Airports
Italian airports — live flights
Real-time air traffic over Italy's main airports. Pick an airport to open the live ADS-B and MLAT map centred on it, see how many aircraft are nearby right now and what FlyItalyADSB can track in the area. 28 airports across 15 regions.
Abruzzo
Calabria
Calabria's main airport, on the isthmus between two seas, a hub for territorial continuity and summer tourist traffic.
An airport overlooking the Strait of Messina, famous for its demanding crosswind approaches between sea and mountain.
Campania
Emilia-Romagna
Friuli-Venezia Giulia
Lazio
Rome's low-cost and cargo airport, a historic Ryanair base, is also a transit point for government flights and business aviation.
Italy's busiest airport and ITA Airways' hub: it handles most of the country's intercontinental traffic, with a steady stream of long-haul flights over the Lazio coast.
Liguria
Lombardia
Ryanair's main Italian base and one of Europe's busiest night cargo hubs: very dense traffic around the clock over the Bergamo plain.
Milan's city airport, focused on short-haul business and domestic routes, with low-altitude approaches over the metropolitan area.
Northern Italy's largest airport and the country's main cargo gateway: heavy intercontinental and freight traffic over the upper Milan area and the Ticino.
Piemonte
Puglia
Sardegna
North-western Sardinia's airport, a hub for territorial continuity and low-cost flights over the Coral Riviera.
Sardinia's main airport, the cornerstone of mainland territorial continuity and the tourist gateway to the south of the island.
The gateway to the Costa Smeralda, it sees extreme peaks of private aviation and business jets during the Gallura summer.
Sicilia
Sicily's main airport, at the foot of Mount Etna: high tourist traffic and mainland connectivity flights.
Western Sicily's airport, squeezed between sea and mountain at Punta Raisi, with scenic approaches along the Tyrrhenian coast.
An airport in far-western Sicily, in mixed civil-military use, with low-cost flights to Italy and Europe over the Trapani salt pans.
Toscana
Florence's city airport, known for its short runway and technical approaches between the hills, focused on European business routes.
Tuscany's main airport, in civil-military use, a gateway to Florence and the Tyrrhenian coast with strong low-cost traffic.
Umbria
Veneto
The low-cost airport serving Venice, a Ryanair base with European point-to-point traffic over the Treviso countryside.
Northern Italy's third intercontinental airport, with spectacular approaches over the Venetian lagoon and strong seasonal tourist traffic.
Gateway to Lake Garda, combining scheduled flights, tourist charters and lively cargo activity at the foot of the Venetian Prealps.