Changi Airport to raise passenger, airline fees to fund improvement plans
The Straits Times|November 08, 2024
Increase to kick in from April 2025; money to be used to upgrade services, infrastructure
Kok Yufeng

Passengers and airlines at Changi Airport will pay higher fees and levies over the next six years, as the airport looks to finance a new $3 billion improvement plan across its four terminals and cover rising operating costs in areas such as energy and labour.

Departing passengers who start their trips at Changi Airport will continue to pay a total of $65.20 in fees for the next two years. But this will go up in stages from April 2027, reaching $79.20 in April 2030—a 21 per cent rise.

For travellers transiting through the airport, the total fees levied on them will more than double, from $9 now to $21 in April 2030.

Meanwhile, airlines will need to pay about 40 per cent more to land and park their planes at Changi come 2030.

Announcing the fee hikes and the multibillion-dollar investment on Nov 7, the Civil Aviation Authority of Singapore (CAAS) and airport operator Changi Airport Group (CAG) said the money will be used to improve existing services and infrastructure, such as baggage handling systems and the Skytrain, which connects Terminals 1, 2 and 3.

There are also plans to refurbish the 16-year-old Terminal 3, though this is still at the planning stage.

Justifying the latest increase in airport charges, which will kick in from April 2025, senior executives at CAG said the airport needs to add more capacity in the short term to meet an expected increase in demand.

With the opening of a third runway in the latter half of this decade, more flights will take off from and land at the airport, and more passengers will pass through it.

This story is from the November 08, 2024 edition of The Straits Times.

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This story is from the November 08, 2024 edition of The Straits Times.

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