The Worlds Most Beautiful Airports 2026 List Has Been Revealed – And Only One Is In Europe

For frequent flyers, airports are little more than a way point between destinations: Somewhere to grab a coffee before boarding, browse shops at duty free or spend a little while longer waiting if on a layover.

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While most travellers judge an airport by its efficiency, especially short security lines, beauty matters, too, with some terminals offering far more than convenience. From striking architecture to sweeping views and even lush indoor spaces, some airports have become attractions and landmarks in their own right.

Prix Versailles, an initiative that spotlights the world’s finest contemporary architectural projects, has revealed its list of the World’s Most Beautiful Airports for 2026.

This year’s seven winners are not only hailed for their facilities by Prix Versailles, but impressive architectural design that moves away from tired standards, to offer a richer, more harmonious experience.

Jérôme Gouadain, Secretary General of the Prix Versailles, described contemporary airports as "inescapable hallmarks", both of the region and era it sits in.

"They are innovative, because they resolve the apparent conflict between the increasing frequency of travel and the need for speed – both central to an airport’s purpose – on the one hand and, on the other, the singularity of a form of tourism that aims to be accessible and that values people’s time in places that, in this day and age, can no longer be described as mere ‘transfer’ spaces," he said.

"And they are inescapable, in that this infrastructure leaves a lasting environmental footprint on the land but also on the history of humanity: in the amalgamation of architecture that they display, airports are becoming attractive settings, emblems of economic, cultural and social dynamics that will continue to shape the societies of tomorrow, draw them together and unify them.”

Among this year’s winners is just one airport from Europe, and it’s located in Germany.

Which airports ranked among the world’s most beautiful for 2026?

  • Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport Terminal 3, Guangzhou, China
  • Frankfurt Airport Terminal 3, Frankfurt am Main, Germany
  • Lokapriya Gopinath Bardoloi International Airport Terminal 2, Guwahati, India
  • Navi Mumbai International Airport Terminal 1, Navi Mumbai, India
  • Techo International Airport, Phnom Penh, Cambodia
  • Pittsburgh International Airport, Pittsburgh, United States
  • San Diego International Airport Terminal 1, San Diego, United States

Why Frankfurt Airport’s new Terminal 3 made the list

Having welcomed its first flyers in April, Frankfurt Airport’s Terminal 3 was praised by Prix Versailles as the “fulfilment of one of the continent’s largest infrastructure projects”.

The new terminal spans 1.3 square kilometres of land, which is roughly the same size as Frankfurt’s city centre, and is expected to handle a footfall of 19 million passengers annually across Piers G, H and J.

A second phase of expansion, including the addition of Pier K, could eventually increase the capacity to 25 million passengers.

Terminal 3’s opening came as Frankfurt Airport’s Terminal 2 closed down for major refurbishment, the first such shut down in more than three decades. As a result, all 57 carriers previously operating from Terminal 2 have begun moving to the newer terminal. Carriers that are among the first to move include Cathay Pacific, China Airlines, Emirates, Etihad Airways, Korean Air and Qatar Airways.

Alongside efficiency and increasing capacity, the new terminal was designed to feel closer to a city than an airport. The brainchild of German architect, Christoph Mäckler, the boarding gates and lounges are designed to resemble streets and public squares where travellers can gather and spend time.

According to Mäckler, airports in fact tend to receive more visitors than many city centres in their own right.

“This makes it even more important for airports to also perform some of the same functions as cities,” he said. “We’re making this happen in Terminal 3.”

Prix Versailles highlighted the terminal’s aesthetic, which pairs natural lighting alongside warm tones, like jura limestone and travertine.

Public art forms another focal point. Suspended in mid-air in the terminal hall are three disc-shaped sculptures by Julius von Bismark, a German artist whose work explores the laws of physics to challenge the way we are used to seeing things. His installation, “The First, the Last, Eternity”, features rotating discs in hues of orange, red and yellow that continuously rotate as travellers move through the space.

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