Tallinn Airport (TLL) — The Complete Master Guide 2026
Lennart Meri Tallinn Airport sits 4 km from Old Town — closer to its capital than any other airport in the European Union. EES went live at the biometric booths on 10 April 2026, Tram 4 remains suspended for the Rail Baltica terminal until June 2026, and the airBaltic + Lufthansa Group split is doing a quietly excellent job filling the absent national flag carrier.
📍 4 km E of Old Town
🚌 Bus 2 · 18 min · €2
🛂 EES Live · ETIAS Q4 2026
⚡ 2026 Quick Reference — Key Facts at a Glance
18 min · €2 — every 7-15 min, runs 06:00–23:30 (night service every 30-40 min)
Resumes June 2026 for Rail Baltica terminal opening — €2, 18-20 min direct to Old Town
4 km · 50 min Pirita coastal path — viable in summer with one carry-on
€10–15 off-peak · €18–25 rush hour · pickup in short-stay car park
2h15m · from €30 via Tallink, Viking, Eckerö — 15-min walk from Old Town port
€45 / 3 hours — Schengen airside, Priority Pass + LoungeKey + DragonPass
Fully live since 10 April 2026 — biometric on first entry, fingerprint-only thereafter
90 min · 2h international · 2.5h with first EES registration
🏢 1. Single Terminal & the Rail Baltica Expansion
Tallinn’s airport is the most compact major capital airport in the EU. The entire passenger operation runs out of one terminal building, and that building is small enough that you can walk from check-in to the furthest gate in under seven minutes. There is no shuttle, no people-mover, no inter-terminal bus. It is a single hall.
🛫 The Single Terminal — Schengen + Non-Schengen Combined
Layout: the footprint splits into three logical zones — landside (check-in counters, kiosks, the SIM kiosks, rental car desks), Schengen airside (most gates plus the LHV Lounge, plus duty-free retail), and non-Schengen airside (UK, Türkiye, occasional onward connections).
Walking time: security to furthest gate is under 7 minutes. Even with EES queues at peak, total arrivals-to-curb is rarely over 25 minutes for non-EU travellers.
🚧 Stage I 2025-2026 — Modernised Check-In, Bag-Drop & Border
Active expansion: Stage I (2025–2026) is replacing the check-in area with self-service bag-drop kiosks that work for all carriers — airBaltic, Lufthansa Group, Ryanair, Wizz Air, easyJet — without crew intervention.
Stage III (2026–2027): expansion of the border control area, which is where EES queues will eventually need more booth capacity. The €75 million programme targets 5 million annual passengers by 2030 (up from ~3.5 million today).
If you’re arriving at TLL from another Schengen country (Helsinki, Stockholm, Riga, Vienna, Frankfurt, etc.), there is no passport check at all — walk straight from the gate to baggage. Only flights from outside Schengen (UK, US, Türkiye, Switzerland is Schengen, the Caucasus) hit the EES booths.
Operating airlines (May 2026)
- airBaltic — the de facto flag carrier (Estonia has no national airline). Largest network from TLL: Riga, Vilnius, Helsinki, Stockholm, Munich, Frankfurt, Amsterdam, Vienna, Zurich, plus seasonal Mediterranean (Barcelona, Malaga, Tenerife, Larnaca, Heraklion).
- Lufthansa Group — Lufthansa to Frankfurt, Austrian to Vienna, Swiss to Zurich, Brussels Airlines occasionally to Brussels.
- Finnair — short hop to Helsinki for onward Asian connections.
- Ryanair — Bergamo, Stansted, Manchester, Dublin, Paphos, Karlsruhe.
- Wizz Air — Larnaca, Tirana, Kutaisi (Georgia), with seasonal Mediterranean.
- Turkish Airlines — daily to Istanbul (IST main).
- SAS, Norwegian — Stockholm Arlanda, Copenhagen, Oslo.
- LOT Polish — daily Warsaw connection for onward European/long-haul.
🛂 2. EES Live, ETIAS Pending & the Schengen Reality
2026 is the year European border procedure changed permanently. EES went fully operational on 10 April 2026; ETIAS is the next domino, expected Q4 2026. TLL was an early-adopter airport with biometric capture booths in non-Schengen arrivals from Q1 2026. The queues are short by EU standards — TLL volumes are low enough that EES rarely creates a real delay.
EES — Fully Operational Since 10 April 2026
All non-EU passport holders are now biometrically registered on first entry: 4-finger fingerprint scan + facial photo. Subsequent entries auto-match. First-time registration adds 10–15 minutes at TLL — much less than CDG or AMS. Two booths are installed in non-Schengen arrivals.
ETIAS — Coming Q4 2026
The €7 pre-travel authorisation for visa-exempt nationals (UK, US, Canada, Australia, Japan, Brazil, etc.) launches in autumn 2026 with a phased grace period. Apply on the official EU portal a few days before travel — beware the third-party scam sites already ranking for “ETIAS application” charging €70.
Estonia e-Residency — Pickup at TLL
Estonia’s transnational digital residency programme issues e-Residency cards to non-resident foreigners. €100–150 + 4–8 weeks; lets you incorporate and run an EU company digitally. Does NOT grant physical residency rights. TLL is one of the official card pickup points for travellers already in-country.
Who needs what for short visits
| Passport | Visa needed | EES applies? | ETIAS from Q4 2026? |
|---|---|---|---|
| EU / EEA / Swiss | No — freedom of movement | No | No |
| UK | No (90/180 visa-free) | Yes — biometric capture | Yes |
| USA / Canada / Australia / NZ | No (90/180 visa-free) | Yes — biometric capture | Yes |
| Brazil / Mexico / Argentina / Israel / Japan / South Korea | No (90/180 visa-free) | Yes — biometric capture | Yes |
| India / China / Russia / South Africa | Yes — Schengen visa required | Yes — biometric capture (linked to visa) | No (covered by visa) |
If you’ve already spent 60+ days in Schengen countries in the past 180, EES will flag this on entry at TLL. The system is much harder to game than the old paper-stamp regime — overstays generate automatic alerts. Plan your Schengen exits accordingly, particularly digital nomads cycling between Lisbon, Berlin, and Paris.
🚌 3. Bus 2, Tram 4 (Suspended), Bolt & the 4 km Walk
The single most important practical fact about TLL transport in 2026: Tram 4, the line that connects the airport directly to Tallinn city centre, has been suspended since 2023 for the Rail Baltica terminal construction. It is scheduled to resume in June 2026. If you are reading this guide before June 2026, the tram is not an option. Use Bus 2.
⭐ Bus 2 — The Current Default
- Stop is directly outside arrivals, signed clearly.
- Runs every 7-15 minutes, 06:00–23:30. Night service every 30-40 minutes.
- 18-22 minutes to Old Town (stops at Hobujaama for Old Town walk-in, or Vabaduse väljak for Freedom Square).
- Single ticket €2 paid contactless on the GoPay Pilet card or Tallinn Mobiilipilet app. Cash to driver: €3.
🚊 Tram 4 — Returns June 2026
Once the Rail Baltica terminal opens, Tram 4 will run from the airport tram stop directly into Old Town’s edge in 18-20 minutes for €2. It will be the recommended option once active because it is fully separated from road traffic and not subject to rush-hour delays. The tram stop will be inside the new combined airport-rail terminal, a short covered walk from the existing airport hall.
Until then: Bus 2 is the equivalent — same fare, same destination, similar journey time, but susceptible to road traffic 17:00–19:00.
🚕 Bolt — Estonian-Founded, Locally Dominant
- Bolt dominates locally — €10-15 to Old Town off-peak, €18-25 in rush hour. Pickup point in the short-stay car park, signed.
- Yandex Go still runs but the government has been increasing scrutiny since 2024 and many drivers have switched to Bolt-only.
- Tallink Takso (the official rank) charges around €0.95/km plus €4 starting fare. Old Town typically €15-18.
- Avoid unmarked black-cab touts in arrivals — they exist, prices are 2-3x metered, the airport police regularly chase them off but they return.
🚶 Walking — Yes, Genuinely Viable
From the terminal door to Tallinn Old Town’s eastern edge (Pikk tänav) is a 4 km, 50-minute flat walk along the Pirita coastal path. With one carry-on it’s pleasant. With checked luggage, take Bus 2. The path is paved, signed, and runs along the Baltic coast — the most scenic airport-to-city route in any EU capital.
The Tallinn transport app (Tallinn Mobiilipilet) accepts contactless tap. Free for Tallinn residents — locals tap a personalised card, you pay €2/single. Buy a 24-hour ticket (€5.50) or 72-hour (€8.50) for unlimited rides if you’re staying in town. For airport-only single trips, the contactless €2 is simplest.
🛋️ 4. The LHV Lounge: Estonia’s One Premium Option
TLL has exactly one third-party lounge — the LHV Lounge, in the Schengen airside zone, after security and to the right past the main duty-free. It is operated by LHV Bank (an Estonian retail bank) but accepts cards from all the major networks.
🛋️ LHV Lounge — €45 Walk-in / Priority Pass
Location: Schengen airside, after security, to the right past main duty-free.
Cash/card walk-in: €45 / 3 hours. Pay at lounge reception, no reservation needed. Last entry 90 min before flight.
Priority Pass / LoungeKey / DragonPass: all accepted with standard partner conditions. Guests typically extra (varies by issuer).
airBaltic Business / Lufthansa Group Business / Star Alliance Gold: free with boarding pass. Some codeshare conditions apply.
💳 LHV Bank Card Holders — Estonian Resident Perks
LHV Bank Platinum: free entry + up to 4 guests when paying with the LHV card.
LHV Bank Gold credit/debit: €30/person + up to 4 guests, paid with the LHV card.
Nordea Platinum credit: 6 free Priority Pass visits per year. Black: unlimited.
LHV Lounge is small — maybe 80 seats — but designed by an Estonian fabric studio, with armchairs upholstered in regional textiles, soft carpets, and a working library nook with Estonian-literature first editions.
The food offer is genuinely Estonian: rye bread with sprat, kama porridge, herring with curd, marinated mushrooms — alongside the international standard (cold cuts, pasta, salads). The bar is fully stocked: Vana Tallinn liqueur, Estonian craft gin from Junimperium, local berry cordials, and the entire airBaltic onboard wine list.
Honest verdict: by major-airport-lounge standards, LHV is small and gets crowded between 06:00–08:00 weekdays. By small-capital-lounge standards, it’s exceptional. The Estonian textile design alone makes it worth the Priority Pass swipe.
What there isn’t
No premium first-class lounge (TLL has no first-class flights). No airline-specific lounge separate from LHV. No transit hotel airside. If you have an extended Helsinki connection routed via TLL, your only lounge is LHV.
🥨 5. Estonian Food: Sprats, Kama, Vana Tallinn & the Black Bread
Eating at TLL is a narrow trade. The food court airside has the usual airport markups — €12 for a sandwich that costs €5 in Tallinn city, €7 for an espresso that costs €3 in town. If your flight boards in less than 90 minutes, it’s the only realistic option. If you have more time, Bus 2 to Hobujaama and a 12-minute walk gets you into Old Town’s working tavern circuit, where lunch is €15-25 for a full meal with beer.
Every Estonian café version is decent. The dense rye base is the national bread — sliced thick, sometimes served with butter and seeds, sometimes with an open sandwich load. Travels well. The airport bakery counter sells loaves by weight — around €6-8 for a 1 kg loaf that will last you a week. Buy here if you fly home tonight.
Estonian roasted-grain yogurt drink — distinctive nutty flavour from the toasted barley/rye/oat/pea-flour blend. Available at the Reisihommik café in the food court, around €4. You won’t find kama outside the Baltic states. The local Saaremaa Piimatööstus brand is the consensus best. Try one before you fly out — it’s the most Estonian flavour you’ll meet.
Open sandwich with smoked sprats, butter, dill, and onion. Around €8 at most Estonian-themed counters in the food court. The Latvian Sprota brand is what’s typically used — small, oily, smoked-tinned fish, served on dense rye. It’s a national breakfast in three Baltic states; the airport version is competent.
Sweet farmer-cheese bar in vanilla, cocoa or berry coatings. €1.50-2.50 each. The format exists in Russia and Latvia in similar form, but the Estonian Saaremaa Piimatööstus brand is the consensus best. Buy 6-8 for the flight or as gifts — they keep at room temperature for a day or two and travel through hand luggage easily.
Duty-Free — What’s Worth Buying
🥃 Vana Tallinn Liqueur
€18-22 for 700ml. The iconic Estonian rum-based liqueur, dark, aromatic. Cheaper at airport than at Tallinn supermarkets surprisingly often — particularly the export 50% strength bottles.
🌲 Junimperium Craft Gin
~€35 duty-free. Distilled with juniper berries from the Estonian forests. Better in town at Põhjala or Tartu Mill stockists for around €28, but hassle to carry that long.
🍫 Kalev Marzipan
€10-15 gift box. The Estonian Kalev confectionery has been making marzipan since 1806. Pricier than Lübeck marzipan but distinctively softer. The pastel-painted pig and ladybug shapes are genuinely cute.
🍬 Anneli Viik Dark Chocolate
€18 for 12 truffles. Boutique chocolatier from Tartu. Occasionally available at the airport speciality counter — hand-painted, dark, distinctively Estonian. Hits well above its price.
Skip the airport amber jewellery — it’s mostly Latvian/Russian re-sold, and you’ll find better at the Old Town amber shops in Tallinn for similar prices. Skip the Russian-imported caviar and vodka — not Estonian, and the EU sanctions situation post-2022 means provenance is murky. Skip the souvenir tea towels — €15 at TLL, €5 at Tallinn’s Balti Jaam market.
💡 6. Insider Tips: Helsinki Ferry, e-Residency & the Coastal Walk
Tallinn’s geography makes it a unique hub-and-spoke base. The Helsinki ferry crosses the Gulf of Finland in 2h15m and runs from the D-Terminal port (a 7-minute taxi or 15-minute walk from Old Town). Three operators — Tallink (8 daily sailings), Eckerö Line (3 daily), Viking Line (2 daily) — share the route. One-way fares from €30, with day-returns aboard the Eckerö MyStar starting at €16-22 if booked in advance. The practical implication: if you’re flying into TLL but want a Helsinki day, do a 06:30 ferry out and 18:00 ferry back, with Tallinn as your home base. Far cheaper than flying to HEL given Helsinki hotels are 2-3x Tallinn rates.
Estonia’s e-Residency programme issues digital identity cards to non-resident foreigners. If you’ve already applied online (€100-150, 4-8 weeks processing), TLL is one of the official pickup points — go to the Police and Border Guard office on the Tallinn city side after landing, present your application reference and biometric document, collect your card. Most travellers prefer to pick up at an Estonian embassy in their home country, but TLL pickup is faster if you’re in Estonia anyway.
From the terminal door to Old Town along the Pirita coastal path is 4 km, 50 minutes flat. It runs along the Baltic coast — the most scenic airport-to-city walk of any EU capital. With one carry-on it’s pleasant year-round (in winter, dress warm). The path is paved, signed, runs past the Russalka monument and the Pirita Olympic Yachting Centre. Free, healthy, and a far better welcome to Tallinn than the Bolt back-of-arrivals.
Best zone: upper gallery near gate 7-8, carpeted, dim, away from the busiest areas. Avoid the food court (cleaning crew works 02:00–04:00).
Temperature: the airside drops to ~16°C overnight. Bring layers or grab a hoodie at duty-free.
Showers: none airside. Closest options are Tallink Spa Hotel (15 min by bus) or shower facilities at Old City Hostel for €5 walk-in.
Curfew: no formal night curfew but landside doors lock between 02:00–03:30 if no flights. Be airside before then.
Better alternative: Tallink Spa Hotel near the port has €60-80 night rates — for the price of two airport meals, you’ve covered a real bed and a hot shower.
EU/EEA visitors: your home plan covers Estonia free under Roam Like At Home — do nothing.
UK/US/non-EU visitors: Telia and Elisa kiosks landside in arrivals. €15 for 30 GB EU-roaming plan, valid 30 days. Bring passport. Tourist eSIM 10 GB / 28 days runs €15-25 — Airalo or Holafly before landing for €5-10 less.
5G: default across Tallinn city, very strong at the airport.
If your TLL connection is 6+ hours and you’ve already done Tallinn Old Town, the under-known move is to bus 1 hour to Virtsu, ferry 25 minutes to Muhu/Saaremaa, and have lunch at the Pädaste Manor restaurant. Real Estonian island life. Ferries every 90 minutes. Manageable as a 4-5 hour round trip if you commit. Total cost €30-40 including lunch and ferry — vastly more memorable than a third LHV Lounge cappuccino.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
📊 2026 Summary Data Table
| Feature | Current Data (2026) |
|---|---|
| IATA / ICAO Code | TLL / EETN |
| Official Name | Lennart Meri Tallinn Airport |
| Distance to Old Town | 4 km — closest capital-city airport in the EU |
| Terminals | 1 — single unified building (Schengen + non-Schengen + landside zones) |
| Annual Passengers | ~3.5M (2024); target 5M by 2030 with current expansion |
| Active Expansion | Stage I 2025-2026 check-in / bag-drop; Stage III 2026-2027 border control area |
| Currency | Euro (EUR / €) — Estonia is Eurozone since 2011 |
| Bus 2 to Old Town | €2 — 18 min — every 7-15 min, runs 06:00–23:30 |
| Tram 4 (suspended) | Resumes June 2026 with the Rail Baltica terminal opening |
| Bolt to Old Town | €10-15 off-peak; €18-25 rush hour |
| LHV Lounge | €45 walk-in / 3 hours — Priority Pass + LoungeKey + DragonPass |
| Helsinki Ferry | From €30 — Tallink, Viking, Eckerö from D-Terminal — 2h15m crossing |
| Border / EES Status | EES live since 10 April 2026; ETIAS Q4 2026; e-Residency pickup available |
| Free WiFi | Unlimited, no registration; 30-50 Mbps reliably; 5G outside |
| Tap Water | Safe — drinkable across Estonia including TLL washroom taps |
| SIM Cards | Telia and Elisa landside — €15 for 30 GB EU-roaming plan, 30 days |



