Ciudad Juárez International Airport
Ciudad Juarez International Airport (Spanish: Aeropuerto Internacional de Ciudad Juárez); officially Aeropuerto Internacional Abraham González (Abraham González International Airport) (IATA: CJS, ICAO: MMCS) is an international airport located in Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua, Mexico, near the Mexico–United States border opposite El Paso, Texas. It serves the Metropolitan Area of Ciudad Juárez and the El Paso-Juarez agglomeration.
Ciudad Juarez International Airport Aeropuerto Internacional Abraham González | |||||||||||||||
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![]() Front facade of the airport | |||||||||||||||
| Summary | |||||||||||||||
| Airport type | Public | ||||||||||||||
| Operator | Grupo Aeroportuario Centro Norte | ||||||||||||||
| Serves |
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| Location | Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua, Mexico | ||||||||||||||
| Elevation AMSL | 1,190 m / 3,904 ft | ||||||||||||||
| Coordinates | 31°38′11″N 106°25′43″W | ||||||||||||||
| Website | www | ||||||||||||||
| Map | |||||||||||||||
![]() CJS ![]() CJS | |||||||||||||||
| Runways | |||||||||||||||
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| Statistics (2022) | |||||||||||||||
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Source: Grupo Aeroportuario Centro Norte | |||||||||||||||
It is the eleventh-busiest airport in Mexico by passenger traffic. In 2021, it handled 1,499,841 passengers, and in 2022 it handled 2,004,524[1] according to its operator, Grupo Aeroportuario Centro Norte.[2][3] The airport also supports cargo flights, flight training and general aviation activities. It is named after Abraham González, former Governor of the State of Chihuahua.
Airlines and destinations

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Passengers
| Airlines | Destinations |
|---|---|
| Aeroméxico | Mexico City |
| Aeroméxico Connect | Mexico City |
| Mexicana de Aviación | Mexico City–AIFA (begins December 2, 2023)[4] |
| TAR | Durango, Hermosillo, Mazatlán, Torreón/Gómez Palacio |
| Viva Aerobus | Cancún, Guadalajara, Leon/Del Bajío, Mazatlán, Mexico City, Mexico City–AIFA (begins December 16, 2023),[5] Monterrey, Puerto Vallarta, San José del Cabo |
| Volaris | Cancún, Culiacán, Guadalajara, Hermosillo, Mexicali, Mexico City, Mexico City–AIFA, Querétaro, Tijuana |
Cargo
| Airlines | Destinations |
|---|---|
| Estafeta | La Paz, San Luis Potosí |
| TUM AeroCarga | Monterrey, Toluca |
Destinations map
| Destinations map |
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![]() Ciudad Juárez Domestic destinations from Ciudad Juárez International Airport Red = Year-round destination Blue = Future destination Orange = Cargo and passenger destination |
Statistics
Busiest routes
| Rank | City | Passengers | Ranking | Airline |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 409,903 | Aeroméxico, Aeroméxico Connect, VivaAerobús, Volaris | ||
| 2 | 187,162 | TAR, VivaAerobús, Volaris | ||
| 3 | 96,475 | VivaAerobús, Volaris | ||
| 4 | 82,272 | Aeroméxico Connect, VivaAerobús | ||
| 5 | 58,837 | VivaAerobús | ||
| 6 | 46,559 | Volaris | ||
| 7 | 13,338 | VivaAerobús | ||
| 8 | 5,861 | TAR | ||
| 9 | 5,304 | TAR | ||
| 10 | 3,985 | TAR | ||
| 11 | 3,611 | TAR |
References
- "OMA reporta tráfico de 2.3 millones de pasajeros en el mes de diciembre de 2022" (PDF).
- "Passenger's Traffic" (PDF). Grupo Aeroportuario Centro Norte (in Spanish). January 2023. Retrieved January 11, 2023.
- "Inicia Volaris operaciones en Ciudad Juárez | INFO7 | Economía". Archived from the original on 2014-02-26.
- "These Are Our Destinations". Mexicana (in Spanish). October 2022. Retrieved October 4, 2023.
- "Viva Aerobus Bets Big on AIFA: 17 New Routes". Aviacionline. September 2023. Retrieved September 28, 2023.
- "Estadística operacional por origen-destino / Traffic Statistics by City Pairs" (in Spanish). Agencia Federal de Aviación Civil. January 2023. Retrieved January 26, 2023.


