LFSB is the ICAO code for EuroAirport Basel-Mulhouse-Freiburg (IATA BSL), located in Saint-Louis, GES, France.
EuroAirport Basel-Mulhouse-Freiburg (LFSB) is a large airport in Saint-Louis, GES, France. Pilots and dispatchers reference it by ICAO code LFSB or IATA code BSL. It sits in Europe.
EuroAirport Basel-Mulhouse-Freiburg is a commercial-airline hub that also handles a steady stream of private and corporate traffic. Mixed commercial and private operations mean planners should expect slot coordination, handling agent involvement, and the usual international hub procedures.
EuroAirport Basel-Mulhouse-Freiburg sits near sea level at 885 ft.
Local operations run on Europe/Paris. Because the field hosts scheduled airline operations, private operators should expect a defined slot environment, possible CDM coordination at peak banks, and limited ramp availability during major event weekends. Booking FBO ramp space in advance is normal practice.
SkyAccess currently tracks 20 departing and 19 arriving private-jet legs at LFSB across the next six months of operator inventory. 1 aircraft from 21 operators are based here or fly through regularly, so most empty-leg supply originates from a local fleet rather than out-of-town repositioning.
As one of the larger fields in France, LFSB tends to be the natural choice for long-range international charters and crew-rest-required flights.
Basel-Mulhouse International Airport, commercially known as EuroAirport Basel-Mulhouse-Freiburg, is a Franco-Swiss international airport located in France, in the administrative commune of Saint-Louis, Hésingue, and Blotzheim, in the French Alsace part of the Trinational Eurodistrict of Basel. It is 4.7 km (2.9 mi) west of the tripoint of France, Germany, and Switzerland, 3.5 km (2.2 mi) northwest of the city of Basel in Switzerland, 20 km (12 mi) southeast of Mulhouse in France, and 46 km (29 mi) south-southwest of Freiburg im Breisgau in Germany. The airport is jointly administered by France and Switzerland, governed by a 1949 international convention. It is the only binational airport in the world. The airport serves as a base for easyJet Switzerland and mainly features flights to European metropolitan and leisure destinations.
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