 April 2026, after a phased rollout from October 2025. It replaces the manual passport stamp with a biometric entry/exit record — facial image and fingerprints — used to track the 90-days-in-any-180 short-stay limit. A non-EU traveller’s first entry of the cycle takes a little longer while that record is created. This matters at Alicante because of its heavy British traffic: post-Brexit, UK passport holders are now non-EU visitors and are subject to EES.
The European Travel Information and Authorisation System (ETIAS) is separate and not yet live, expected in the last quarter of 2026. Once running, visa-exempt non-EU visitors (UK, US, Canadian, Australian and similar) will apply online for a paid authorisation before flying. Until then a valid passport is all that is needed to land at Alicante.
| Passport | Visa for short stay? | EES applies? | ETIAS once live (Q4 2026)? |
|---|---|---|---|
| EU / EEA / Swiss | No | No | No |
| UK | No (≤90/180) | Yes | Yes |
| USA / Canada / Australia / NZ | No (≤90/180) | Yes | Yes |
| Japan / South Korea / Singapore | No (≤90/180) | Yes | Yes |
| India / China / South Africa | Yes — Schengen visa | Yes (recorded at entry) | N/A while visa required |
🚌 3. The C-6 Bus, the TRAM Connection & Benidorm Coaches
There is no railway or tram station at the airport — the Alicante TRAM does not reach it — so the airport bus is the way into the city.
For Alicante city, the C-6 bus (run by the municipal operator TAM) leaves from outside arrivals and reaches the centre in about 20 minutes for around €4.60 single. It runs every 20 minutes from early morning to about 22:30 and roughly hourly overnight — usefully, it is a 24-hour service, which covers late and early flights. It stops at the Renfe main station, at Plaza de los Luceros (where you can change onto the Alicante TRAM lines L1–L5 for the city beaches and the coast), and at Plaza Puerta del Mar by the marina and old town. Buy the ticket from the driver.
For the Costa Blanca resorts, the coach operator ALSA runs intercity services directly from the airport to Benidorm, Dénia, Jávea and Murcia — the simplest way to the northern resorts without going through Alicante. Check ALSA times in advance, as frequencies vary by season.
Taxis from the rank run about €20–25 into the city, around 15 minutes. Use the official rank outside arrivals; agree nothing with anyone approaching you inside the terminal.
🛋️ 4. Sala VIP Costa Blanca: the Lounge
Alicante’s airside lounge is the Sala VIP Costa Blanca (also signed as the Salón Ifach), on the ground floor near gates C45–C46, open daily roughly 04:00 to 23:00 — wide hours that suit the early-morning charter departures. It accepts Priority Pass and is on the American Express network, both subject to capacity, which is the real constraint on a busy summer morning when the lounge fills. If capacity is tight, a pass can be pre-booked online for about €30 to guarantee entry. The offer is a standard Spanish airport lounge — coffee, soft drinks, wine and beer, and a light buffet — so the value is a guaranteed seat away from a packed gate area rather than a meal.
🍽️ 5. Alicante Food & Turrón Before You Fly
Alicante province has a serious food identity, and one edible souvenir above all: turrón, the almond-and-honey nougat made in Jijona just inland, sold everywhere in the soft (Jijona) and hard (Alicante) styles and the obvious thing to carry home. The local kitchen is rice-led — this is Valencian-Alicante territory, so look for arroz a banda (rice cooked in fish stock) and the regional rice dishes rather than only the Valencia-style paella. Salazones, salt-cured fish, are a Costa Blanca speciality, and the local wines are the robust Monastrell reds from the Alicante DO. To drink in the heat, horchata, the chufa (tiger-nut) milk, is the regional soft drink. Turrón and sealed wine clear EU customs without issue.
💡 6. Insider: Alicante, the Explanada & the Layover Math
Alicante is more rewarding than its package-holiday reputation suggests, and it is compact enough for a layover. The seafront set-piece is the Explanada de España, the palm-lined promenade paved with about six million red, cream and black marble tiles in a wave pattern, running beside the marina. Above the city, the Castillo de Santa Bárbara crowns Mount Benacantil — reachable by a lift cut up through the rock from near Postiguet beach, which saves the climb and gives the best view over the bay. The old quarter, Barrio de Santa Cruz, climbs the hill below the castle in tiled, flower-hung lanes.
The layover math: the C-6 bus is about 20 minutes each way, so a four-hour layover gives a comfortable hour and a half along the Explanada and up to the castle by the lift, with a return-security buffer of at least 90 minutes in summer. A three-hour layover is tight but workable for a quick walk along the marina and Explanada in good conditions. Benidorm and the northern resorts are coach trips, not layover material. Elche, with its UNESCO-listed palm groves, is closer to the airport than Alicante but needs its own half-day.
🧭 7. Practical Notes Before You Go
- Buy and keep your bus ticket. The C-6 ticket is bought from the driver; keep it for the ride. If you plan to use the TRAM from Luceros, tickets are separate from the bus.
- Cash and the exchange trap. Draw euro from a bank ATM rather than the airport bureau de change, whose rates carry a heavy markup. Cards are accepted almost everywhere, including the coaches.
- Reduced-mobility assistance. Free under EU rules but must be requested through your airline at least 48 hours before departure; the assistance meeting point is signed in the terminal.
- Night and runway works. Alicante has periodically run overnight runway maintenance with associated schedule disruption; if you hold a very late or very early flight, reconfirm it close to departure.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
📊 2026 Summary Data Table
| Feature | Current Data (2026) |
|---|---|
| Official name | Aeropuerto de Alicante-Elche Miguel Hernández |
| IATA / ICAO | ALC / LEAL |
| Location | ~10 km southwest of Alicante, near Elche |
| Passengers (2024) | 18.38 million (record; 2025 tracked higher) |
| Terminals | 1 |
| Train/tram to centre | None — no airport rail; TRAM connects at Plaza de los Luceros |
| Bus to centre | C-6 (TAM), ~€4.60, ~20 min, every 20 min, 24-hour service |
| Coaches | ALSA to Benidorm, Dénia, Jávea, Murcia |
| Taxi to centre | ~€20–25, ~15 min |
| Currency | Euro (€) |
| Schengen status | Member; EES live (10 Apr 2026), ETIAS pending Q4 2026 |
| Lounges | Sala VIP Costa Blanca / Salón Ifach (Priority Pass / Amex; ~04:00–23:00) |
| Dominant carriers | Ryanair, easyJet (base), Jet2, Vueling, TUI, Norwegian |
| 2026 change | easyJet reopened its Alicante base |
| Best layover move | C-6 bus to the Explanada + Santa Bárbara castle lift (4 hr+ layover) |



