Weeze Airport (NRN) — Airport Guide 2026
Quick Reference
Weeze Airport / Airport Niederrhein (marketed “Düsseldorf-Weeze”)
NRN / EDLV
Weeze, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany — Lower Rhine, near the Dutch border
About 70 km northwest of Düsseldorf; a short hop from Nijmegen (Netherlands)
One passenger terminal
2,245,735 passengers (+14%) — a record, back over 2 million for the first time in a decade
Germany — Schengen, euro; EES live since April 2026, ETIAS expected Q4 2026
Euro (€)
Shuttle bus ~1 hr 15 min, €24 (book ahead); or train + bus ~1 hr 30 min
Hourly bus, about an hour, roughly €9–12
No reliably confirmable Priority Pass lounge — don’t count on one
Ryanair (focus city), Wizz Air, Corendon
🛫 1. What Weeze Airport is
Weeze is a low-cost leisure airport on the Lower Rhine, a former Royal Air Force base (RAF Laarbruch, until 1999) turned over to Ryanair holiday traffic. It had a strong 2025: 2,245,735 passengers, up 14% and back over two million for the first time in a decade. For a small single-terminal field near the Dutch border, that’s a genuine recovery, built almost entirely on cheap flights to the Mediterranean.
The catchment explains the numbers. Weeze pulls from the German Lower Rhine and, just as heavily, from the Dutch side of the border — Nijmegen, Arnhem and the wider Gelderland sit within easy reach, and for many Dutch travellers a cheap flight from Weeze beats the drive to Eindhoven or the cost of Schiphol. A binational, drive-in leisure crowd is what keeps a small rural airport above two million.
The thing to understand before you book is the name. The airport sells itself as “Düsseldorf-Weeze,” and it is not in Düsseldorf — the city is about 70 km away. That matters because the fare that looks like a Düsseldorf bargain comes with a transfer that a Düsseldorf arrival wouldn’t. NRN is a real, useful airport for the right trip; it is the wrong airport if you booked it thinking it was Düsseldorf’s.
Don’t be fooled by the name. NRN is sold as “Düsseldorf-Weeze,” but Düsseldorf city is about 70 km off — a €24 booked shuttle or a 90-minute public-transport relay, not a quick hop. If Düsseldorf is your actual destination, the real Düsseldorf Airport (DUS) is usually the better arrival; NRN earns its keep on price and on where it genuinely sits.
🛬 2. The terminal and the lounge
One passenger terminal, small and quick to cross, built for low-cost turnarounds. Several stands sit west of the terminal and use bus-boarding, so allow a few extra minutes between the gate and the aircraft. The single security line is the only real pinch, and it backs up in the summer-morning Ryanair bank — two hours for a peak departure, ninety minutes off-season. Airside is cafés and shops pitched at holiday traffic, nothing more.
The bus-boarding is worth a practical word: it means a short walk or shuttle across the open apron to the aircraft, exposed to the weather. Fine in July; less so on a wet Lower Rhine morning, so don’t pack your only warm layer in the hold.
On lounges, be realistic: there is no reliably confirmable Priority Pass walk-in lounge here. A pay-per-use or concierge lounge product may be sold, but at a leisure airport like this you should plan on the café rather than assume lounge access, and verify on the airport’s own site if it matters to you.
✈️ 3. Carriers, and what that means for your booking
This is a Ryanair airport with a leisure tilt. Ryanair is the focus carrier and runs the bulk of the schedule, weighted hard toward the Mediterranean — Palma de Mallorca, Girona, Alicante, Málaga and Zadar are among the busiest routes. Wizz Air adds budget frequencies, and Corendon flies scheduled and charter services to Turkey, Greece and Spain, which gives the airport a strong holiday-and-visiting-family profile rather than a business one.
For booking, that means cheap leisure fares and a wide summer map, but nothing to connect onto — every itinerary is a single point-to-point hop. It also means the route list moves around.
Book with one eye on the schedule: Ryanair has flagged network adjustments at its German bases, Weeze included, for summer 2026. Secondary-airport routes shift more than a legacy hub’s, so confirm your specific flight is still operating before you commit to NRN over the alternatives.
🛂 4. The border: Germany, Schengen, the euro
Germany is in the Schengen Area and uses the euro. EU/EEA and Swiss nationals walk through; UK, US, Canadian, Australian and many other passport-holders enter visa-free for up to 90 days in any 180-day period.
Arrivals from elsewhere in Schengen — the Spanish and Greek leisure routes — clear with no passport check, and the bus across to the Netherlands crosses no border at all. Arrivals from outside Schengen, such as the UK or Turkey, hit a Schengen external border, where the EU’s EES biometric registration has applied since 10 April 2026.
ETIAS, the pre-travel authorisation for visa-exempt visitors, is expected to follow in the last quarter of 2026, ahead of becoming mandatory in 2027 — worth checking before you book on a non-EU passport. Everything is in euros, ATMs are in the terminal, and cards work nearly everywhere, with a little cash handy for bus tickets.
🚌 5. Getting out: Düsseldorf, the Lower Rhine, and the Dutch option
There is no railway station at the airport. What you do next depends on where you’re actually going, and the honest hierarchy runs against the airport’s own branding.
- To Düsseldorf: the Airport Weeze Shuttle runs to Düsseldorf Hauptbahnhof five or six times a day in about an hour and fifteen minutes for €24, and you must reserve it ahead through the airport or the shuttle operator. The cheaper public-transport route — bus to a local station, then the half-hourly RE10 regional train via Kleve — takes around an hour and a half with a change.
- To the local rail network: bus SW1 reaches Weeze Bahnhof in about 11 minutes for €3.30, hourly, and regional trains run from there.
The smarter exit is often the Netherlands. The airport sits near the Dutch border, and an hourly BVR bus runs to Nijmegen Centraal in about an hour for roughly €9–12 — cheaper and simpler than the Düsseldorf run, and from Nijmegen the Dutch rail network opens up Arnhem, Utrecht and beyond.
If you’re staying in the region rather than transferring straight out, weigh a hire car. The Lower Rhine is rural and flat, public transport between its smaller towns is sparse, and car-hire desks plus a large car park sit at the terminal — a real share of NRN’s traffic simply drives in and leaves a car for the week. For Düsseldorf or the Dutch cities, though, the train and bus links above are the better call; you wouldn’t want a car in either.
No one connects at Weeze — it’s a point-to-point airport — so the only real planning question is the transfer. Match it to your destination honestly: the Dutch bus for the Netherlands, the regional train for the Lower Rhine towns, and the booked shuttle (or, frankly, a different airport) for Düsseldorf itself.
🏞️ 6. The reason you’re here: the Lower Rhine and the border
Be honest about what this is: most people at NRN are flying out, not in — locals and Dutch neighbours catching cheap sun flights. It isn’t a tourist destination airport, and pretending otherwise would be dishonest.
For the rarer inbound traveller, the genuine draw is the region rather than any single sight. The Lower Rhine (Niederrhein) is flat, green cycling country, with Xanten’s Roman archaeological park the one stop that justifies a detour, and Kleve and the river towns filling in the rest. Just as close, and often more interesting, is the Dutch side: Nijmegen is one of the oldest cities in the Netherlands and an easy bus away. On food, set expectations low — the terminal does standard German bakery-and-bratwurst fare, and in spring the regional thing to eat is Lower Rhine white asparagus (Spargel); there’s nothing here worth carrying home that you couldn’t buy better elsewhere.
❓ 7. FAQ
📋 8. At a glance
| Item | Detail |
|---|---|
| Airport | Weeze / Niederrhein (NRN / EDLV), Lower Rhine |
| Terminal | Single terminal, bus-boarding stands; arrive 2h in summer peak |
| To Düsseldorf | Airport Weeze Shuttle ~1 hr 15 min, €24 (book ahead); or train+bus ~1 hr 30 min |
| To Nijmegen (NL) | Hourly BVR bus, ~1 hr, ~€9–12 |
| To local rail | Bus SW1 to Weeze Bahnhof, ~11 min, €3.30, hourly |
| Border | Germany; Schengen; euro; EES live since April 2026; ETIAS expected Q4 2026 |
| Currency | Euro (€); some cash useful for buses |
| Lounge | None reliably confirmable (no Priority Pass walk-in) |
| Carriers | Ryanair (focus city), Wizz Air, Corendon |
| Busiest period | Summer Mediterranean season + school holidays |
🔗 9. Explore More
- Düsseldorf Airport (DUS) guide — the actual Düsseldorf airport, the better arrival if the city is your destination
- Cologne Bonn Airport (CGN) guide — another North Rhine-Westphalia low-cost gateway



