๐ต๐ฌ Salamo, Papua New Guinea
Salamo Airport (SAM) is a small airfield serving the village of Salamo in Milne Bay Province, Papua New Guinea. It functions primarily as local access rather than a full-service passenger terminal.
Published data list a single runway 14/32 of about 930 m (3,051 ft) at roughly 50 ft (15 m) elevation. The airport is described as an airfield serving Salamo, reflecting its limited scale.
Service is typically limited to small aircraft and chartered flights, so passenger handling is minimal and oriented to basic boarding and drop-off rather than extensive terminal amenities.
The facility maintains minimal operational capabilities due to its remote location and basic infrastructure, with operations significantly affected by Papua New Guinea's challenging tropical weather including monsoonal rains, thunderstorms, and high humidity that can make the short runway unusable during wet conditions. The airport's remote location serves the small community of Salamo and surrounding villages, providing critical access for medical emergencies, supply deliveries, and occasional tourism to one of Papua New Guinea's most isolated and pristine regions known for traditional culture and untouched tropical landscapes.Salamo is an East Sepik community airport in PNG, so the airport is a practical link into the island-and-river transport system.
Arrive early and verify charter flight arrangements, as Salamo Airport serves a remote village in Papua New Guinea's Milne Bay Province with extremely limited infrastructure and irregular flight schedules that depend entirely on charter operations and small aircraft availability. If the plan changes, a pre-arranged pickup or host contact is the useful backup, because the airport is really the handoff into Salamo rather than a place to wait around. The meaningful alternates are Port Moresby Jacksons International Airport, Iamalele Airport, Wapolu Airport, which is why the backup plan matters more than the terminal amenities. Scheduled service is carried by Regional carriers, so the first bank of the day is the one to watch. That makes weather and daylight the real constraints, with the village or resort side of the trip doing most of the work.
Seasonal weather patterns dramatically impact the airport's ability to operate, with Papua New Guinea's wet season from December through March bringing heavy tropical rains that can flood the runway and make aircraft operations impossible for extended periods, while the dry season offers more reliable flying conditions but still features afternoon thunderstorms typical of tropical climates.The village-side handoff is the real arrival, not the terminal.
โข Public transport may be limited; plan ground travel in advance.
โข Check your flight status before leaving for the airport.
โข Allow extra time during peak travel periods at this airport.
โข Keep important documents easily accessible at this airport.
โข Download your airline's mobile app for updates at this airport.
Minimum domestic connection:
45 minutes
International connections:
90 minutes
Interline transfers:
120 minutes
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Last updated: April 2026 | Data Source: IATA and other airline sites and resources