Dodge City Regional Airport

Dodge City Regional Airport

Located in Ford County, Kansas, three miles east of Dodge City, lies the Dodge City Regional Airport. The Essential Air Service program provides funding for its usage in general aviation. The National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems for the years 2011–2015 designated it as a facility providing non-primary commercial services. 4,701 passenger boardings (enplanements) were recorded at this airport in 2008, 3,373 in 2009, and 3,853 in 2010, according to the Federal Aviation Administration. When you fly out of Dodge City Regional Airport (DDC), you may save time and money by avoiding long trips, traffic, and parking costs. Travelers from DDC may connect to Denver International Airport (DEN) and other destinations with United Airlines starting on February 13, 2020, offering dependable daily flights.

The original Dodge City landing field was situated where Gibson's Pharmacy is today, to the northeast of the city. In order to create a landing field, Mr. McCoy of Luther and McCoy Motor Company bought 160 acres of property. From 1927 to 1934, this landing field would be in use. Dr. C. A. Milton sold the land where the Dodge City Regional Airport now stands to the State of Kansas in 1888. One of Dodge City's seven founders, R. M. Wright, oversaw the land's usage as a forestry experiment station. The effort and thousands of trees, principally cottonwood, cedar, locust, and box elder, were overseen by R. M. Wright. The project was abandoned since the majority of the trees died due to hard winters and bores. Ford County received the land as a deed from the State of Kansas in 1919 to be utilized as a poor farm.

An essential component of the region's transportation network and the southwest Kansas regional airport system is the Dodge City Regional Airport. An essential component of our community's stability, economic prosperity, and quality of life is the airport. The airport is located at a height of 2,594 feet on 451 acres. Two asphalt runways are present. 23,501 aircraft operated out of the airport on average per day in the year ending January 31, 2008: 77% were general aviation, 16% were airline, 6% were air taxis, and 1% were military. The airport originally had 33 aircraft, of which 82% were single-engine and 18% were multi-engine.