Gol Transportes Aéreos destinations
For destinations related to "old" Varig, the airline that ceased operations in 2006, see Varig destinations.
As of November 2015 Gol Transportes Aéreos, including the brand Varig, operated scheduled services to the following destinations:[1]
- Argentina
- Barbados
- Bolivia
- Brazil
- Altamira – Altamira Airport
- Aracaju – Santa Maria Airport
- Bauru/Arealva – Moussa Nakhl Tobias Airport
- Belém – Val de Cans/Julio Cézar Ribeiro International Airport
- Belo Horizonte – Tancredo Neves International Airport
- Boa Vista – Atlas Brasil Cantanhede International Airport
- Brasília – Pres. Juscelino Kubitschek International Airport
- Campina Grande – Pres. João Suassuna Airport
- Campinas – Viracopos International Airport
- Campo Grande – Campo Grande International Airport
- Carajás (Parauapebas) – Carajás Airport
- Caxias do Sul – Hugo Cantergiani Airport
- Chapecó – Serafin Enoss Bertaso Airport
- Cruzeiro do Sul – Cruzeiro do Sul International Airport
- Cuiabá/Várzea Grande – Mal. Rondon International Airport
- Curitiba – Afonso Pena International Airport
- Fernando de Noronha – Fernando de Noronha Airport
- Florianópolis – Hercílio Luz International Airport
- Fortaleza – Pinto Martins International Airport
- Foz do Iguaçu – Cataratas International Airport
- Goiânia – Santa Genoveva Airport
- Ilhéus – Jorge Amado Airport
- Imperatriz – Pref. Renato Moreira Airport
- João Pessoa – Pres. Castro Pinto International Airport
- Joinville – Lauro Carneiro de Loyola Airport
- Juazeiro do Norte – Orlando Bezerra de Menezes Airport
- Londrina – Gov. José Richa Airport
- Macapá – Alberto Alcolumbre International Airport
- Maceió – Zumbi dos Palmares International Airport
- Manaus – Eduardo Gomes International Airport
- Marabá – Marabá Airport
- Maringá – Sílvio Name Júnior Regional Airport
- Montes Claros – Mário Ribeiro Airport
- Natal – Greater Natal International Airport
- Navegantes – Min. Victor Konder International Airport
- Palmas – Brig. Lysias Rodrigues Airport
- Petrolina – Sen. Nilo Coelho Airport
- Porto Alegre – Salgado Filho International Airport (Base)
- Porto Seguro – Porto Seguro Airport
- Porto Velho – Gov. Jorge Teixeira de Oliveira International Airport
- Presidente Prudente – Presidente Prudente Airport
- Recife – Guararapes/Gilberto Freyre International Airport
- Ribeirão Preto – Leite Lopes Airport
- Rio Branco – Plácido de Castro International Airport
- Rio de Janeiro (Base)
- Salvador da Bahia – Dep. Luís Eduardo Magalhães International Airport
- Santarém – Maestro Wilson Fonseca Airport
- São Luís – Mal. Cunha Machado International Airport
- São Paulo (Base)
- Teresina – Sen. Petrônio Portella Airport
- Uberlândia – Ten. Cel. Av. César Bombonato Airport
- Vitória – Eurico de Aguiar Salles Airport
- Chile
- Dominican Republic
- Paraguay
- Surinam
- Trinidad and Tobago
- Uruguay
Additionally, Gol operates dedicated executive bus services between some locations and its nearest airports, as connecting services to its flights:[2]
- Blumenau and Navegantes – Ministro Victor Konder International Airport
- São Paulo – Congonhas Airport and São Paulo/Guarulhos – Gov. André Franco Montoro International Airport
Terminated destinations
- Argentina
- Bariloche
- Aruba
- Oranjestad
- Brazil
- Altamira, Bauru, Belo Horizonte-Pampulha, Imperatriz, Natal-Augusto Severo, São José do Rio Preto, São José dos Campos, Sinop
- Colombia
- Bogotá
- Curaçao
- Willemstad
- Dominican Republic
- La Romana, Santo Domingo
- Perú
- Lima
- United States
- Miami-MIA, New York-JFK, Orlando
- Venezuela
- Caracas
References
- ↑ "Gol: Destinos" (in Portuguese). Gol Linhas Aéreas. Retrieved 14 November 2015.
- ↑ "Transporte para aeroportos" (in Portuguese). Gol Airlines. Retrieved 30 August 2011.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, April 15, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.