๐ธ๐ง Parasi, Solomon Islands
Parasi Airport serves the remote rural community of Parasi in the southern region of Malaita Province, providing essential aviation connectivity to one of Solomon Islands' most isolated settlements. This small regional facility operates at sea level with a single runway oriented 12/30, designed specifically for DHC-6 Twin Otter aircraft that provide lifeline services to communities scattered across the archipelago's outer islands.
The airport functions as a basic airstrip with minimal infrastructure, reflecting its role as a remote community service point rather than a commercial aviation hub. Passenger facilities remain rudimentary, consisting primarily of a simple shelter area and basic aircraft parking apron. The facility lacks modern amenities typically found at larger airports, focusing instead on essential operational requirements for small aircraft operations.
Solomon Airlines provides scheduled domestic services to Parasi on Monday and Friday, operating approximately 40-minute flights between Honiara and this remote destination. The airline utilizes DHC-6 Twin Otter aircraft specifically chosen for their ability to operate from shorter, unpaved runways common throughout the Solomon Islands' rural aviation network.
Transfers from Parasi Airport rely primarily on boat transportation, highlighting the community's coastal geography and the integrated air-sea transportation system essential for accessing remote Pacific Island settlements. The airport serves as a crucial link in the chain connecting Parasi's residents to medical services, educational opportunities, and government functions available in Honiara and other provincial centers. As one of four airports serving Malaita Province alongside Auki, Atoifi, and Manaoba, Parasi Airport demonstrates Solomon Airlines' commitment to maintaining aviation services for isolated rural communities throughout the Solomon Islands archipelago.
Parasi is a small Solomon Islands domestic field, so arrivals are usually tied to a single community pickup or to a boat-and-road continuation rather than to any spare airport transport. That is especially important because scheduled flights are thin, and the practical handoff is the one arranged with the village or the host before you leave Honiara.
A critical tip: there are no banking or retail facilities on the island; you must bring all food, water, and cash (SBD) from Honiara. Always builds in significant flexibility for weather-related delays That means the road, the host, or the mission contact is part of the flight plan rather than an afterthought.
If you are headed inland or along the coast after landing, the next leg should be arranged before departure from Honiara, because Parasi is the aviation part of a longer island transfer and not a place where you can reliably improvise a truck, boat, or extra seat at the terminal. There is no spare transport bay on site, so every good trip starts with the next leg already spoken for. A village pickup or mission contact should already be spoken for, because Parasi is only useful when the next leg is fixed. A village pickup or mission contact should already be spoken for, because Parasi is only useful when the next leg is fixed and there is no spare transport bay.
โข Coordinate local canoe pickup with your host weeks in advance.
โข Financial tip: Bring all personal supplies and cash from the capital.
โข Pack extremely light in soft bags to comply with weight limits.
โข The flight from Honiara offers spectacular views of the reef lagoons.
โข Check flight status in Honiara; rain often closes the grass strip.
Minimum domestic connection:
45 minutes
International connections:
90 minutes
Interline transfers:
120 minutes
See current Google Maps reviews, ratings, photos, and traveler experiences for Parasi Airport (PRS).
Compare PRS/AGGP with another airport: Comparison Tool
Bila, Solomon Islands
Auki, Solomon Islands
Atoifi, Solomon Islands
Avu Avu, Solomon Islands
Ballalae, Solomon Islands
Last updated: April 2026 | Data Source: IATA and other airline sites and resources