Mexico · Tourism & Infrastructure
Key Facts
—Passenger Capacity The expansion roughly doubles terminal capacity from 711,000 to approximately 1.2 million passengers per year, meeting surging demand in the Mexican Caribbean.
—Investment Size Total project spending runs into the hundreds of millions of pesos; the terminal building alone carries a budget of 354 million pesos (about US$18 million as of mid-2026 cost execution reports).
—Aircraft Upgrade The modernized commercial apron adds two positions for larger Category C jets like the Airbus A320 and Boeing 737, enabling direct service from more distant markets.
—Job Creation The first stage of apron construction is expected to generate 127 new temporary and permanent jobs for engineers, surveyors, operators, and support staff.
—Timeline With environmental approval granted on October 1 by SEMARNAT, construction is advancing in stages and the expanded terminal is projected to fully operate during 2027.
Airport operator Grupo Aeroportuario del Sureste (ASUR) has broken ground on a Cozumel Airport expansion that will nearly double annual passenger capacity, add positions for larger Category C aircraft, and anchor a long-term tourism bet on the Mexican Caribbean.
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Terminal Expansion Adds Space and Speeds Up Passenger Flow
The existing passenger terminal at Cozumel International Airport (CZM) covers 14,000 square meters. Under a multi-year project now under construction, the facility is being expanded to nearly 17,000 square meters alongside a broader commercial apron upgrade, according to aviation outlet Aviacionline.
ASUR spokesperson Adolfo Castro has outlined a $12 million investment (250 million pesos, roughly US$12.6 million at contemporary exchange-rate estimates) specifically for the terminal building works. That budget has since been revised to 354 million pesos (about US$18 million as of mid-2026, according to a July 2026 report by El Heraldo de México).
The terminal expansion will deliver a larger check-in area with more airline desks and a waiting area that doubles current capacity, allowing the airport to process far more passengers during peak Caribbean travel windows.
Commercial Apron and Category C Aircraft: What Changes
A parallel component of the project, costing approximately 58 million pesos (about US$3 million), expands the commercial apron with eight new boarding gates and two additional positions designed for Category C aircraft. These jets—with wingspans between 24 and 36 meters—include the Airbus A318, A319, A320, and A321 families, as well as the Boeing 737 and McDonnell Douglas MD-81.
The apron works encompass clearing designated land, filling caverns, building a new ramp and stormwater drainage, installing high-mast lighting, and placing ground-vehicle and aircraft signage. ASUR estimates that this phase alone will create 127 new temporary and permanent jobs, from heavy-machinery operators and surveyors to security guards and engineers, according to data released by local authorities.
Tourism-Driven Logic: Flights, Cruise Passengers, and European Routes
Cozumel airport administrator Pablo Esteban Arjona Ortiz has pegged total expansion spending at over 330 million pesos (about US$17 million) to accommodate more domestic and international flights. The airport recorded 77,678 passengers between January and September of the most recent reporting period, a 38.97 percent jump versus the same months in 2023.
Daily operations currently average about five flights, but projections call for that figure to climb to as many as 17 flights on Saturdays as the island’s tourism base expands.
The island is already a cruise-ship giant, handling over 4 million cruise passengers in 2022, which puts extra strain on airport infrastructure. Work is also underway to enable longer-range flights by 2027, potentially including European routes, while 72 private flights from Colombia, Brazil and the Dominican Republic have recently used the airport, underscoring its growing role as a regional interaction point in the Mexican Caribbean.
Why This Matters for Investors and Expats
ASUR is deploying capital that forms part of a 2024–2028 Master Development Plan of 30,616 million pesos (about US$1.6 billion, measured in December 2022 currency) across its network. The expansion at Cozumel is not a stand-alone project; it is embedded in a broader corporate commitment backed by a MXN 9.5 billion (roughly US$500 million) revolving credit facility from BBVA México to modernize airports in Mexico, Colombia, and Puerto Rico.
For expats and property investors along the Riviera Maya, higher-capacity airport infrastructure directly supports asset values and rental demand. A bigger, better-connected Cozumel relieves pressure on Cancún Airport and creates a secondary access point that can sustain year-round visitor flows—reinforcing the long-term viability of Quintana Roo’s tourism real estate market.
Construction Progress and the Road to 2028
Mexico’s Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources (SEMARNAT) approved the environmental impact statement on October 1, clearing the project to move ahead in two stages: first, expansion of the commercial platform, then expansion of the terminal building. Overall work is expected to take around three years.
By July 2026, the terminal expansion structure was 65 percent complete, with 270 million pesos already executed.
Airport officials have indicated that the enlarged terminal should become fully operational during 2027, with the goal of starting 2028 in a completely new passenger space. A 1.6-hectare site for a new rental-vehicle building and Fire and Rescue Corps facility carries a target completion date of December 2026, according to Riviera Maya News.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much will the Cozumel airport expansion cost?
The full project involves hundreds of millions of pesos. The terminal building is budgeted at 354 million pesos (about US$18 million), while the commercial apron expansion carries an estimated cost of 58 million pesos (about US$3 million).
Total spending is expected to surpass 330 million pesos (about US$17 million) across all components.
When will the expanded terminal at Cozumel airport be ready?
Construction is advancing in stages. Officials estimate the expanded terminal building will fully operate during 2027, and airport managers aim to begin 2028 with a new passenger space.
The rental-vehicle building and Fire and Rescue Corps are targeted for completion in December 2026.
Why is ASUR investing so heavily in Cozumel right now?
Passenger traffic is surging—up nearly 39 percent in one reporting period—and the island’s role as a cruise and regional aviation hub is growing. ASUR sees the expansion as a strategic bet on Mexican Caribbean tourism, meant to attract more commercial flights, accommodate larger aircraft, and capture traffic that might otherwise bypass the island.
Sources: Riviera Maya News – Government gives Cozumel Airport mega expansion project green light, Aviacionline – Cozumel Airport to expand with eight new boarding gates in $58M project, This is Cozumel – Cozumel Airport expansion, El Heraldo de México – Cozumel Airport advances 65% in works and seeks to expand international connectivity, El Sureste – ASUR plans strategic expansion at Cancún and Cozumel airports, BBVA CIB – BBVA México reinforces alliance with ASUR through MXN 9.5 billion credit facility
View original source — Rio Times ↗



