Chania International Airport (CHQ) — The Complete Master Guide 2026
Chania’s “Ioannis Daskalogiannis” airport is the gateway to western Crete, sitting on the Akrotiri peninsula about 14 km from the city. It is Crete’s second airport after Heraklion and the sixth-busiest in Greece, handling around 2 million passengers a year — strongly seasonal, with July and August alone bringing roughly 730,000–750,000 a month. Operated by Fraport Greece, it runs a modern two-storey terminal, busy with easyJet, Ryanair, Sky Express and Aegean plus a wide seasonal charter spread. There are no trains on Crete. For the traveller the essentials are the bus into Chania, the Schengen border under EES, the lounge picture, and whether the Venetian harbour is reachable on a layover. This guide covers each — and stays on western Crete, which is a different airport and a different end of the island from Heraklion.
⚡ 2026 Quick Reference — Key Facts at a Glance
Chania International Airport “Ioannis Daskalogiannis”
CHQ / LGSA
~14 km from Chania (Akrotiri peninsula)
KTEL bus, ~€2.70, ~30 min, ~10 departures/day (check times)
~€25–30, ~20 min
Euro (€) — Greece is in the eurozone
Yes. EES live; ETIAS pending Q4 2026
Airport/CIP lounge present; Priority Pass acceptance not confirmed — verify
easyJet, Ryanair, Sky Express, Aegean, Condor, TUI (heavily seasonal)
One passenger terminal (Fraport Greece)
📋 Table of Contents
- 🏢 1. One Terminal on Akrotiri & the Western-Crete Gateway
- 🛂 2. EES Live, ETIAS Pending & the Schengen Reality
- 🚌 3. The KTEL Bus & Taxis into Chania
- 🛋️ 4. The Lounge: Verify Before You Rely on It
- 🍽️ 5. Western-Cretan Food Before You Fly
- 💡 6. Insider: the Venetian Harbour & the Layover Math
- 🧭 7. Practical Notes Before You Go
- ❓ Frequently Asked Questions
- 📊 2026 Summary Data Table
🏢 1. One Terminal on Akrotiri & the Western-Crete Gateway
Chania runs a single modern two-storey terminal on the Akrotiri peninsula northeast of the city, with restaurants, cafés, duty-free, car-hire desks and Wi-Fi. Fraport Greece took it over in 2017, following an earlier terminal expansion, and traffic has grown steadily — up around 7% in 2025, driven by Ryanair, Condor and Aegean and strong demand from Austria, Germany and France. The character is firmly seasonal: relatively quiet in winter, then heaving from late spring through October as western Crete’s beaches and gorges pull holiday traffic. On a peak summer changeover day the terminal and its single security stream are busy, so do not cut your arrival fine. Most arrivals pick up a hire car, because western Crete’s best — the gorges and the far-west beaches — is car country.
🛂 2. EES Live, ETIAS Pending & the Schengen Reality
Greece is in the Schengen Area and uses the euro, so flights arriving from within Schengen clear with no passport control — most of Chania’s summer 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 manual passport stamp with a biometric entry/exit record — facial image and fingerprints — used to track 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. With Chania’s heavy UK and other non-EU summer traffic, the non-EU queue can be slow at peak under the new system, so allow time.
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 Chania.
| 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 KTEL Bus & Taxis into Chania
There are no trains on Crete, so it is the bus, a taxi or a hire car.
The KTEL bus runs from a stop across the Departures area (east side of the terminal) to Chania town and the central KTEL bus station in about 30 minutes for around €2.70, bought from the kiosk at the airport or from the driver. The catch is frequency: there are only about ten departures a day, spaced roughly every 60–90 minutes (with morning and late-evening gaps), so it does not always line up with a flight — check the posted KTEL Chania timetable. From the central station, intercity KTEL coaches serve Rethymno, Heraklion and the western towns.
Taxis from the rank run about €25–30 into Chania, roughly 20 minutes — the more reliable option when the bus timing does not suit, and reasonable shared between a few. Use the official rank; agree the fare for trips beyond the city, which climb steeply by distance.
🛋️ 4. The Lounge: Verify Before You Rely on It
Chania’s terminal has a CIP/airport lounge facility, but the Priority Pass position was not clearly confirmable for 2026 when this guide was written — so do not assume your card gets you in. If lounge access matters, check the current Priority Pass (or DragonPass/Amex) directory for Chania before you travel, or budget to wait in the public seating. As a busy seasonal leisure airport, Chania’s airside fills at the summer-morning peak, and any lounge here would be capacity-limited then. The honest plan is to treat lounge access as “confirm first,” not guaranteed.
🍽️ 5. Western-Cretan Food Before You Fly
Western Crete has its own takes on the island’s kitchen, and a couple are distinctly Chaniot. Boureki is a Chania speciality — a baked dish of sliced courgette and potato layered with soft mizithra cheese — and gamopilafo, the rich “wedding rice” cooked in meat stock, turns up at celebrations. The everyday Cretan staples apply: dakos (barley rusk with tomato and mizithra), firm graviera cheese, herb-and-cheese kalitsounia pastries, and the world-class Cretan olive oil. The drink is raki (tsikoudia), poured to finish a meal. For the carry-home: Cretan olive oil, a bottle of raki, vacuum-packed graviera or the island’s thyme honey — all of which clear EU customs without issue.
💡 6. Insider: the Venetian Harbour & the Layover Math
Chania’s old town is one of the most beautiful in Greece, built around a Venetian harbour ringed by tall, faded merchant houses and closed by a long mole leading to the lighthouse — first built by the Venetians, rebuilt in Egyptian-Ottoman times, and the single most photographed sight in Crete. Behind the waterfront, the lanes of the old town mix Venetian, Ottoman and Jewish quarters, with the covered market and the Maritime Museum nearby. The airport itself sits on the Akrotiri peninsula, near the tombs of the statesman Eleftherios Venizelos and historic monasteries. The region’s headline excursions — the Samaria Gorge through the White Mountains, and the lagoon beaches of Balos and Elafonisi — are full-day trips, not quick stops.
The layover math: the constraint is the bus’s roughly-hourly frequency, so if you want to see the harbour on a layover, a taxi is the reliable choice: a four-hour layover allows a taxi into the old town, a walk to the Venetian harbour and lighthouse, and back, with a 90-minute return-security buffer (keep it firm in summer, when queues are slow). On the bus you would need to time the connection carefully and probably want five hours. Samaria, Balos and Elafonisi are day trips, not layover stops.
Crete, in full: this is western Crete and the Chania end. For Heraklion and the Minoan east, and how the island fits together, see our Crete island guide — and note that Heraklion (HER) is a separate airport at the other end of the island.
🧭 7. Practical Notes Before You Go
- Don’t assume the bus lines up. KTEL Chania runs only about ten airport departures a day; check the timetable, and have a taxi (~€25–30) as the fallback, especially for early or late flights.
- Confirm lounge access first. Priority Pass acceptance at Chania was not clearly confirmable; verify before relying on a card, or plan to wait in the public area.
- Cash and the exchange trap. Draw euro from a bank ATM rather than the airport bureau de change. Cards are widely accepted, but carry coins for the bus and small tavernas.
- Reduced-mobility assistance. Free under EU rules but must be requested through your airline at least 48 hours before departure; the meeting point is signed in the terminal.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
📊 2026 Summary Data Table
| Feature | Current Data (2026) |
|---|---|
| Official name | Chania International Airport “Ioannis Daskalogiannis” |
| IATA / ICAO | CHQ / LGSA |
| Location | ~14 km from Chania, Akrotiri peninsula, western Crete |
| Passengers | ~2 million/year (6th-busiest in Greece; peak Jul–Aug) |
| Terminals | 1 (Fraport Greece) |
| Train to centre | None — no railways on Crete |
| Bus to centre | KTEL, ~€2.70, ~30 min, ~10 departures/day (check times) |
| Taxi to centre | ~€25–30, ~20 min |
| Currency | Euro (€) |
| Schengen status | Member; EES live (10 Apr 2026), ETIAS pending Q4 2026 |
| Lounges | CIP/airport lounge present; Priority Pass acceptance not confirmed — verify |
| Dominant carriers | easyJet, Ryanair, Sky Express, Aegean, Condor, TUI |
| Best layover move | Taxi to the Venetian harbour / old town (4 hr+; bus too sparse to rely on) |



