Hannover Airport (HAJ) — The Complete Master Guide 2026
Hannover’s airport at Langenhagen, about 11 km north of the city, is a mid-size German airport with one big convenience: a suburban-rail station directly under the terminal, putting the central station 18 minutes away. It handled 5.34 million passengers in 2025 across more than 60 destinations, with a leisure-heavy roster — TUIfly and Corendon base aircraft here, and Eurowings has rebuilt a base too. For the traveller the essentials are the S-Bahn into the city, the Schengen border under EES, the lounge, and what a layover can reach — and Hannover happens to have an unusually good device for exactly that, a painted line on the pavement that walks you past the city’s sights. This guide covers each.
⚡ 2026 Quick Reference — Key Facts at a Glance
Hannover Airport (Flughafen Hannover-Langenhagen)
HAJ / EDDV
~11 km north of Hannover
S-Bahn S5, Hannover Flughafen → Hauptbahnhof, ~18 min, ~€4.30 (2 zones)
~€30–35, ~20 min
Euro (€) — Germany is in the eurozone
Yes. EES live; ETIAS pending Q4 2026
Karl-Jatho Lounge (airside) — Priority Pass / Amex; €25 walk-in
TUIfly (base), Eurowings (base), Corendon (base), Lufthansa, Condor
Three terminals (A, B, C), one complex
📋 Table of Contents
- 🏢 1. Terminals A–C & the Airport Station
- 🛂 2. EES Live, ETIAS Pending & the Schengen Reality
- 🚆 3. The S5 S-Bahn & Taxis into Hannover
- 🛋️ 4. The Karl-Jatho Lounge
- 🍽️ 5. Lower-Saxon Food & Leibniz Biscuits Before You Fly
- 💡 6. Insider: the Rote Faden & the Layover Math
- 🧭 7. Practical Notes Before You Go
- ❓ Frequently Asked Questions
- 📊 2026 Summary Data Table
🏢 1. Terminals A–C & the Airport Station
Hannover has three terminals — A, B and C — built side by side in one walkable complex, so the lettering is about check-in zones rather than separate buildings; the S-Bahn station sits underground between them, reached by escalator from the arrivals level. The airport runs an even, year-round mix of leisure charters (Mallorca, the Canaries, Turkey) and scheduled European links, busiest in the summer holidays and around the city’s giant trade fairs. Eurowings rebuilt a base here, joining the long-standing TUIfly and Corendon operations, and the airport reaches more than 60 destinations. It rarely feels overwhelmed outside the summer-Saturday and Messe peaks.
🛂 2. EES Live, ETIAS Pending & the Schengen Reality
Germany is in the Schengen Area and uses the euro, so flights arriving from within Schengen clear with no passport control.
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.
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 Hannover.
| 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 S5 S-Bahn & Taxis into Hannover
The airport’s strength is its rail link. The S-Bahn S5 runs from Hannover Flughafen station, directly beneath the terminals, to Hannover Hauptbahnhof (the central station) in about 18 minutes. A single ticket covering the airport’s two fare zones is around €4.30 for an adult (about €1.30 for a child), bought from the machine on the platform — there are no ticket barriers, so buy and, where required, validate before boarding. The S5 runs roughly every 20 minutes through the day (every 10–15 in the morning and evening peaks, every 30 at weekends). From the Hauptbahnhof you are in the centre, with the city’s Stadtbahn (tram) network and onward rail to hand.
Taxis from the rank run about €30–35 into the city, roughly 20 minutes. Use the official rank outside arrivals.
🛋️ 4. The Karl-Jatho Lounge
Hannover’s main contract lounge is the Karl-Jatho Lounge — named for a Hannover aviation pioneer — in the corridor between Terminals A and B, airside. It accepts Priority Pass and is on the American Express network, and a walk-in is about €25 for travellers departing from Terminal A. The lounge sets a three-hour maximum stay and lets one child under 12 in free per adult. There is also a second Priority Pass facility (the Hannover Lounge) at the airport. The offer is a standard German airport lounge — coffee, soft drinks, beer and wine, and a light buffet — so the value is the quiet seat rather than a meal. Capacity can bite at the summer-morning charter peak.
🍽️ 5. Lower-Saxon Food & Leibniz Biscuits Before You Fly
Hannover’s edible souvenir is unusually specific: the Leibniz butter biscuit (the Leibniz-Keks, with its 52 teeth), made by Bahlsen, the biscuit company founded in Hannover in 1889 — a packet is the easy carry-home. On the plate, the regional German staples apply — Currywurst and Bratwurst from the stands, hearty Lower-Saxon pork and potato cooking — and the local drinking curiosity is the Lüttje Lage, a Hannover ritual of downing a small beer and a grain schnapps from two glasses held in one hand at once, done at the spring Schützenfest. The beers to drink are the local Herrenhäuser and Gilde pilsners. Sealed biscuits and bottled beer clear EU customs without issue.
💡 6. Insider: the Rote Faden & the Layover Math
Hannover gives the layover traveller a genuinely useful tool: the Rote Faden (Red Thread), a red line painted on the pavement that runs about 4.2 km in a loop from the Hauptbahnhof past 36 of the city’s sights — you simply follow it, with a numbered booklet keyed to each stop. It is the most efficient self-guided city walk in this set. Along it: the Neues Rathaus (New Town Hall), a vast 1913 pile whose dome is reached by a one-of-a-kind lift that climbs on a curve (it leans with the dome), with a view over the city and the Maschsee lake. The baroque Herrenhausen Gardens — the Great Garden of the former royal house — are the other set-piece, a short tram ride from the centre rather than on the Red Thread.
The layover math: the S5 is about 18 minutes each way, so a four-hour layover gives a comfortable hour and a half to follow part of the Rote Faden from the Hauptbahnhof, take in the Neues Rathaus, and get back, with a 75–90 minute return-security buffer. A three-hour layover is workable for a quick loop of the old town near the station. Herrenhausen needs a little more time (the tram out and back), so save the gardens for a five-hour-plus layover.
🧭 7. Practical Notes Before You Go
- Buy the right zone ticket. The airport-to-Hauptbahnhof S5 ride needs the GVH 2-zone ticket (~€4.30); German regional transit has no barriers but inspectors do check, and travelling without a valid ticket draws a fine.
- Cash and the exchange trap. Draw euro from a bank ATM rather than the airport bureau de change. Cards and contactless are widely accepted, including on the S-Bahn machines; Germany is still more cash-friendly than most of Western Europe, so carry some.
- 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.
- Trade-fair surge. Hannover hosts some of the world’s largest trade fairs at its Messe; during a big fair, hotels and flights fill and the airport is busier — check whether your dates overlap one.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
📊 2026 Summary Data Table
| Feature | Current Data (2026) |
|---|---|
| Official name | Flughafen Hannover-Langenhagen |
| IATA / ICAO | HAJ / EDDV |
| Location | ~11 km north of Hannover, Lower Saxony |
| Passengers (2025) | 5.34 million |
| Terminals | 3 (A, B, C — one complex) |
| Train to centre | S-Bahn S5, Hannover Flughafen → Hauptbahnhof, ~18 min, ~€4.30 (2 zones) |
| Taxi to centre | ~€30–35, ~20 min |
| Currency | Euro (€) |
| Schengen status | Member; EES live (10 Apr 2026), ETIAS pending Q4 2026 |
| Lounges | Karl-Jatho Lounge (Priority Pass / Amex; €25 walk-in; 3-hr max) + a second PP lounge |
| Dominant carriers | TUIfly (base), Eurowings (base), Corendon (base), Lufthansa, Condor |
| Best layover move | S5 to Hauptbahnhof + the Rote Faden walking route (4 hr+ layover) |



