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Miami International Airport

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Template:Short description Template:Redirect Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox airport

Miami International Airport Template:Airport codes — also known as MIA and historically as Wilcox Field — is the primary international airport serving Miami and its surrounding metropolitan area, in the U.S. state of Florida. It hosts over 1,000 daily flights to 185 domestic and international destinations, including most countries in Central and South America and the Caribbean. The airport is in an unincorporated area in Miami-Dade County,<ref name="Censusmap">Template:Cite web</ref> Template:Convert west-northwest of downtown Miami, in metropolitan Miami,<ref name="FAA">Template:FAA-airport, effective April 17, 2025.</ref> adjacent to the cities of Miami and Miami Springs, and the village of Virginia Gardens. Nearby cities include Hialeah, Doral, and the census-designated place of Fontainebleau.

In 2021, Miami International Airport became the busiest international cargo airport in the U.S.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and the busiest U.S. gateway for international passengers, surpassing John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York City.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> As of 2021, it is the 10th busiest airport in the U.S. with 17,500,096 passengers for the year. It is Florida's busiest airport by total aircraft operations, total cargo traffic and total passenger traffic.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The airport is American Airlines' third-largest hub and serves as its primary gateway to Latin America and the Caribbean. Miami also serves as a focus city for Avianca, Frontier Airlines, and LATAM, both for passengers and cargo operations.

In 2024, MIA Airport served nearly 56 million passengers and saw 3 million tons of cargo passing through MIA, recording three consecutive record years for passenger volume and five straight years of cargo volume.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Miami International Airport covers Template:Convert.<ref name=FAA/><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> It is South Florida's main airport for long-haul international flights and a hub for the Southeastern United States with passenger and cargo flights to cities throughout the Americas, Europe, Africa, and Asia. It is the largest gateway between the U.S. and Central, South America and the Caribbean and one of the largest airline hubs in the nation.

History

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Template:See also

Pan American Airways Airport - Inauguration January 9, 1929
Inauguration Day - January 9, 1929. Crowds gather around Pan American Airways' new international passenger terminal, the first U.S. mainland port of entry for visitors arriving in the U.S. via air.
Aerial view of Pan American Airport and Pan American Field, Miami, Florida 1929.
Aerial View of Pan American Field and Pan American Airport, NW 36th Street, Miami, Florida 1929. The airport terminal with domed roof is located at center, flanked by two hangars to the east and one to the west. Only the west hangar (Pan Am Hangar 5) is still in existence today. It is located at its original site off NW 36th Street in what is today the north field of Miami International Airport.

In June of 1928 Pan American Airways acquired 116 acres of land on NW 36th Street for the purpose of building a privately owned and operated international airport in Miami, Florida. The establishment of a commercial airport and of regularly scheduled international passenger airline service by Pan Am was a transformative event for the City of Miami. By September of 1928, Pan Am had begun to operate regularly scheduled Air Mail service between Miami and Havana. On January 9, 1929, Pan American Airport, also known as Pan American Field, was officially dedicated at a ceremony attended by thousands of residents and celebrities such as Amelia Earhart, who saw in the new airport the promise of a bright new future in international aviation for Miami. It was the first mainland airport in the United States to have international port of entry facilities. The passenger terminal building, designed by Delano & Aldrich of NYC, was the most advanced and luxurious in the country. Three hangars, two on the east and one on the west, provided housing and maintenance facilities for Pan Am's fleet of Sikorsky amphibian and Fokker aircraft. During the first few years of its operation, from late 1928 until late 1930, it was from this busy airport that Pan American Airways historically pioneered U.S. international passenger aviation, inaugurating regularly scheduled Air Mail and passenger airline service from the U.S. to the West Indies, Caribbean, and Central and South America. In the 1930s Pan American leased space at its airport to Eastern Air Lines. Eastern officially took up residence at the 36th Street Airport in August of 1935. In 1940, Intercontinent Corporation, owned by William Pawley, built an aircraft manufacturing plant on land acquired immediately east of Pan American Field. The City and County, eager to encourage the growth of an aircraft manufacturing industry in Miami, agreed to finance and build runways and ground facilities at the Intercontinent plant, including an east-west runway that extended from Le Jeune Road as far west as Pan American Field, where it intersected with Pan Am's east-west runway. National Airlines, which had been operating in Miami at Miami's city-owned Municipal Airport since 1937, moved to the 36th Street Airport in 1942. National used a terminal on LeJeune Road, across the street from the airport and would stop traffic on the road in order to taxi aircraft to and from its terminal. Miami Army Airfield opened in 1943 on 1400 acres of land acquired during World War II to the south of Pan American Field. The two airfields were listed in some directories as a single facility.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Following World War II, the Dade County Port Authority embarked on a long-planned airport expansion in order to meet Miami's increasing commercial aviation needs. On December 31, 1945, a formal agreement between the County and Pan Am transferring ownership of the airport to the County was signed, becoming effective at 1:00 AM on January 1, 1946. Thus ended any distinct identity of Pan American Field. It also acquired Intercontinent's former holdings, which were leased to Eastern Air Lines, and changed the name of the newly expanded airport to Miami International Airport. Pan American's former NW 36th Street terminal building continued to serve as the hub for the new Miami International Airport. Between 1945 and 1950, the Port Authority cobbled together thousands more acres adjacent to and south of the airport, including the Army’s former air base; the Seaboard Air Line Railroad property; and additional parcels, with the intention of meeting Miami’s future aviation needs. The result was a County-owned, Miami International Airport based at NW 36th Street that by 1948 had grown to 2500 acres. The former domed-roofed Pan Am terminal building was extensively remodeled and enlarged, the words “Miami International Airport” now curving across its façade. The new airport was officially dedicated January 4, 1950. United States Air Force Reserve troop carrier and rescue squadrons also operated from the airport from 1949 through 1959, when the last unit relocated to nearby Homestead Air Force Base (now Homestead Air Reserve Base). In the late 1940s, Pan Am and Eastern also expanded their bases at MIA on NW 36th Street, which made the airport the world's largest commercial aircraft maintenance and overhaul facility at the time.<ref name=":0">Template:Cite book</ref>

File:MIA Aerial 1950s.jpg
20th Street Terminal in the 1950s

In the 1950s, a continuing boom in postwar passenger aviation soon stretched even the County’s expanded airport to capacity. Scheduled airlines had outstripped ships, trains and buses to become the state’s as well as the nation’s largest carriers of interstate and international traffic. Delta had joined Pan Am, Eastern and National to become MIA's "Big Four" carriers and the airport also served a host of smaller scheduled and non-scheduled airlines. A new jet age loomed. Plans for an entirely new airport, to be built from scratch on land south and east of the existing facility were set in motion. On February 1, 1959, after years of planning and construction, Miami's brand-new Miami International Airport was formally inaugurated at 20th Street, on what was dubbed Wilcox Field in honor of the Port Authority attorney who had been instrumental in bringing the project to completion. No longer needed, the former domed-roofed terminal building on NW 36th Street was torn down in November 1962. This part of MIA along NW 36th Street is known today as MIA's north field.

When it was dedicated in 1959, MIA's new 20th Street Terminal was the largest central airport terminal in the world, with five concourses (Concourses C-G) and a 270-room hotel. In 1961, the terminal was expanded with the addition of a sixth concourse (Concourse H) on the south side, which was the first concourse at the airport to include jetways. By 1965, the original five concourses were renovated with jetways added to them.<ref name="history1">Template:Cite web</ref>

The 20th Street Terminal was expanded in the 1970s. Parking garages were added just east of the terminal and Concourse B opened on the north side of the terminal in 1973 to accommodate the expansion of Eastern Air Lines.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In 1977, Concourse E's satellite terminal opened. The satellite was originally connected with shuttle buses, though a people mover was built to connect the satellite in 1980.<ref name="history1"/>

Nonstop flights to Chicago and Newark started in late 1946, but nonstops didn't reach west beyond St. Louis and New Orleans until January 1962. Nonstop transatlantic flights to Europe began in 1970. In the late 1970s and early 1980s, Air Florida had a hub at MIA, with a nonstop flight to London, England which it acquired from National upon the latter's merger with Pan Am. Air Florida ceased operations in 1982 after the crash of Air Florida Flight 90.<ref name="petzinger">Template:Cite book</ref> British Airways flew a Concorde SST (supersonic transport) triweekly between Miami and London via Dulles International Airport in Washington, D.C., from 1984 to 1991.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

The terminal was further expanded in the 1980s. The original Concourses D and E were rebuilt early in the decade and Concourses B and F were expanded.<ref name="history2">Template:Cite web</ref> Pedestrian bridges with moving walkways were built in 1985 connecting the parking garages with the third level of the terminal. Within the next few years, the moving walkway system on the third level was expanded to run along the full length of the terminal.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

After former Apollo 8 astronaut Frank Borman became president of Eastern Air Lines in 1975, he moved Eastern's headquarters from Rockefeller Center in New York City to Building 16 in the northeast corner of MIA, Eastern's maintenance base. Eastern remained one of the largest employers in the Miami metropolitan area until ongoing labor union unrest, coupled with the airline's acquisition by Texas Air in 1986, ultimately forced the airline into bankruptcy in 1989.<ref name="petzinger" /> Eastern operated out of Concourses B through D on the north side of the terminal, where American's Concourse D stands today.<ref name=":1">Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Concourse E was the home for most international carriers, while Pan Am operated out of Concourses E and F.<ref name=":1" /><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

American Airlines hub

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File:AA terminal at MIA 10 2004.jpg
American Airlines planes at Concourse D in April 2005

Amid Eastern's turmoil, American Airlines CEO Robert Crandall sought a new hub in order to utilize new aircraft which AA had on order. AA studies indicated that Delta Air Lines would provide strong competition on most routes from Eastern's hub at Hartsfield–Jackson Atlanta International Airport in Atlanta, but that MIA had many key routes only served by Eastern. American Airlines announced that it would establish a base at MIA in August 1988. Lorenzo considered selling Eastern's profitable Latin America routes to AA as part of a Chapter 11 reorganization of Eastern in early 1989 but backed out in a last-ditch effort to rebuild the MIA hub. The effort quickly proved futile, and American Airlines purchased the routes (including the route authority between Miami and London then held by Eastern sister company Continental Airlines) in a liquidation of Eastern which was completed in 1990.<ref name="petzinger" /> Later in the 1990s, American transferred more employees and equipment to MIA from its failed domestic hubs at Nashville, Tennessee, and Raleigh–Durham, North Carolina. The hub grew from 34 daily departures in 1989 to 157 in 1990, 190 in 1992, and a peak of 301 in 1995, including long-haul flights to Europe and South America.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Today Miami is American's largest air freight hub and is the main connecting point in the airline's north–south international route network.

In December 1992, South African Airways launched flights to Johannesburg via Cape Town using a Boeing 747.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The company's codeshare agreement with American Airlines supported the route. The carrier later decided to codeshare with Delta Air Lines instead, which operated a hub in Atlanta. Consequently, South African replaced its Miami service with a flight to Atlanta in January 2000.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Concourse A was built on the northeast side of the terminal in 1995, and Concourse H was rebuilt in 1997. Concourse J was built in August 2007 along with an expansion of the terminal on the south side.<ref name="history2"/>

American began the development of the current North Terminal in the 1990s. Concourses B and C were demolished as part of the project with Concourse A becoming the eastern end of the expanded Concourse D. Although the terminal was originally scheduled to be completed in 2004, numerous delays arose in the construction process, and Miami-Dade County took over control of the project in 2005, at which time the project had a budget of $2.85 billion.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The terminal was ultimately completed in 2011 and included Skytrain, an automated people mover system, as well as a wing for American Eagle commuter flights.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Other hub operations

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Pan Am was acquired by Delta Air Lines in 1991, but filed for bankruptcy shortly thereafter. Its remaining international routes from Miami to Europe and Latin America were sold to United Airlines for $135 million as part of Pan Am's emergency liquidation that December.<ref name="petzinger" /> United's Latin American hub offered 24 daily departures in the summer of 1992, growing to 36 daily departures to 21 destinations in the summer of 1994, but returned to 24 daily departures in the summer of 1995 and never expanded further.<ref name=":2">Template:Cite web</ref> United ended flights from Miami to South America, and shut down its Miami crew base, in May 2004, reallocating most Miami resources to its main hub in O'Hare International Airport in Chicago.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> United ceased all mainline service to Miami in 2005 with the introduction of its low-cost product Ted.<ref name=":2" />

Iberia also established a Miami hub in 1992, positioning a fleet of DC-9 aircraft at MIA to serve destinations in Central America and the Caribbean. The hub took advantage of rights granted under the 1991 bilateral aviation agreement between the United States and Spain.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> During the 1990s, the airport had sterile international-to-international transit facilities in Concourse D (American, British, and Alitalia) and Concourse F (Iberia and four Central American carriers), and there were plans to establish a sterile corridor for international connecting passengers between six concourses.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> However, the September 11, 2001, attacks made it necessary for many foreigners to obtain a visa in order to transit the United States, and as a result, United Airlines and Iberia closed their hubs in 2004.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Future

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MIA is projected to process 77 million passengers and 4 million tons of freight annually by 2040.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> To meet such a demand, the Miami-Dade Board of County Commissioners approved a $5 billion improvement plan to take place over 15 years and concluding in 2035. The comprehensive plan includes concourse optimization, construction of two on-site luxury hotels, the demolition of Concourse G, and expansion of the airport's cargo capacity.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Facilities

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File:Vue de l'aéroport depuis le MIA Mover (février 2022).JPG
Tarmac and hangars at Miami International Airport in February 2022

Terminals

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Miami International Airport contains three terminals (North, Central, and South) and six concourses for a total of 131 gates.<ref name="MIAMap">Template:Cite web</ref> With the exception of Concourse G, all concourses contain gates to access U.S. Customs and Border Protection facilities.

  • Concourse D contains 51 gates. The eastern section opened in 1995 as Concourse A, and the other parts opened in March 2013.<ref name="MIAMap" />
  • Concourse E contains 18 gates. Opened throughout the early 1960s, the satellite terminal opened in 1974.<ref name="MIAMap" />
  • Concourse F contains 19 gates. Opened in the 1970s.<ref name="MIAMap" />
  • Concourse G contains 14 gates. Opened in the mid-1960s.<ref name="MIAMap" />
  • Concourse H contains 13 gates. Opened in March 1998.<ref name="MIAMap" />
  • Concourse J contains 15 gates. Opened in August 2007.<ref name="MIAMap" />
File:1 - Aéroport de Miami - Août 2008.jpg
Concourse J in the South Terminal is MIA's newest passenger facility and has one gate that can accommodate the Airbus A380.

American operates three Admirals Clubs and one Flagship Lounge across Concourses D & E.<ref name="MIAClub">Template:Cite web</ref> Numerous other lounges exist across the airport as well, including an American Express Centurion Lounge located in Concourse D.<ref name="MIAClub" /><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The North Terminal (Concourse D) is for the exclusive use of American Airlines. The Central Terminal (Concourses E, F, and G) has varied uses; Concourse E is mainly used by American and its Oneworld partner airlines along with some Caribbean and Latin American airlines, and E's satellite terminal has a gate that can accommodate an Airbus A380. Concourses F and G are used by non-AA domestic and Canadian carriers and flights. The South Terminal (Concourses H and J) is the main non-Oneworld international terminal. Concourse H is largely used by Delta and non-Oneworld international carriers that send narrowbody planes largely from Central and the northern parts of South America, and some widebody flights; and Concourse J is used by most non-Oneworld international carriers that send widebody planes and is the main terminal at MIA for non-Oneworld trans-continental flights. Concourse J also has one gate that can accommodate an A380.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Ground transportation

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Template:Main

File:Miami Central Station from NW 25th Street.jpg
Miami Intermodal Center serves as a hub for intercity transportation, primarily Tri-Rail and Miami-Dade Transit. Pictured in March 2015.
File:Miami International Airport, Miami, Florida 2021 - Tram.jpg
The MIA Mover transports landside passengers between the main terminal and the Miami Intermodal Center (MIC).

Miami International Airport offers the MIA Mover, a free people mover system to transfer passengers between MIA terminals and the Miami Intermodal Center (MIC) that opened to the public on September 9, 2011. The MIC provides direct access from the airport to ground transportation (shuttle/bus/rail) as well as the Rental Car Center. A Metrorail station opened at the MIC on July 28, 2012; a Tri-Rail station followed on April 5, 2015. Plans for Amtrak to operate a station at the MIC have been cancelled since it was discovered that the platform built for the service was too short for Amtrak trains. The platform now sits empty and closed, with no trains stopping at it.<ref>Template:Cite webTemplate:Dead link</ref>

The rental car center consolidates airport car rental operations at the MIC.<ref name="ReferenceA">Template:Cite web</ref>

Miami International Airport has direct public transit service to Miami-Dade Transit's Metrorail and Metrobus networks; Greyhound Bus Lines and to the Tri-Rail commuter rail system. Metrorail operates the Orange Line train from Miami International Airport to destinations such as Downtown, Brickell, Health District, Coconut Grove, Coral Gables, Dadeland, Hialeah, South Miami, and Wynwood. It takes approximately 15 minutes to get from the airport to Downtown.

Miami-Dade Transit operates an Airport Flyer bus that connects MIA directly to South Beach.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

MIA is served directly by Tri-Rail, Miami's commuter rail system. The station opened on April 5, 2015. Tri-Rail connects MIA to northern Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach counties. Tri-Rail directly serves points north such as Boca Raton, Deerfield Beach, Delray Beach, Fort Lauderdale, Hollywood, Pompano Beach and West Palm Beach.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Cargo yard

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MIA has a number of air cargo facilities. The largest cargo complex is located on the west side of the airport, inside the triangle formed by Runways 12/30 and 9/27. Cargo carriers such as LATAM Cargo, Atlas Air, Amerijet International, and DHL operate from this area. The largest privately owned facility is the Centurion Cargo complex in the northeast corner of the airport, with over Template:Convert of warehouse space.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> FedEx and UPS operate their own facilities in the northwest corner of the airport, off of 36th Street. In addition to its large passenger terminal in Concourse D, American Airlines operates a maintenance base to the east of Concourse D, centered around a semicircular hangar originally used by National Airlines which can accommodate three widebody aircraft.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Airlines and destinations

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Passenger

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Template:Airport destination list

Cargo

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Template:Airport destination list

Statistics

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Top destinations

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Busiest domestic routes to and from MIA (January 2024 – December 2024)<ref name=MIASTATS>Template:Cite web</ref>
Rank City Passengers Carriers
1 Template:Flagicon Atlanta, Georgia 1,019,000 American, Delta, Frontier, Southwest, Spirit
2 Template:Flagicon New York–LaGuardia, New York 879,000 American, Delta, Frontier, Spirit
3 Template:Flagicon New York–JFK, New York 827,000 American, Delta, JetBlue
4 Template:Flagicon Dallas/Fort Worth, Texas 806,000 American, Frontier, Spirit
5 Template:Flagicon Chicago–O'Hare, Illinois 646,000 American, Spirit, United
6 Template:Flagicon Newark, New Jersey 623,000 American, Frontier, JetBlue, Spirit, United
7 Template:Flagicon Los Angeles, California 607,000 American, Delta, JetBlue
8 Template:Flagicon Charlotte, North Carolina 581,000 American, Spirit
9 Template:Flagicon Boston, Massachusetts 561,000 American, Delta, Frontier, JetBlue, Spirit
10 Template:Flagicon Washington–National, D.C. 546,000 American, Delta
Busiest international routes from MIA (January 2024 – December 2024)<ref name=MIASTATS />
Rank Airport Passengers Carriers
1 Template:Flagicon London–Heathrow, United Kingdom 1,033,267 American, British Airways, Virgin Atlantic
2 Template:Flagicon Bogotá, Colombia 1,000,685 American, Avianca, LATAM Chile, LATAM Colombia
3 Template:Flagicon Lima, Peru 878,700 American, LATAM Peru, Sky Airline Peru
4 Template:Flagicon Panama City–Tocumen, Panama 826,891 American, Copa Airlines
5 Template:Flagicon São Paulo–Guarulhos, Brazil 822,911 American, LATAM Brasil
6 Template:Flagicon Mexico City, Mexico 802,071 Aeroméxico, American, Volaris
7 Template:Flagicon Madrid, Spain 788,562 Air Europa, American, Iberia
8 Template:Flagicon Havana, Cuba 735,991 American, Delta
9 Template:Flagicon Buenos Aires–Ezeiza, Argentina 644,543 Aerolíneas Argentinas, American
10 Template:Flagicon Medellín–JMC, Colombia 567,111 American, Avianca, LATAM Colombia

Airline market share

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Template:Pie chart

Top airlines at MIA
(December 2022 – November 2023)<ref name=MIASTATS />
Rank Airline Passengers Percent of market share
1 American Airlines 15,902,000 57.26%
2 Delta Air Lines 3,031,000 10.89%
3 Spirit Airlines 2,164,000 7.77%
4 Southwest Airlines 1,592,000 5.72%
5 United Airlines 1,586,000 5.59%
6 Other 3,568,000 12.82%

Annual traffic

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Annual passenger traffic (enplaned + deplaned) at MIA, 2000 through present<ref name="miastats">Template:Cite web</ref>
Year Passengers Year Passengers Year Passengers
2000 33,621,273 2010 35,698,025 2020 18,663,858
2001 31,668,450 2011 38,314,389 2021 37,302,456
2002 30,060,241 2012 39,467,444 2022 50,684,396
2003 29,595,618 2013 40,562,948 2023 52,340,934
2004 30,165,197 2014 40,941,879 2024 55,926,566
2005 31,008,453 2015 44,350,247
2006 32,553,974 2016 44,584,603
2007 33,740,416 2017 44,071,313
2008 34,063,531 2018 45,044,312
2009 33,886,025 2019 45,924,466

Accidents and incidents

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File:Red Air MD-82, HI1064. Aircraft touched down and had its left main gear collapse causing the aircraft to catch fire. I took this photo facing the northeast. MIA. 6-21-2022.jpg
The aftermath of RED Air Flight 203.
  • On January 22, 1952, an Aerodex Lockheed Model 18 Lodestar on a test flight crashed after takeoff due to engine failure, all 5 occupants were killed.<ref>Template:ASN accident</ref>
  • On August 4, 1952, a Curtiss C-46 Commando on a ferry flight crashed on approach to MIA because of the failure of the elevator control system, all 4 occupants died.<ref>Template:ASN accident</ref>
  • On March 25, 1958, Braniff International Airways Flight 971, a Douglas DC-7 crashed 5 km WNW of MIA after attempting to return to the airport because of an engine fire crashing into an open marsh, 9 passengers out of 24 on board were killed.<ref>Template:ASN accident</ref>
  • On October 2, 1959, a Vickers Viscount of Cubana de Aviación was hijacked on a flight from Havana to Antonio Maceo Airport, Santiago by three men demanding to be taken to the United States. The aircraft landed at Miami International Airport.<ref name=ASN021059>Template:Cite web</ref>
  • On February 12, 1963, Northwest Airlines Flight 705, a Boeing 720, crashed into the Everglades while en route from Miami to Portland, Oregon, via Chicago O'Hare, Spokane, and Seattle. All 43 passengers and crew died.
  • On February 13, 1965, an Aerolíneas de El Salvador (AESA) Curtiss C-46 Commando, a cargo flight, had an engine failure shortly after takeoff and crashed into an automobile junkyard, killing both occupants.<ref>Template:ASN accident</ref>
  • On March 5, 1965, a Fruehaf Inc. Lockheed Model 18 Lodestar nosed down after takeoff due to elevator trim tab problems, and both occupants were killed.<ref>Template:ASN accident</ref>
  • On June 23, 1969, a Dominicana de Aviación Aviation Traders Carvair, a modified DC-4, en route to Santo Domingo was circling back to Miami International Airport with an engine fire when it crashed into buildings 1 mile short of Runway 27. All 4 crewmembers aboard the Carvair and 6 on the ground were killed.<ref>Template:ASN accident</ref>
  • On April 14, 1970, an Ecuatoriana de Aviacion Douglas DC-7, a cargo flight, crashed after takeoff from MIA beyond the runway and slid 890 feet before striking a concrete abutment, both occupants were killed.<ref>Template:ASN accident</ref>
  • On December 29, 1972, Eastern Air Lines Flight 401, a Lockheed L-1011, crashed into the Everglades. The plane had left JFK International Airport in New York City bound for Miami. There were 101 fatalities out of the 176 passengers and crew on board.<ref>Template:ASN accident</ref> (This accident is the subject of the movie The Ghost of Flight 401.)
  • On June 21, 1973, a Warnaco Inc. Douglas DC-7, a cargo flight, crashed into the Everglades six minutes after takeoff in heavy rain, wind, and lightning. All three occupants died.<ref>Template:ASN accident</ref>
  • On December 15, 1973, a Lockheed L-1049 Super Constellation operated by Aircraft Pool Leasing Corp, a cargo flight, crashed 1.3 miles E of MIA because of overrotation of the aircraft causing a stall, crashing into a parking lot and several homes, all three occupants were killed, along with six on the ground.<ref>Template:ASN accident</ref>
  • On September 27, 1975, a Canadair CL-44 operated by Aerotransportes Entre Rios (AER), crashed after takeoff because of an external makeshift flight control lock on the right elevator, 4 crew and 2 passengers of the 10 on board died.<ref>Template:ASN accident</ref>
  • On January 15, 1977, a Douglas DC-3, registered as N73KW of Air Sunshine crashed shortly after take-off on a domestic scheduled passenger flight to Key West International Airport, Florida. All 33 people on board survived.<ref name=ASN150177>Template:Cite web</ref>
  • On January 6, 1990, a Grecoair Lockheed JetStar crashed after aborting takeoff and exiting the runway, One occupant of the two on board died.<ref>Template:ASN accident</ref>
  • On May 11, 1996, ValuJet Airlines Flight 592, a McDonnell Douglas DC-9 crashed into the Everglades 10 minutes after taking off from MIA while en route to Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport after a fire broke out in the cargo hold, killing all 110 occupants onboard.
  • On August 7, 1997, Fine Air Flight 101, a Douglas DC-8 cargo plane, crashed onto NW 72nd Avenue less than a mile (1.6 km) from the airport. All four occupants on board and one person on the ground were killed.
  • On November 20, 2000, American Airlines Flight 1291, an Airbus A300 en route to Port-au-Prince, Haiti, returned to Miami following a cabin depressurization. During the evacuation one of the emergency exit doors explosively opened, killing a flight attendant.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
  • On July 1, 2002, two America West Airlines pilots operating Flight 556 to Phoenix–Sky Harbor were ordered back to the gate by air traffic control before takeoff after security agents notified supervisors that the men smelled of alcohol and became belligerent when they were told they were not allowed to take an open cup of coffee through the security checkpoint. Breathalyzer tests conducted after their removal from the aircraft revealed that both men had blood alcohol content in excess of the legal limit for operating a vehicle in Florida, and they were arrested by police. Investigators found that the men had been drinking at a local bar until 4:40Template:Nbspam, roughly six hours before the flight was scheduled to depart. They were fired by the airline the next day, later stripped of their pilot certificates, and convicted in 2005 of operating an aircraft while drunk.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
  • On December 7, 2005, passenger Rigoberto Alpizar was killed by federal air marshals after frantically exiting an American Airlines flight to Orlando during boarding with a backpack strapped to his chest. The air marshals, who said they had heard Alpizar declare he had a bomb, confronted him in the jetway and shot him after he ignored their commands to stop moving and reached into the backpack. This was the first case of federal air marshals opening fire on a suspect after the September 11 attacks.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
  • On September 15, 2015, Qatar Airways Flight 778 to Doha overran Runway 9 during takeoff and collided with the approach lights for Runway 27. The collision, which went unnoticed during the 13.5-hour flight, tore a Template:Convert hole in the pressure vessel of the Boeing 777-300ER aircraft just behind the rear cargo door. The crew was confused by a printout from an onboard computer and erroneously began takeoff on Runway 9 at the intersection of Taxiway T1 rather than at the end of the runway, which trimmed roughly Template:Convert from the length of the runway available for takeoff.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite report</ref>
  • On June 21, 2022, RED Air Flight 203 departed from Las Américas International Airport in the Dominican Republic at 3:36 pm. The aircraft landed at Miami International Airport on runway 09 at 5:38 pm with their McDonnell Douglas MD-82. Once the aircraft landed, the left main landing gear collapsed, causing the MD-82 to skid off the runway before coming to a halt on the side of runway 09. The right main landing gear was broken, there is extreme damage to the nose, and a fire on the right wing. There were no reported casualties; three passengers were left with minor injuries.
  • On January 18, 2024, Atlas Air Flight 095, a cargo Boeing 747-87UF registered as N859GT, en route to San Juan, experienced an engine fire shortly after takeoff from Miami International Airport. The aircraft safely returned to the airport and made an emergency landing within 15 minutes of takeoff.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Notes

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See also

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References

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