AME · Terminals
1

Single terminal

One single terminal handles everything at Alto Molocue (AME)

AME runs on a single small terminal building, with all arrivals and departures using the same hall and apron area. With only one terminal, there are no airside bus transfers, no terminal trains, and no confusion about where to go for check-in or departure gates.

The single terminal at Alto Molocue Airport currently has no catalogued restaurants, so plan to eat before arriving or bring food with you for the time you spend at AME. Expect basic seating in the public area rather than a food court, and assume very limited options for snacks or drinks once you are on-site.

Lounges are not listed for the terminal at AME, and there are no known contract lounges or airline-branded spaces in current schedules. If you usually rely on Priority Pass or similar programs, treat this airport as lounge-free and plan to charge devices and relax in the general waiting area instead.

No shops are catalogued inside the single terminal, so do not count on buying last-minute items like adapters, SIM cards, or travel-sized toiletries at AME. Bring essentials with you in your carry-on, and sort out cash or mobile payments before you reach the airport.

Because online details are sparse and there are zero traveller reports with gate numbers or walking times, arrive at least 2 hours before an international departure here as a buffer. With only one terminal and limited documentation, building that extra 30–60 minutes into your plan covers slow check-in, manual processes, or schedule changes that never make it to apps.

Transport options into Alto Molocue town from the single terminal are not well documented, and there is no confirmed on-site taxi stand schedule or bus timetable in public data. If you are landing at AME, pre-arrange a pickup with your hotel or local contact and agree on a time and meeting point just outside the terminal doors.

There is no publicly listed Wi‑Fi information for the AME terminal, and no official website gives details on SSIDs or access codes. Load offline maps for Alto Molocue, download boarding passes and key documents in advance, and assume you may be running off mobile data or entirely offline once you arrive.

With one small, lightly documented terminal and no confirmed food, shops, or lounges, treat Alto Molocue as a “self-sufficiency” airport: pack snacks, bring water (to fill after any security check), download what you need, and lock in ground transport plans before your flight lands.