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Brindisi Salento Airport (BDS) — The Complete Master Guide 2026

Italy · Brindisi · Puglia / Salento · Schengen · EES Live · EUR

Brindisi Salento Airport (BDS) — The Complete Master Guide 2026

Brindisi is the southern gateway to Puglia’s Salento — the heel of Italy’s boot — and for most arrivals the airport is a means to an end somewhere else: Lecce, the white town of Ostuni, the beaches of the Adriatic and Ionian coasts. It handles around 2.5 million passengers a year, with Ryanair as its home-base anchor, and shares Puglia’s air traffic with Bari to the north. The town of Brindisi itself is modest, but it carries a real piece of history — it was the terminus of the Appian Way, the Roman road from Rome, and one of the two marble columns that marked the road’s end still stands above the harbour. This guide covers the airport bus, the shuttle to Lecce, the Schengen border under EES, the lounge, and how to spend a layover here.

Airport: Brindisi Salento Airport (Aeroporto del Salento,…Currency: Euro (€) — Italy is in the eurozone

⚡ 2026 Quick Reference — Key Facts at a Glance

Airport
Brindisi Salento Airport (Aeroporto del Salento, Papola Casale)
IATA / ICAO
BDS / LIBR
Distance to centre
~6 km from Brindisi town
Bus to Brindisi centre
STP city bus, ~€1.10 (advance) / €1.50 on board, ~10–15 min
Shuttle to Lecce
Pugliairbus, ~40 min, €6 one-way / €12 return, ~9×/day
Taxi to Brindisi centre
~€20, ~15 min
Currency
Euro (€) — Italy is in the eurozone
Schengen
Yes. EES live; ETIAS pending Q4 2026
Lounge
VIP Lounge (airside) — Priority Pass / Amex; ~05:00–21:00
Dominant carriers
Ryanair (base), easyJet, Eurowings, TUI fly, ITA Airways
Terminals
One passenger terminal

📋 Table of Contents

🏢 1. Single Terminal & the Salento Gateway

Brindisi runs a single passenger terminal at Papola Casale, about 6 km from town. The layout is compact and quick to move through: landside check-in with the bus stops out front, security, then a small airside with shops, a bar and the lounge. Like the other southern Italian leisure airports it loads heavily in summer for the Salento beach season and is quieter through winter. Because most arrivals are heading onward — to Lecce, Ostuni, the coasts — the useful mental model is less “airport for Brindisi” and more “airport for Salento,” and the transport choices below reflect that.

🛂 2. EES Live, ETIAS Pending & the Schengen Reality

Italy is in the Schengen Area and uses the euro, so flights from elsewhere in Schengen arrive with no passport control — which covers most of Brindisi’s traffic.

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 passport stamp with a biometric entry/exit record (face and fingerprints) that tracks the 90-in-180-day short-stay limit; a non-EU traveller’s first entry of the cycle takes a little longer while the record is created.

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 passport holders (US, UK, Canada, Australia and similar) will apply online for a paid authorisation before flying. Until then, a valid passport is all that is needed to land here.

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. STP City Bus, the Lecce Shuttle & Taxis

There is no railway station at the airport; Brindisi’s train station is in the town, linked by bus or taxi.

For Brindisi town, the STP city bus runs from the airport to the centre — the railway station and the Via del Mare / port area — in about 10–15 minutes. A ticket is €1.10 bought in advance (from the Giunti bookshop in the terminal) or €1.50 from the driver; the same line continues to the Costa Morena ferry harbour in 25–30 minutes, which matters if you are connecting to a Greece or Albania ferry. A taxi to town is about €20.

For Lecce — where a large share of arrivals are actually going — the Pugliairbus coach runs direct from the airport to Lecce City Terminal (Piazza Carmelo Bene) in about 40 minutes, roughly nine times a day, for €6 one-way or €12 return. This is the cleanest way into Salento’s main city and avoids backtracking through Brindisi station. Buy ahead online or at the airport counter in summer when seats fill.

🛋️ 4. The VIP Lounge

Brindisi has one airside lounge, the recently refreshed VIP Lounge, open roughly 05:00 to 21:00 daily. It accepts Priority Pass and is on the American Express network. The offer is straightforward for a regional airport — air conditioning, a cold buffet, soft drinks and a limited bar of beer and wine. It is a comfortable seat and a quiet hour rather than a dining stop, and in a small airside zone that fills at summer peak, the seat is the point. Note the 21:00 close, which leaves late departures without lounge access.

🍽️ 5. Pugliese Food Before You Fly

Puglia’s food is among Italy’s most distinctive, and the things to seek out — in town rather than at the airport bar, ideally — start with orecchiette, the little ear-shaped pasta, classically served alle cime di rapa with turnip tops. Burrata, the cream-filled fresh cheese, comes from Andria up the road and is at its best here. The Salento street-and-snack canon runs to friselle (twice-baked bread rings softened with water and topped with tomato), taralli (crunchy savoury rings), and, from Lecce, the pasticciotto — a short-crust pastry filled with custard, eaten warm for breakfast. The wines to carry out are the heavy Salento reds, Primitivo and Negroamaro. Within the EU, wine and sealed taralli travel home without issue; fresh burrata does not keep, so eat it here.

💡 6. Insider: Brindisi, Lecce & the Layover Math

Brindisi rewards the curious traveller more than its reputation suggests. The town’s anchor is the Roman column at the top of the monumental staircase above the harbour — historically the terminus of the Via Appia, the Appian Way that ran from Rome, which gained UNESCO World Heritage listing in 2024. A second column once stood beside it; its capital was carried off to Lecce centuries ago. The waterfront, the cathedral quarter and the column are a compact walk from the centre.

The bigger prize is Lecce, 40 minutes away by the Pugliairbus — Salento’s baroque capital, where the soft local pietra leccese limestone was carved into the extravagant facades that earned it the nickname “the Florence of the South.” Ostuni, the white hill town, and the coastal beaches are car or regional-train territory beyond that.

The layover math: Brindisi town is a 10–15 minute bus each way, so a four-hour layover easily covers the Roman column and waterfront with a 75-minute return-security buffer. Lecce is feasible only on a long layover or a day — 40 minutes each way plus the wait for the return coach means you want five to six hours minimum to make it worthwhile, and you should check the Pugliairbus return times before committing, because services are spaced through the day rather than frequent. Under four hours, stay airside.

🧭 7. Practical Notes Before You Go

  • Validate your ticket. STP bus tickets must be stamped on board; the €1.10 advance fare from the airport’s Giunti bookshop beats the €1.50 driver price, but an unstamped ticket still counts as no ticket if checked.
  • Cash and the exchange trap. Use a bank ATM (Bancomat) for euro rather than the airport bureau de change. Cards are accepted widely, but the Pugliairbus and STP machines are simplest with a card or small change.
  • Reduced-mobility assistance. Free under EU rules but must be booked through your airline at least 48 hours ahead; the meeting point is signed in the terminal.
  • Two Puglia airports — don’t mix them up. Puglia is served by Brindisi and Bari, about 90 minutes apart. They are not interchangeable, so confirm which airport your return or onward flight actually uses; Bari is the better gateway for the trulli of Alberobello, Brindisi for Lecce and the southern Salento.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

How do I get from Brindisi Airport to the town centre? +
Take the STP city bus — about 10–15 minutes to the centre and railway station, €1.10 bought in advance at the airport’s Giunti bookshop or €1.50 from the driver. The same line continues to the Costa Morena ferry harbour. A taxi is about €20.
How do I get from Brindisi Airport to Lecce? +
The Pugliairbus coach runs direct to Lecce City Terminal (Piazza Carmelo Bene) in about 40 minutes, roughly nine times a day, for €6 one-way or €12 return. It is the simplest route into Salento and avoids changing at Brindisi station.
Does Brindisi Airport have a train station? +
No. There is no rail link at the airport; Brindisi’s station is in the town, reached by the STP bus or a taxi.
Is there a lounge at Brindisi Airport? +
Yes — one airside VIP Lounge, open roughly 05:00–21:00, accepting Priority Pass and American Express. It has a cold buffet, soft drinks and a limited beer-and-wine bar. It closes at 21:00, so late flights miss it.
What currency is used at Brindisi, and do I need ETIAS? +
The euro. Italy is in the Schengen Area, so there is no border check on flights from within Schengen. ETIAS is not yet required — it is expected in the last quarter of 2026. The EES biometric border has been live for non-EU arrivals since 10 April 2026.
Which airlines fly from Brindisi? +
Ryanair bases aircraft here and carries most traffic; easyJet (London Gatwick), Eurowings (Prague), TUI fly (Brussels) and ITA Airways add routes, with about 20 airlines serving the airport in 2026. The schedule peaks in the summer Salento season.
Can I reach Lecce or the beach on a layover? +
Lecce is feasible only on a long layover — allow five to six hours given the 40-minute coach each way and spaced return times. The coastal beaches need a car or regional train and are not layover material. Brindisi town and its Roman column are an easy four-hour-layover option.
Is there a ferry connection from Brindisi Airport? +
Yes — the STP airport bus continues to the Costa Morena harbour (about 25–30 minutes), the departure point for ferries to Greece and Albania. Useful if you are connecting flight-to-ferry.
How busy is Brindisi Airport? +
It handles around 2.5 million passengers a year, strongly seasonal, peaking in summer for the Salento beach season.
What should I eat or buy before flying out of Brindisi? +
Orecchiette pasta and burrata if you are eating in town; a pasticciotto custard pastry from Lecce, taralli rings, and a bottle of Primitivo or Negroamaro as duty-free carry-outs that travel fine within the EU.

📊 2026 Summary Data Table

Feature Current Data (2026)
Official name Aeroporto del Salento (Brindisi-Papola Casale)
IATA / ICAO BDS / LIBR
Location ~6 km from Brindisi, Puglia (Salento)
Passengers ~2.5 million/year
Terminals 1
Train to centre None — no airport rail link
Bus to Brindisi centre STP, ~€1.10 advance / €1.50 on board, ~10–15 min
Shuttle to Lecce Pugliairbus, ~40 min, €6/€12, ~9×/day
Ferry connection STP bus to Costa Morena harbour, ~25–30 min
Taxi to Brindisi centre ~€20, ~15 min
Currency Euro (€)
Schengen status Member; EES live (10 Apr 2026), ETIAS pending Q4 2026
Lounges VIP Lounge (Priority Pass / Amex; ~05:00–21:00)
Dominant carriers Ryanair (base), easyJet, Eurowings, TUI fly, ITA Airways
Best layover move STP bus to the Roman column / harbour (4 hr+); Lecce only on 5–6 hr+

Posted 1h ago

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