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Bordeaux–Mérignac Airport (BOD) — The Complete Master Guide 2026

France · Bordeaux · Schengen · EES Live · EUR

Bordeaux–Mérignac Airport (BOD) — The Complete Master Guide 2026

Bordeaux’s airport at Mérignac, about 12 km west of the city, finally got a direct tram into town — and as of late 2025 the line serving it is Line F, reaching the centre in about 35 minutes. It is a mid-size French airport handling around 5.8 million passengers a year, a figure that dipped after Ryanair pulled out entirely at the end of 2024 and is now rebuilding on easyJet, Volotea, Transavia and Air France. For the traveller the essentials are the tram and shuttle into town, the Schengen border under EES, the lounge situation (which has a Bordeaux-specific twist), and what a layover in the wine capital can reach. This guide covers each.

Airport: Bordeaux–Mérignac Airport (Aéroport de Bordeaux-M…Currency: Euro (€) — France is in the eurozone

⚡ 2026 Quick Reference — Key Facts at a Glance

Airport
Bordeaux–Mérignac Airport (Aéroport de Bordeaux-Mérignac)
IATA / ICAO
BOD / LFBD
Distance to centre
~12 km west of Bordeaux
Tram to centre
Line F (since Dec 2025) → Hôtel de Ville ~35 min / Gare Saint-Jean ~45 min, ~€2 (TBM)
Express shuttle
30’Direct coach, Hall B → Gare Saint-Jean, ~30 min, every 30 min
Taxi to centre
~€35–45, ~25–30 min
Currency
Euro (€) — France is in the eurozone
Schengen
Yes. EES live; ETIAS pending Q4 2026
Lounge
Priority Pass here = a dining credit (Ritazza/Ostrea); plus a Hall A lounge & Air France lounge
Dominant carriers
easyJet, Volotea (base), Transavia, Air France, Vueling
Terminals
Hall A & Hall B (plus the low-cost “billi” area history)

📋 Table of Contents

🏢 1. The Halls & the Post-Ryanair Reshuffle

Bordeaux operates two connected halls — Hall A and Hall B — within one terminal complex; check which your flight uses, as the lounges and the 30’Direct shuttle stop are hall-specific. The airport’s recent story is the airline reshuffle: Ryanair withdrew all its services at the end of October 2024 in a dispute over fees, cutting around 40 routes and knocking traffic down to roughly 5.8 million from a 2019 peak near 7.7 million. Other carriers have moved in — Volotea based a third aircraft here in 2025 and now offers well over a million seats, with easyJet, Transavia and Air France adding frequencies — and demand has been climbing back. Note that the Bordeaux–Paris Orly route no longer exists: the French government banned short domestic flights where a sub-2½-hour train alternative exists, and the TGV does Bordeaux–Paris in about two hours.

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

France 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 Bordeaux.

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 Line F Tram, the 30’Direct Shuttle & Taxis

Bordeaux now has a direct tram to the airport — and the line changed recently, so older guides will mislead you. Since 6 December 2025 the airport is served by tram Line F, which runs to the city centre (Hôtel de Ville) in about 35 minutes and on to Gare Saint-Jean (the main station) in about 45 minutes. It uses the standard TBM city-transport ticket (around €2, bought from the platform machine). This is the cheap, turn-up option, though at 35–45 minutes it is not the fastest.

The 30’Direct shuttle is the quicker route to the train station: an air-conditioned express coach from Hall B to Gare Saint-Jean in about 30 minutes, running every half hour, with free Wi-Fi and luggage handling. It costs more than the tram (buy at the airport); choose it if you are catching a train and want speed.

Taxis from the rank run about €35–45 into the centre, roughly 25–30 minutes. Use the official rank.

🛋️ 4. Lounges & the Priority Pass Catch

Bordeaux has a Priority-Pass quirk worth knowing: the Priority Pass benefit here is largely a dining credit, not a classic lounge. At the Ritazza café (Hall A) and L’Ostrea (Hall B), Priority Pass cardholders get about €23 off the bill rather than access to a members’ lounge — useful, but it is a meal credit, not a quiet seated lounge. The airport does operate a paid Hall A departure lounge (drinks, snacks, press, Wi-Fi, runway views) for passengers departing from Hall A, and Air France runs its own lounge in Terminal 1 for eligible premium and status passengers — small, but with a French sense of place, down to the canelés. If you specifically want a traditional lounge on a Priority Pass, manage expectations: at Bordeaux the card mostly buys you lunch.

🍽️ 5. Bordeaux Food, Cannelés & Wine Before You Fly

Bordeaux is, of course, a wine name first — the reds of the Médoc and Saint-Émilion and the sweet Sauternes — and a bottle is the obvious carry-home from a city built on the trade. The edible souvenir, though, is the cannelé: a small, heavily caramelised cake of rum-and-vanilla custard in a fluted copper-baked crust, invented in Bordeaux and sold boxed across the city. On the plate, the local classics are entrecôte à la bordelaise (steak in a red-wine-and-shallot sauce), oysters from the Arcachon basin just down the coast, and the rich foie gras of the surrounding southwest. Wine and boxed cannelés clear EU customs without issue; fresh oysters are a here-and-now pleasure.

💡 6. Insider: the Miroir d’Eau, La Cité du Vin & the Layover Math

Bordeaux’s 18th-century centre — the “Port of the Moon,” a UNESCO World Heritage site — curves along the Garonne in honey-coloured limestone. The set-piece is the Place de la Bourse facing the Miroir d’Eau, the world’s largest reflecting pool (a thin film of water over granite that mirrors the façade and mists on a cycle), laid out in 2006. The city’s modern landmark is La Cité du Vin, the wine museum in a swirling, decanter-shaped building on the riverbank, reachable by tram. Rue Sainte-Catherine, running off Place de la Comédie, is one of Europe’s longest pedestrian shopping streets. The Médoc and Saint-Émilion wine châteaux are day-trip country beyond the city.

The layover math: the constraint is the tram’s 35-minute run to the centre, so realistically a five-hour-plus layover is what makes a Bordeaux visit comfortable — tram in to Hôtel de Ville or the riverfront, the Place de la Bourse and Miroir d’Eau, a cannelé, and back, with a 90-minute return-security buffer. A four-hour layover is tight but possible for a quick look at the Place de la Bourse if the tram times line up. The wine châteaux are not layover material. Under four hours, stay airside.

🧭 7. Practical Notes Before You Go

  • It’s Line F now, not Line A. The airport tram was reorganised in December 2025; take Line F for the centre and Gare Saint-Jean. Guides naming the old Line A airport branch are out of date.
  • Priority Pass = a meal, not a lounge. At Bordeaux the card mainly gives a ~€23 dining credit at Ritazza (Hall A) or L’Ostrea (Hall B); plan accordingly if you wanted a traditional lounge.
  • Cash and the exchange trap. Draw euro from a bank ATM rather than the airport bureau de change. Cards and contactless are accepted almost everywhere, including the tram machines.
  • 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

How do I get from Bordeaux Airport to the city centre? +
Take tram Line F (which has served the airport since December 2025) — about 35 minutes to the centre (Hôtel de Ville) and 45 to Gare Saint-Jean, on a standard TBM ticket (around €2). For speed to the train station, the 30’Direct express coach from Hall B does it in about 30 minutes, every half hour. A taxi is about €35–45.
Which tram goes to Bordeaux Airport? +
Line F, since 6 December 2025. It replaced the earlier Line A airport branch, so older guides naming Line A are out of date. It runs to Hôtel de Ville (~35 min) and Gare Saint-Jean (~45 min).
Is there a lounge at Bordeaux Airport, and does Priority Pass work? +
Sort of — at Bordeaux, Priority Pass mainly gives a ~€23 dining credit at the Ritazza (Hall A) and L’Ostrea (Hall B) outlets rather than access to a classic lounge. There is a paid Hall A departure lounge, and Air France runs a lounge in Terminal 1 for its premium passengers.
What currency is used at Bordeaux, and do I need ETIAS? +
The euro. France 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.
Can I see Bordeaux on a layover? +
Comfortably only on a five-hour-plus layover, given the 35-minute tram each way — enough for the Place de la Bourse and Miroir d’Eau, a riverfront walk and a cannelé, with a 90-minute return-security buffer. A four-hour layover is tight. The wine châteaux are day trips, not layover stops.
Which airlines fly from Bordeaux? +
easyJet, Volotea (which bases aircraft here), Transavia, Air France and Vueling are the main carriers. Ryanair withdrew entirely at the end of 2024, which dented traffic, but others have added routes since. Note the Bordeaux–Paris Orly flight no longer exists — France banned it in favour of the TGV.
Did Ryanair leave Bordeaux? +
Yes — Ryanair pulled all its services from Bordeaux at the end of October 2024 in a dispute over airport charges, cutting about 40 routes. Other carriers have since stepped in to rebuild the network.
What should I eat or buy before flying out of Bordeaux? +
A box of cannelés — the caramelised rum-and-vanilla cakes invented here — and a bottle of Bordeaux wine are the classic carry-homes; for eating, entrecôte à la bordelaise or Arcachon oysters. Wine and boxed cannelés clear EU customs fine.

📊 2026 Summary Data Table

Feature Current Data (2026)
Official name Aéroport de Bordeaux-Mérignac
IATA / ICAO BOD / LFBD
Location ~12 km west of Bordeaux
Passengers ~5.8 million/year (recovering after Ryanair’s 2024 exit)
Terminals Hall A & Hall B (one complex)
Tram to centre Line F (since 6 Dec 2025) → Hôtel de Ville ~35 min / Gare Saint-Jean ~45 min, ~€2 (TBM)
Express shuttle 30’Direct coach, Hall B → Gare Saint-Jean, ~30 min, every 30 min
Taxi to centre ~€35–45, ~25–30 min
Currency Euro (€)
Schengen status Member; EES live (10 Apr 2026), ETIAS pending Q4 2026
Lounges Priority Pass = ~€23 dining credit (Ritazza/L’Ostrea); paid Hall A lounge; Air France lounge (premium)
Dominant carriers easyJet, Volotea (base), Transavia, Air France, Vueling
2026 change Tram Line F now serves the airport (from 6 Dec 2025)
Best layover move Tram F to Place de la Bourse / Miroir d’Eau (5 hr+ layover)

Posted 6h ago

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