Honiara International Airport (HIR) — Airport Guide 2026
The terminal you land at in Honiara is a rebuilt version of the airstrip the Japanese started, the Americans captured, and a Marine killed at Midway gave his name to — a piece of infrastructure the 1942 Guadalcanal campaign left behind, now handling Brisbane flights and connecting Solomon Islanders to Munda and Gizo.
Quick Reference
HIR / AGGH
Henderson Field (renamed September 2003)
~11 km east of the CBD; 20–35 min by road
Single asphalt, ~2,200 m — narrowbody only (A320/737-class)
Solomon Islands dollar (SBD); ~8.0 SBD = 1 USD, ~9.4 SBD = 1 EUR (late May 2026)
$5, $10, $40, $50, $100 — the $40 note is genuine
Free 30-day visitor permit on arrival (US, Commonwealth, most EU passports)
6 months beyond travel dates; onward ticket + proof of funds required
Solomon Airlines, Qantas, Air Niugini, Fiji Airways
Brisbane (~3h15m, ~9 flights/week), Nadi, Port Moresby
SBD 200–400 (~USD 25–50), unmetered — negotiate before bags go in
Belama Club Lounge, SBD 400 day pass; no Priority Pass/DragonPass/LoungeKey
None — cash machines are in Honiara town
UTC+11, no daylight saving
🏛️ The Terminal and the Runway
There is one passenger terminal and one runway, and the runway came first by about 60 years. Japanese forces began clearing the airstrip at Lunga Point in May 1942. They nearly finished it. On 7 August 1942, the U.S. 1st Marine Division landed under Operation Watchtower and took the half-built field with minimal resistance. On 16 August it was named Henderson Field, after Major Lofton R. Henderson — a Marine dive-bomber commander killed leading an attack at the Battle of Midway on 4 June 1942. The field kept that name until September 2003. The original WWII-era control tower still stands on the site, visible from the apron if you get a window seat on the right side.
The terminal you use now is recent. A JICA-funded project costing north of SBD 300 million rebuilt the international side ahead of the November 2023 Pacific Games. That delivered a new international departure building with a larger departures hall, the Belama lounge, duty-free space, and flood defences for a site that sits low near the Lunga River. The domestic building was renovated alongside it. This is the airport’s genuine recent overhaul — there is nothing further scheduled for 2026.
The runway’s ~2,200 m caps the airport at narrowbody traffic. The longest scheduled flight is Qantas to Brisbane, roughly 2,120 km and about 3 hours 15 minutes. No widebody service operates out of Honiara; travellers from Europe or North America are connecting through Brisbane, Nadi, or Port Moresby.
Brisbane is the busiest international route at around nine departures a week. For an international departure, arrive 2 to 2.5 hours ahead — this is a small terminal with manual check-in processes, and the Brisbane bank queues up. For a domestic hop to Munda or Gizo, an hour is enough.
⚠️ No ATM in the terminal
Cash machines are in Honiara town, not at the airport. You need Solomon Islands dollars in hand before you leave the terminal — for the taxi, for anything sold before you reach town. Change a modest amount of USD or AUD before departure, or arrange a hotel transfer that doesn’t require cash on the spot.
🛂 Border, Visa & Entry
Solomon Islands runs its own permit regime with no electronic pre-authorisation for short stays. U.S. citizens, Commonwealth passport holders, and most EU nationals receive a free visitor permit on arrival, valid for 30 days. Requirements at the desk: a passport with at least 6 months’ validity beyond your travel dates, a confirmed onward or return ticket, and evidence of sufficient funds. The permit does not allow any work.
For stays beyond 30 days, you apply to the Immigration Division in-country before the permit expires. Extensions can run to roughly 150 days where circumstances justify; the standard extension fee is around USD 100. Nationals from countries outside the visa-exempt list apply online for a visitor visa in advance — roughly USD 50 online versus USD 100 for a standard application — and must carry the grant letter to show on arrival.
Check your own nationality’s status against the Immigration Division before you fly. The exempt list is the deciding factor and it does change.
No EU exit-entry systems or pre-travel authorisation acronyms you’ve encountered for European travel apply here. The Solomons is not a Schengen-adjacent jurisdiction. The only document logic that matters at Honiara is the one above.
🛂 Visa on arrival — the standard entry
Free 30-day permit for US, Commonwealth, and most EU passports. Show a return ticket and a funding source — immigration officers do check. Non-exempt nationals need a grant letter obtained online before travel.
💰 Currency & Money
The Solomon Islands dollar is the only legal tender. As of late May 2026: roughly SBD 8 to 1 USD and SBD 9.4 to 1 EUR. Notes in circulation run $5, $10, $40, $50, and $100 — the $40 note is not a misprint, it is a standard denomination that catches first-timers out every time. Coins cover 10, 20, and 50 cents plus a $1 coin.
Outside the larger Honiara hotels and some dive operators, card acceptance is thin. Treat the Solomons as a cash economy. Keep small notes: taxi drivers don’t routinely carry change, and the Honiara Central Market works in cash only.
Departure tax, where it applies, is normally bundled into the airfare rather than collected separately at the airport. Confirm with your airline at booking; this is the kind of operational detail that shifts, and it isn’t worth budgeting a fixed figure from this guide.
🏥 Health
Solomon Islands is among the higher-risk malaria countries in the Pacific. This is a genuine medical decision, not a formality — discuss antimalarial prophylaxis and mosquito precautions with a travel clinic well before departure. Dengue also circulates. A yellow-fever certificate is required only if you are arriving from a country with active transmission risk.
Do not drink tap water in Honiara. Use bottled or treated water; that caution extends to ice and raw salads at cheaper establishments. Bring prescription medication — pharmacy stock in Honiara is limited and restocking times are long.
🚕 Getting Into Honiara
The town is 11 km west along the coast road. The drive takes 20 to 35 minutes depending on traffic through Honiara’s single congested corridor. There is no train in the Solomons and no scheduled airport bus.
Taxi
Taxis wait outside the terminal. None are metered. The fare is whatever you agree before you get in — expect SBD 200 to 400 (roughly USD 25 to 50) to central Honiara. State the number out loud in SBD before the bags go in. The spread is wide because it depends on the driver, the time of day, and how many passengers are competing for the same cars off the same flight. Because there is no airport ATM, you already need that cash in your pocket.
Tipping is not customary; rounding up for luggage help is fine but not expected.
Hotel transfer
Most Honiara hotels and dive lodges arrange airport pickups. Some include it with the room; others charge around SBD 150 to 300. For a first arrival, or a late-night landing, a named driver holding a sign is worth the modest cost. Confirm the pickup at booking and reconfirm your flight number if the schedule changes.
Pre-booked private transfer
Online transfer operators quote roughly USD 30 to 60 for a private sedan and USD 50 to 80 for a minivan. That’s a premium over a negotiated street taxi, and what you’re paying for is a fixed price agreed in advance — useful if you’re arriving with dive equipment, a group, or simply don’t want to negotiate at the kerb after a long connection.
Public minibuses
Honiara’s shared minibuses are a sensible way to get around town once you’re settled, but they have no scheduled airport service, no fixed terminal stop, and no capacity for luggage. Don’t plan an airport arrival around them.
🚕 Negotiate before bags go in
Taxis are unmetered and drivers will quote in USD to international arrivals. Ask for the SBD price, agree it out loud, then load. SBD 200–400 is the expected range for central Honiara. The airport ATM does not exist, so have cash ready before you land.
🛋️ The Lounge
There is one lounge: the Belama Club Lounge, run by Solomon Airlines in the international departures area, accessible after immigration, adjacent to the international gates. It seats around 40, was refurbished and reopened in November 2023, and offers complimentary food and drink, free wifi, a television, a flight-information screen, and modern restrooms.
Day access is SBD 400 per guest (around USD 50). Solomon Airlines’ Belama Club members get access as a membership benefit.
Priority Pass, DragonPass, and LoungeKey do not work here. There is no Qantas lounge at Honiara — Qantas premium passengers get lounge access at the Brisbane end of the route. If your credit card provides lounge access through a network, assume it won’t open this door and budget the SBD 400 accordingly.
🛋️ Belama Club Lounge — SBD 400 at the door
The only lounge at HIR. After immigration, turn into the departures hall. Day access is SBD 400 (~USD 50) per person; no network lounge access applies. For a long wait on the Brisbane bank — particularly if the flight delays — it is a reasonable trade for the aircon, the wifi, and the quiet.
🍽️ Food Before You Fly
The terminal has kiosks and small cafés landside and airside — coffee, cold drinks, packaged snacks, and basic hot food. It functions, and it carries the usual captive-terminal markup. In a cash economy with no airport ATM, that markup is particularly inconvenient, because any SBD you spend airside is SBD you may need for the taxi.
The practical move: buy water and snacks in Honiara before heading to the airport.
For actual food, Honiara town is where you want to be. The everyday Solomons plate runs on root crops and fish: kumara (sweet potato), taro, cassava, reef fish, and tuna, frequently cooked in coconut milk. Poi — a paste of mashed taro or breadfruit — is the regional staple starch. The Honiara Central Market is the honest version: produce, fresh fish, and cooked food at local prices a fraction of any hotel restaurant. A plate from a market or a local kai bar costs a few SBD. The same food dressed up for the waterfront hotel crowd multiplies several times over.
The duty-free shop in the rebuilt departures building covers spirits, tobacco, and a little perfume. It is not a shopping airport. If you want a Solomons souvenir, the wood carvings and shell money from town markets or the Betikama carvings near the airport are the real thing; the duty-free shelf is not where you find them.
⚔️ War History, Wrecks & What You Can Actually Reach
Honiara’s draw is the 1942–43 Guadalcanal campaign and the diving that campaign left behind. The airport sits at the eastern edge of town, 11 km from the CBD, which matters for calculating what’s feasible.
Bloody Ridge (Edson’s Ridge)
South of the airfield. In mid-September 1942, a Marine battalion held this ridge against a Japanese assault in one of the campaign’s pivotal engagements. It is 5 to 10 minutes from the airport by car — the one major battlefield site genuinely feasible on a layover, even a short one. Interpretation on-site is minimal, so read up first or hire a guide.
Vilu War Museum
An open-air collection of aircraft skeletons — F4F Wildcat, F4U Corsair, SBD Dauntless, P-38 Lightning — and field guns, 21 km west of Honiara. From the airport that’s the full width of town plus another 21 km, so reckon 45 minutes to an hour each way plus museum time. This is a half-day out from a Honiara base, not a layover visit.
Bonegi Beach Wrecks
West of town along the coast, two Japanese transports — the Hirokawa Maru and Kinugawa Maru — lie beached and partly submerged off the sand. They are the most-dived wrecks in the country, shallow enough for snorkellers and beginner divers, with reef life covering the hulls. Roughly 20-plus km from the airport via town. An easy half-day with a dive operator; not a layover activity.
Iron Bottom Sound
The stretch of water between Guadalcanal and the Florida and Savo islands, named for the warships and aircraft sunk there during the naval battles. The deeper wrecks here are technical dives reached by boat with a licensed operator out of Honiara. Planned dive trip only.
Other sites from town
The American War Memorial on Skyline Ridge, the Japanese memorial on Mount Austen, Red Beach and Tetere east of the airport (the original Marine landing beaches), and the Betikama carvings near the airport. A standard half-day Guadalcanal battlefield tour links several of these by vehicle over roughly four hours.
⏱️ Layover math — be honest with yourself
A round trip from the airport to central Honiara is 22 km and 40–70 minutes of driving, before you see anything. Add a 2-hour international check-in buffer before your departure. Under 5 hours total: stay airside or limit yourself to Bloody Ridge (5–10 min from the terminal). Five to seven hours: you can reach town and the closer memorials and return comfortably. Vilu, Bonegi, and any Iron Bottom Sound diving require an overnight. A guide who tells you otherwise is selling you a stressful afternoon.
📱 Connectivity & Practical Notes
WiFi: Airport wifi is unreliable. Plan to be offline from landing until you have a local SIM or hotel connection.
SIM cards: The two carriers are Our Telekom and bmobile-Vodafone. Buy a prepaid SIM and data bundle from a carrier shop in town, not at the airport — there is no airside counter worth relying on. Coverage is decent in and around Honiara and thins fast on the outer islands. Download offline maps before you leave town.
Safety: Honiara has had periods of unrest — the November 2021 riots damaged parts of the Chinatown district — and petty theft exists as in any capital with a large informal economy. Day-to-day tourist movement around standard sites is generally fine. Avoid demonstrations, don’t display cash or electronics, and take standard precautions after dark. On the islands and dive sites, the sea and malaria are the real risks. Check your government’s current travel advisory before you travel.
Tipping: Not a tipping culture. Round up for genuine help with luggage if you like, but there is no obligation and no awkwardness if you don’t.
💊 Malaria is not theoretical here
Solomon Islands is among the higher-risk countries in the Pacific. Sort antimalarial prophylaxis with a travel clinic before you leave home, not after arrival. Mosquito precautions apply in Honiara and across the islands. Dengue also circulates.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
📊 At a Glance — HIR 2026
| Feature | Detail |
|---|---|
| Airport name | Honiara International Airport (formerly Henderson Field) |
| IATA / ICAO | HIR / AGGH |
| Renamed from Henderson Field | September 2003 |
| Location | ~11 km east of Honiara, Guadalcanal |
| Terminals | One passenger terminal (international building rebuilt November 2023) |
| Runway | Single asphalt, ~2,200 m — narrowbody only |
| Time zone | UTC+11, no daylight saving |
| Currency | Solomon Islands dollar (SBD) |
| Exchange rate (late May 2026) | ~8.0 SBD = 1 USD; ~9.4 SBD = 1 EUR |
| Banknotes | $5, $10, $40, $50, $100 |
| ATM at airport | None — ATMs in Honiara town only |
| Entry | Free 30-day visitor permit on arrival (US / Commonwealth / most EU) |
| Passport validity | 6 months beyond travel dates; onward ticket + proof of funds |
| Departure tax | Normally included in airfare — confirm with airline |
| International airlines | Solomon Airlines, Qantas, Air Niugini, Fiji Airways |
| Key international routes | Brisbane (~3h15m, ~9/week), Nadi, Port Moresby |
| Domestic routes | Munda, Gizo (Nusatupe), Auki, outer islands |
| Taxi to town | SBD 200–400 (~USD 25–50), unmetered — negotiate first |
| Hotel transfer | Free to ~SBD 150–300 depending on property |
| Private transfer | ~USD 30–80 |
| Public bus from airport | None scheduled |
| Lounge | Belama Club Lounge — SBD 400 day pass; no network lounge access |
| Mobile carriers | Our Telekom, bmobile-Vodafone — buy SIM in town |
| Airport wifi | Unreliable — plan to be offline until SIM or hotel |
| Tap water | Not safe to drink — bottled or treated only |
| Malaria | High-risk Pacific country — prophylaxis strongly advised |
| Layover-viable war site | Bloody Ridge (5–10 min from airport) |
| Sites requiring overnight | Vilu War Museum, Bonegi wrecks, Iron Bottom Sound diving |



