
Low-cost congestion at Warsaw-Modlin Airport is finally being tackled after the state-regional owner consortium approved a PLN 5.4 million (≈ €1.2 m) fast-track extension of the passenger terminal announced on 26 Feb 2026. According to CEO Jacek Kowalski, the steel-frame annex will double departure gates from four to eight and raise security-screening lanes to six, enabling the airport to process nine simultaneous morning departures—critical as Wizz Air, Ryanair and newcomer Air Arabia ramp up schedules. Modlin handled 218,000 passengers in January, a 96 % year-on-year jump and the fastest growth among Polish airports.
Amid these developments, VisaHQ can help both individual travellers and corporate mobility managers navigate Polish and wider Schengen visa requirements, offering fast online applications, document checking and real-time alerts on forthcoming systems like the EU’s Entry/Exit Scheme. To streamline upcoming trips through Modlin or any other Polish gateway, visit https://www.visahq.com/poland/ for tailored assistance.
The surge follows the return of Wizz Air after a 13-year absence and Ryanair’s restoration of trimmed frequencies. With summer season around the corner and limited room at Warsaw Chopin, multinational employers increasingly use Modlin for cost-efficient commuter flights to Western Europe. The temporary structure is intended to be ready by July; a larger PLN 280 m permanent expansion remains mired in shareholder disputes. Until then, travellers can expect construction-related way-finding changes and longer walks to buses. Companies operating posted-worker rotations should warn staff about reduced landside parking and encourage online check-in to minimise dwell time. From a mobility-tax perspective, the upgrade may help Modlin lobby for inclusion in the EU’s upcoming Schengen Entry/Exit System (EES) pre-deployment list, ensuring biometric gates are in place before the April 2027 go-live. Forward-thinking HR teams should already plan for possible EES enrolment queues at Poland’s regional airports. The Modlin project also exemplifies Poland’s push to decentralise air traffic: Katowice, Wrocław and Rzeszów each have smaller terminal add-ons under construction, targeting a combined 7 million additional seats by 2028. Source: Money.pl, 26 Feb 2026
Amid these developments, VisaHQ can help both individual travellers and corporate mobility managers navigate Polish and wider Schengen visa requirements, offering fast online applications, document checking and real-time alerts on forthcoming systems like the EU’s Entry/Exit Scheme. To streamline upcoming trips through Modlin or any other Polish gateway, visit https://www.visahq.com/poland/ for tailored assistance.
The surge follows the return of Wizz Air after a 13-year absence and Ryanair’s restoration of trimmed frequencies. With summer season around the corner and limited room at Warsaw Chopin, multinational employers increasingly use Modlin for cost-efficient commuter flights to Western Europe. The temporary structure is intended to be ready by July; a larger PLN 280 m permanent expansion remains mired in shareholder disputes. Until then, travellers can expect construction-related way-finding changes and longer walks to buses. Companies operating posted-worker rotations should warn staff about reduced landside parking and encourage online check-in to minimise dwell time. From a mobility-tax perspective, the upgrade may help Modlin lobby for inclusion in the EU’s upcoming Schengen Entry/Exit System (EES) pre-deployment list, ensuring biometric gates are in place before the April 2027 go-live. Forward-thinking HR teams should already plan for possible EES enrolment queues at Poland’s regional airports. The Modlin project also exemplifies Poland’s push to decentralise air traffic: Katowice, Wrocław and Rzeszów each have smaller terminal add-ons under construction, targeting a combined 7 million additional seats by 2028. Source: Money.pl, 26 Feb 2026