โฐ Minimum Connection Times
Domestic โ Domestic
45
minutes
Domestic โ International
90
minutes
Interline Connections
110
minutes
๐ข Terminal Information
Queenstown Airport in South Africa's Eastern Cape is an operational public airfield, but not a current scheduled-airline terminal. Published aerodrome data identifies it as FAQT, public use, with airfield communications and a high inland elevation of about 3,637 ft, which is more useful context here than any generic description of passenger facilities.
The airport serves Queenstown's farming and business hinterland through private flying, charters, and occasional utility use rather than routine commercial departures. In practice it is a local access field for the interior Eastern Cape, while most mainstream passenger traffic for the region is funneled through larger airports and completed by road.
UTW should therefore be understood as a working regional airfield with limited landside infrastructure, relevant for ad hoc aviation and local connectivity rather than for commercial-terminal services.
๐ Connection Tips
Queenstown Airport is not a scheduled commercial airport, so the useful connection is the road link from East London or the pre-arranged taxi into Queenstown itself. The field mainly serves private, charter, and business traffic, which means there is little on-site support if you arrive without a pickup plan. If you are using the airport for work or a regional visit, make the road transfer the primary booking and treat the runway as the final arrival point rather than a passenger interchange. In the Eastern Cape, that is the sensible model because Queenstown is more of a regional access point than a hub, and the airport is built around point-to-point movements rather than airline connections. If you are arriving for business, having the car or driver ready before the aircraft lands avoids wasting time looking for transport that may not be formally waiting on site. If you are coming for a family trip or local event, the airport gives you a convenient arrival, but the rest of the journey still belongs to the road network, not the runway. That means the safest way to use UTW is to start the transfer planning with the town and end it with the aircraft, not the other way around. When the ground side is already arranged, the airport works well. When it is not, there is little redundancy to save the day.
โฐ Minimum Connection Times
Domestic โ Domestic
60
minutes
Domestic โ International
90
minutes
Interline Connections
120
minutes
๐ข Terminal Information
Alldays Airport (ADY) is a small regional airfield located in the Limpopo Province of South Africa, approximately 1 kilometer from the town center of Alldays. It primarily serves as a gateway for general aviation, private charters, and agricultural flights. The terminal is a single-story structure that provides the most basic of passenger services, reflecting its role as a functional strip for locals and visitors to nearby game reserves rather than a commercial hub.
The facility lacks the complex infrastructure found at larger South African airports. There are no automated check-in kiosks or baggage carousels; instead, operations are handled manually and directly with aircraft operators. The terminal layout is straightforward, consisting of a small waiting area and limited administrative space. Its proximity to the runway means that transit times from the terminal to the aircraft are exceptionally short, often taking less than a minute on foot.
Amenities at the terminal are very limited. Passengers should not expect to find restaurants, duty-free shops, or lounges. It is highly recommended that travelers carry their own refreshments and essential supplies. While the airport provides basic shelter, it does not offer extensive climate control or high-speed internet. Security is conducted in accordance with general aviation standards, focusing on direct coordination between pilots and passengers rather than large-scale screening processes.
๐ Connection Tips
Alldays Airport is not a scheduled airline connection point, so trips through ADY need to be planned around charter, private, or business aviation from the outset. Public airport references show a single 1,450 m asphalt runway serving the Limpopo town of Alldays, and nearby-airport listings place Polokwane International Airport roughly 125 to 136 km away. In practical terms, most travelers who are not arriving on a private flight should think in terms of driving from Polokwane or another larger airport rather than expecting an airline transfer at ADY itself.
That makes ground transport the critical connection issue. There is no normal airline ecosystem here with ticket desks, protected rebooking, or frequent fallback departures, so a missed pickup or a late-arriving charter can leave you with very few same-day alternatives. If you are using ADY for lodge access, mining travel, or business in far northern Limpopo, make sure the receiving party knows your exact arrival time and aircraft details before departure.
The airport's value is location, not network depth. It sits close to the Botswana and Zimbabwe border region and can save hours of driving for private users already operating in the area. But because it is a small field, you should carry essentials with you, confirm fueling and handling through your operator if needed, and keep a road-transfer backup in mind. For most travelers, the safest plan is to anchor the commercial part of the journey in Polokwane and treat ADY as the final private segment.
โ Back to Queenstown Airport