KSIA Masterplan: Size, Runways, Terminals, and 2030 Targets

King Salman International Airport (KSIA) is Riyadh’s long-term airport transformation plan—designed to turn the capital into a larger global aviation and logistics hub while expanding around the existing airport footprint and terminals. Public Investment Fund+1

How big is KSIA?

KSIA’s published masterplan scale is approximately 57 km². King Salman International Airport+2Public Investment Fund+2
On KSIA’s official project figures, that total is split into:

PIF’s masterplan release also describes 12 km² within the plan dedicated to airport support facilities and broader development uses such as residential/recreation, retail, and logistics real estate. Public Investment Fund+1

Runways: what “six parallel runways” changes

The KSIA masterplan specifies six parallel runways. Public Investment Fund+2Foster + Partners+2

In airport planning terms, this is a capacity and resilience move:

  • more simultaneous arrival/departure capability during peak “bank” periods

  • more flexibility during maintenance or weather disruptions

  • more room to separate traffic flows (domestic/international patterns, widebody waves, and future growth)

Terminals: how many, and what types?

KSIA is described as a multi-terminal airport complex that includes the existing terminals at King Khalid International Airport (the current RUH terminal set). Public Investment Fund+1

On terminal count and terminal types, KSIA’s own published materials describe it in two complementary ways:

1) “Nine passenger terminals”

KSIA’s brand identity announcement states the airport will feature nine passenger terminals. King Salman International Airport

2) A terminal “mix” that includes specialized terminals

KSIA’s official FAQ describes the development as including six terminals, plus additional specialized terminal elements: an iconic terminal (for travelers and non-travelers), a royal terminal, a private aviation terminal, and a cargo and logistics hub. King Salman International Airport

The easiest way to understand this is that KSIA is planned as a terminal ecosystem—not a single building—with passenger terminals supported by dedicated facilities for VIP/royal operations, private aviation, and cargo/logistics. King Salman International Airport+1

The 2030 targets: what KSIA is aiming to achieve

KSIA’s published 2030 targets focus on two headline outputs: passengers and cargo.

Passenger capacity target (2030)

Two official project statements are commonly cited:

Both point to the same strategic direction: KSIA is planned at a scale intended to push RUH/Riyadh into the world’s top tier of high-volume airports by 2030. Public Investment Fund+1

Cargo capacity target (2030)

KSIA’s official project figures list ~2 million tons of cargo capacity by 2030. King Salman International Airport+1

That cargo target is a major part of the masterplan logic: it supports hub economics (belly cargo + freighters), a larger logistics district, and stronger global trade connectivity through Riyadh. Public Investment Fund+1

Why these targets matter operationally

Hitting “2030-scale” targets isn’t just about building bigger terminals—it’s about building a hub system that can run reliably at peak volume.

To support 100M+ annual passengers and large cargo throughput, KSIA’s masterplan focuses on:

A quick reality check: 2030 vs 2050

KSIA is a long-horizon project. Official communications also highlight the 2050 capacity ambition—up to 185 million passengers and 3.5 million tons of cargo—which frames 2030 as a major milestone, not the endpoint. Public Investment Fund+1