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Sacramento Executive Airport (SAC) — Airport Guide 2026

Sacramento · California, United States · USD

Sacramento Executive Airport (SAC) — Airport Guide 2026

Quick Reference

Airport
Sacramento Executive Airport
Codes
SAC / KSAC
City
Sacramento, California, United States
Location
About 3 miles (5 km) south of downtown Sacramento
Type
General-aviation airport — no scheduled airline flights since 1967
Commercial flights
None — the commercial airport for Sacramento is SMF (Sacramento International), ~20 km north
Based here
~365 general-aviation aircraft, an FBO (Modern Aviation), four flight schools, charters
Country & border
United States — CBP / ESTA / Global Entry; no EES/ETIAS; US dollars
Currency
US dollar ($ / USD)
To downtown
Taxi or rideshare, a short 5–10 minute ride; car rental at the FBO
Lounge
No public airline lounge — the FBO has a pilot/passenger lounge for general-aviation users

🛫 1. The first thing to know: SAC is not the airport you probably want

The single most useful fact about Sacramento Executive is what it is not. Despite the IATA code SAC, this is a general-aviation airport with no scheduled airline service, and has had none since 1967. If you have booked a commercial ticket “to Sacramento,” you are flying into Sacramento International Airport (SMF), about 20 km north of the city — a different airport entirely, with its own SMF guide covering terminals, transport and the rest.

The codes are easy to mix up, especially because online tools sometimes show SAC for the city. So before anything else: a normal airline booking on United, Southwest, Delta, Alaska or anyone else goes to SMF, not here. SAC is for private aircraft, business jets, charter flights and flight training, and a passenger turning up here for a scheduled flight would find no airline desks at all.

The one check worth doing before you travel: look at the airport name on your ticket, not just the city. “Sacramento International (SMF)” is the commercial airport almost everyone wants; “Sacramento Executive (SAC)” is this general-aviation field. They are different places about 25 km apart, and only a private or charter flight uses SAC.

If you genuinely have business at SAC — a private or charter flight, a lesson, or a visit to one of the airport’s businesses — then the rest of this guide is for you. If you are a regular traveller, the practical takeaway is to confirm your booking says SMF and head there instead.

🛩️ 2. What Sacramento Executive actually is

Executive is Northern California’s main general-aviation airport, sitting on about 540 acres just south of downtown with two lighted runways and a helipad. It is home to roughly 365 based aircraft and around 30 aviation businesses, so on any given day it is busy with light aircraft, training flights and the occasional business jet rather than airliners.

The services here are the general-aviation kind. Modern Aviation runs the FBO — the fixed-base operator that handles fuelling, ramp and ground services for private and charter aircraft — and the field also hosts four flight-training operations, an avionics shop, aircraft sales and rentals, and charter operators. For a private pilot or a charter passenger, that means the support you would expect; for everyone else, it confirms this is a working aviation site, not a passenger terminal.

The airport has a long history for the region. It opened in 1930 as Sutterville Aerodrome, was taken over for military use during the Second World War, and gained a terminal building in 1955. When the new metropolitan airport opened north of the city in 1967, the scheduled airlines moved there and this field settled into its long-running role as the city’s general-aviation airport.

For the rare passenger who does arrive here — almost always on a charter or private flight — the experience is an FBO one: you are met on the ramp, you pass through the FBO building rather than a security-and-gates terminal, and you are on your way quickly. It is a far smaller and more personal operation than an airline terminal, which is much of the point for the people who use it.

🛂 3. The border, for private and charter arrivals

The United States runs its own entry system, so the European schemes do not apply — there is no EES or ETIAS here, the currency is the US dollar, and international visitors generally need either an ESTA under the Visa Waiver Program or a US visa, with Global Entry an option for frequent travellers.

The wrinkle specific to a general-aviation airport is customs and immigration. SAC is not a routine scheduled-international port of entry, so an international private or charter flight does not simply land and walk out — arrangements for US Customs and Border Protection clearance have to be made, and many international general-aviation flights into the Sacramento area clear at a designated port of entry. If you are arriving from abroad on a private or charter aircraft, your operator or handler sorts the CBP coordination; it is not something a passenger improvises.

For the overwhelmingly domestic traffic the airport actually sees, none of this applies — a flight arriving from elsewhere in the US has no border formalities at all. The border note matters only for the small slice of international general-aviation arrivals.

🚗 4. Getting downtown — the one genuine advantage

If there is a single practical upside to Executive, it is the location. The airport is only about 3 miles south of downtown Sacramento, in the Land Park area, so reaching the city is a short hop rather than a journey.

A taxi or rideshare (Uber or Lyft) into downtown is a quick 5-to-10-minute ride in normal traffic, and car rental is available through the airport’s businesses, which suits the charter and private traffic that often needs a car at the other end. There is no light-rail station at the field, so the road is the way in — but with downtown this close, that is no hardship.

For anyone weighing SAC against SMF purely on city access, this is the trade: Executive is far closer to downtown, but it has no airlines, so the comparison only matters if you have the choice of flying private. For a scheduled flight, the longer run in from SMF is simply part of the deal.

🛬 5. Lounge, food, and the honest summary

There is no public airline lounge at Executive, because there are no airlines — the comfort here is the FBO lounge at Modern Aviation, for crews and the passengers of the private and charter flights it handles. A Priority Pass or airline-status lounge has no meaning at this airport; that world is at SMF.

The same goes for food and shopping: this is not a terminal with concessions to fill a wait, so the eating worth doing is in the city, a few minutes away. Land Park and the nearby neighbourhoods have good cafés and restaurants, and downtown and Midtown Sacramento — with the city’s strong farm-to-fork food scene — are a short ride off.

The honest summary is short because the airport calls for it: SAC is a busy, historic general-aviation field three miles from downtown Sacramento, useful to private pilots, charter passengers and flight students, and close enough to the city to be genuinely convenient for them. For everyone booking a normal flight, it is the wrong SAC — the airport you want is SMF.

🌅 6. If you are visiting Sacramento

Whichever airport brings you in, Sacramento itself is a worthwhile California capital rather than just a stop on the way to San Francisco or Tahoe. The California State Capitol and its park anchor downtown, Old Sacramento preserves a Gold Rush-era waterfront district by the river with the California State Railroad Museum, and the Tower Bridge is the city’s golden landmark across the Sacramento River.

The city’s real signature is food. Sacramento brands itself America’s farm-to-fork capital, drawing on the surrounding Central Valley farmland, and Midtown is where much of the good eating and drinking sits. It is also a practical base — Lake Tahoe and the Sierra are a couple of hours east, and the Napa and Sonoma wine country lies to the west. For the airport practicalities and the fuller picture of arriving by scheduled flight, the SMF guide is the one to read.

❓ 7. FAQ

Is SAC the same as Sacramento International Airport? +
No. SAC is Sacramento Executive Airport, a general-aviation field three miles south of downtown with no scheduled airline flights. The commercial airport is Sacramento International (SMF), about 20 km north. If you booked a normal flight, you are going to SMF.
Can I fly commercially into SAC? +
No. Executive has had no scheduled airline service since 1967. It handles private aircraft, business jets, charter flights and flight training only. A commercial airline booking to Sacramento will be SMF.
Why does my booking show SAC for Sacramento? +
Some travel tools use SAC loosely for the city of Sacramento, which causes confusion. Check the actual airport name and code on your ticket — a scheduled airline flight will operate to Sacramento International (SMF), not Sacramento Executive (SAC).
What is Sacramento Executive Airport used for? +
General aviation: about 365 based aircraft, an FBO (Modern Aviation) handling private and charter flights, four flight schools, plus charter, rental, sales and avionics businesses. It is a working aviation field, not a passenger terminal.
How do I get from SAC to downtown Sacramento? +
It is only about 3 miles, so a taxi or rideshare into downtown is a quick 5–10 minute ride, and car rental is available through the airport’s businesses. There is no light-rail station at the airport.
Is there a lounge at Sacramento Executive Airport? +
Not a public airline lounge — there are no airlines. The Modern Aviation FBO has a lounge for the crews and passengers of the private and charter flights it serves. Priority Pass and airline-status lounges do not apply here.
Do I need a visa or ESTA to fly into SAC from abroad? +
The usual US rules apply — an ESTA under the Visa Waiver Program or a US visa for visitors, with no EES or ETIAS (those are European systems). But SAC is not a routine international port of entry, so an international private or charter flight needs CBP clearance arranged in advance by the operator.
Which airport is closer to downtown, SAC or SMF? +
SAC, by a long way — it is about 3 miles south of downtown, while SMF is roughly 20 km north. But SAC has no airlines, so the proximity only helps if you are flying privately. For a scheduled flight, you use SMF.
Can I take flying lessons at Sacramento Executive? +
Yes. The airport hosts four flight-training operations, along with aircraft rental and other general-aviation services, which is a large part of what keeps it busy.
What is there to do in Sacramento? +
The California State Capitol, Old Sacramento’s Gold Rush waterfront and railroad museum, the Tower Bridge, and a strong farm-to-fork food scene in Midtown. The city is also a base for Lake Tahoe and the Sierra to the east and the Napa–Sonoma wine country to the west.

📋 8. At a glance

Item Detail
Airport Sacramento Executive (SAC / KSAC), ~3 miles south of downtown Sacramento
Type General-aviation airport — no scheduled airline flights since 1967
Commercial flights None — use Sacramento International (SMF), ~20 km north, for airline travel
Based here ~365 general-aviation aircraft, Modern Aviation FBO, four flight schools, charters
To downtown Taxi or rideshare, ~5–10 min; car rental at the FBO; no light rail
Border United States — CBP / ESTA / Global Entry; no EES/ETIAS; SAC not a routine international port of entry
Currency US dollar ($ / USD)
Lounge No public airline lounge; FBO lounge for general-aviation users only
Bottom line If you booked a normal flight to Sacramento, you want SMF — not this airport

🔗 9. Explore More

Posted 3h ago

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