EKVG - Vágar Airport

Overview

Vágar Airport (EKVG) is the main airport serving the Faroe Islands. Located on the island of Vágar, the airport supports scheduled passenger flights, regional services, business aviation, helicopter operations, search and rescue activity, and occasional charter traffic.

Vágar is a challenging North Atlantic airport due to surrounding terrain, rapidly changing weather, sea winds, turbulence, and low cloud. Pilots should expect close attention to published procedures, approach minima, and runway conditions.

Weather conditions at Vágar can change quickly. Strong winds, low visibility, rain, fog, turbulence, wind shear, and rapidly lowering cloud bases are common throughout the year.

Available Stands

Use of stands

Area Stands Assigned to
Main Apron 1-5 Passenger operations
GA / Remote Apron As assigned General aviation, business aviation & overflow parking
Helicopter Area As assigned Helicopter, SAR and special operations

IFR Clearance

Vágar is normally operated as an AFIS / information service environment. Initial contact is with Vágar Information, reporting:

Example: “Vágar Information, FLI55AW stand 2, Airbus A320 with information Alpha, request IFR clearance to Copenhagen.”

Information Service: Vágar operates as an AFIS / Information service. Pilots remain responsible for terrain clearance, runway separation, and sequencing unless otherwise coordinated. Expect advisory information rather than full ATC separation services.

Push-back

Most stands at Vágar may require pushback or careful manoeuvring due to the compact apron layout.

Vágar Information may issue:

Taxi

Taxi instructions normally include the full taxi route. Pilots should use caution due to the compact apron, terrain, and possible strong wind conditions.

Runways

Vágar Airport operates a single runway:

Runway Length Common Use
12/30 1,799 m / 5,902 ft Primary arrival and departure runway

Runway selection depends heavily on wind, visibility, traffic flow, runway condition and aircraft performance.

SIDs

Standard Instrument Departures from Vágar route aircraft safely away from surrounding terrain and into North Atlantic regional airspace.

Initial climb altitudes are assigned by ATC and must not be exceeded unless cleared.

If unable to comply with RNAV procedures, advise ATC for alternative departure instructions.

Important Note When Departing

Vágar departures are frequently handed over shortly after departure depending on ATC coverage and traffic levels.

AFIS Operations: Vágar operates as an Information / AFIS service rather than a fully controlled aerodrome. Pilots are responsible for ensuring runway separation and determining whether it is safe to depart based on the information provided.

Example: “FLI55AW, runway 30 is free, surface wind 310 degrees 18 knots, when airborne contact Reykjavík Control on XXX.XXX.”

Under AFIS procedures, Vágar Information will provide runway, traffic, weather and operational information, however formal takeoff clearances are not issued. Pilots should acknowledge the information and commence departure when safe to do so.

Arrival and STARs

Vágar arrivals may involve:

Do not descend unless explicitly cleared by ATC. Receiving an arrival or approach clearance does not automatically mean unrestricted descent unless the procedure and clearance allow it.

Approach

Expect an instrument approach during poor weather, with visual approaches available when conditions permit.

Runway Approach Types Frequency Course
12 LOC, RNP 109.10 109
30 ILS, RNP 110.30 302

ILS Categories

Runway ILS Category
30 CAT I

Navigation Aids

Vágar is supported by navigation aids used for arrivals, departures and instrument approach procedures.

Navaid Type Frequency Usage
VG NDB 348 Non-precision approach and missed approach reference
MY NDB 337 Non-precision approach and missed approach reference

Low Visibility Procedures (LVP)

Reduced visibility operations may occur during fog, rain, low cloud or poor weather. Pilots should ensure they are familiar with the published approach minima and runway condition reports.

Pilots conducting instrument approaches into Vágar should closely monitor terrain clearance and weather conditions due to the surrounding mountainous terrain and rapidly changing visibility.

Direct Routings

Direct routings may be issued when traffic and workload permit.

Communications

You can always check online positions and sectors by visiting VATSIM Radar.

Callsign Description Frequency
EKVG_I_TWR Vágar Information / AFIS 124.850
BIRD_S1_CTR Reykjavík Control 119.700

When Vágar Information is online, pilots should treat the service as AFIS rather than full tower control. Expect traffic information, runway information, weather information and advisory instructions rather than full radar or tower control separation.

Notes


Revision #1
Created 8 May 2026 22:19:50 by Mickey Champion (1317411)
Updated 8 May 2026 22:33:32 by Mickey Champion (1317411)