San Bernardino International Airport is a public airport southeast of downtown San Bernardino, California, in San Bernardino County, California, United States. The airport covers and has one runway that can accommodate the largest existing aircraft, including the Airbus A380 and the Boeing 747. In September 2011, as part of a special joint corruption task force, the FBI raided the offices of the airport and the home of airport developer Scot Spencer to secure internal documents. In late September 2011, Don Rogers, the Director of the SBIA Authority (SBIAA) resigned.

Launch of commercial passenger service

thumb|San Bernardino International Airport domestic terminal.

San Bernardino International Airport encompasses three passenger terminals: a domestic terminal served by Breeze Airways, an international terminal with a U.S. Customs and Border Protection processing facility, and the Luxivair SBD executive terminal, an airport-owned fixed-base operator.

In April 2017, Volaris, a Mexican low-cost airline, announced the beginning of flights to Guadalajara, Mexico, for launch on June 29, 2017. However, these plans were later postponed to November 2017, before being cancelled altogether. In March 2022, Breeze Airways first announced plans to operate passenger service at the airport with flights to San Francisco. Scheduled passenger service finally began on August 4, 2022, when Breeze became the first commercial airline to operate passenger flights in and out of SBD's never-used domestic air terminal.

Airlines and destinations

Passenger

Statistics

{| class="wikitable sortable"

|+Busiest routes from SBD (February 2025 – January 2026)

!Rank

!City

!Passengers

!Carrier(s)

|-

|1

| San Francisco, California

|18,790

|Breeze

|-

|2

| Provo, Utah

|7,980

|Breeze

|}

Location

The airport and some of the surrounding area is within the city of San Bernardino and the Inland Valley Development Agency. The surrounding areas are being redeveloped by Hillwood.

The airport is about two miles east of downtown San Bernardino and 14 miles northeast of Riverside. It is six miles northwest of Redlands, on the outskirts of Highland. Motorists can use the San Bernardino Freeway (Interstate 10), Barstow Freeway (Interstate 215), or the Foothill Freeway (SR 210).

Ground transportation

The Omnitrans route 15 bus connects from North Del Rosa Drive and East Rialto Street to the San Bernardino Transit Center, where Metrolink connections are available to several locations including Los Angeles Union Station.

The airport was the filming location for the 1996 movie Executive Decision, the 2001 movie The Fast and the Furious and the 2004 Martin Scorsese film The Aviator using a Lockheed Constellation preserved by the National Airline History Museum, and flown in for the shoot, with one hangar "dressed" as a Trans World Airlines facility.

References

<!--See Wikipedia:Footnotes for an explanation of how to generate footnotes using the tags and the tag below -->