About New Delhi Airport

The capital city New Delhi has its own international airport known as Indira Gandhi International Airport and one domestic airport known as Palam Domestic Airport. Indira Gandhi International Airport was built up in the year 1930 and its IATA code for the air terminal is abbreviated as DEL.

Here one can get all the important information about airlines that operates from New Delhi airport. All the top domestic and international flights fly from this capital city.

Out of them, the airlines which provide the services frequently are Jet Konnect, JetLite, JetLite and Jet Airways. What’s more, the most frequent route from New Delhi is flights from New Delhi to Mumbai and after that New Delhi to Bangalore with 199, 134 flights on a weekly basis.

At the airplane terminal, one can get a free transport benefit at regular intervals from one terminal o another. Both these terminals are all around furnished with exceptionally facilities, for example, seating room, resting room, banks, bureaux de change, restaurants, cafes, free Wi-Fi and a duty free shopping area.

Aside from all the luxury at the Delhi Airport, there are various tangles which are proper flight schedules and tight security. You may also need to remain in lines for better security checks.

Indira Gandhi Airport has three active passenger terminals:

Terminal 1
It is used by low cost carriers such as GoAir, IndiGo and SpiceJet. The terminal is divided into:

  • Terminal 1-C: It is used for domestic arrivals.
  • Terminal 1-D: It is used for departures and can handle up to 15 million passengers annually. Currently closed due to improvement works and so all the flights are transferred to Terminal 2.

Terminal 2
It has been used temporarily to host the low cost airlines of Terminal 1. When Terminal 1 will revive, it will be decimated to construct the new Terminal 4.

Terminal 3
It is the newest terminal and was opened in 2010, one of the biggest terminals in the world which is able to handle 40 million passengers per year. Other terminals include T1A & T1B, currently unused nowadays.