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Florida · Medium hub airport

Tyndall Air Force Base

Panama City, Florida  ·  No scheduled passenger service  ·  Field elevation 17 ft

IATAPAM
ICAOKPAM
FAA IdentKPAM
Time zoneAmerica/Chicago
FAA regionSouthern

About Tyndall Air Force Base

Tyndall Air Force Base is a medium hub airport serving Panama City and the surrounding region of Florida. The airport is identified by FAA location identifier KPAM, by the three-letter IATA code PAM used on passenger tickets and baggage tags, and by the four-letter ICAO code KPAM used in air-traffic-control flight plans and worldwide aeronautical publications. It is open to public use but does not currently host regularly scheduled commercial passenger service, it is used for general aviation, business charter, training, and air-taxi operations. Administratively the airport falls inside the FAA's Southern Region region, headquartered in College Park, GA.

The airfield sits at approximately 30.0696° N, 85.5754° W, with a published field elevation of 17 feet above mean sea level. Local operations follow the America/Chicago time zone, which is important to remember when reading published schedules, airline departure boards always display local time, not the traveler's home time. Travelers connecting through here should plan ground transportation with the airport's class in mind: as a medium hub, expect a manageable terminal footprint with a representative selection of rental-car brands, taxi and ride-share queues, and dedicated economy parking lots.

"Tyndall Air Force Base" is one of 533 public-use airports in Florida, and one of roughly 16,000 such airports indexed in the FAA's national airspace records.

Reference data

Official nameTyndall Air Force Base
LocationPanama City, Florida (FL)
FAA Form 5010 identKPAM
IATA codePAM
ICAO codeKPAM
Airport classMedium hub
FAA administrative regionSouthern Region (ASO)
Latitude / longitude30.0696° N, 85.5754° W
Field elevation17 ft MSL
Time zoneAmerica/Chicago (UTC -6)
Scheduled passenger serviceNo
Official airport websitewww.tyndall.af.mil
Reference articleWikipedia entry

Estimated traffic profile

The figures below are projected from the FAA's airport-class definitions and the Bureau of Transportation Statistics' published baseline ranges for each class. They are intended as orientation, not as a substitute for the live BTS T-100 segment data, which is updated quarterly.

43,680
Annual departures (est.)
2,184,000
Annual passengers (est.)
49
Nonstop destinations (typical)
9
Carriers represented

Runways & airfield

The airfield carries an estimated 2 runways, with the longest runway running approximately 9,100 feet. A runway of this length comfortably accommodates wide-body equipment such as the Boeing 777 or Airbus A330 at full payload, which is part of why this airport supports the route mix it does. Pavement type, lighting, instrument-approach minima, and any displaced thresholds are all published in the FAA's NASR record for the airport, pilots should consult the live AIP and current charts rather than relying on summary figures here.

Airlines you are likely to see at PAM

The list below is composed of US-certificated carriers that commonly serve airports of this class. Routes change with each schedule revision, for live availability check the carrier's own booking site.

Parking at PAM

Parking at Tyndall Air Force Base spans the standard tiers you would expect at a medium hub airport. Short-term and hourly rates typically run between $4–$6 per hour, depending on whether you park in the garage closest to the terminal or in a satellite lot. Daily economy parking generally runs $11–$17 per day, with off-airport private lots usually undercutting the long-term garage by a few dollars per day in exchange for a short shuttle ride. A free cell-phone waiting lot is available for drivers picking up arriving passengers, sparing them the curbside-loitering ticket that has become standard at most US airports. Always cross-check rates on the airport's own website before you travel, parking pricing is one of the most volatile data points at any airport.

Ground transport & rental cars

Ground transport options at Tyndall Air Force Base reflect the airport's role in the local ecosystem. Rental-car desks for the major brands (Hertz, Enterprise, Avis/Budget, National, Alamo) are available either inside the terminal or at a consolidated rental facility a short shuttle ride away, follow signage for "Rental Car Center" on arrival. Public-transit service is limited or non-existent, most travelers use a rental car, ride-share, taxi, or pre-arranged private car service.

Ride-share pickup and drop-off zones at US airports are increasingly being moved to dedicated lots away from the main curb, check signage on arrival rather than relying on memory from past visits. Pickup wait times at peak hours can be substantially longer than the app's initial estimate, especially when bad weather concentrates demand. Pro tip: if you have a tight outbound connection, a pre-booked private car often beats ride-share on reliability for early-morning and late-night flights.

TSA security & checkpoint expectations

Average TSA security wait times at Tyndall Air Force Base typically range from 4–13 minutes off-peak, climbing to 22 minutes or more during the early-morning and late-Sunday rushes. TSA PreCheck lanes, where available, usually clear in under five minutes regardless of class. Travelers without PreCheck can typically save the most time by arriving outside the 5–8 a.m. and 4–7 p.m. windows when business traffic concentrates at most US airports. The TSA publishes official screening guidance for current rules on liquids, electronics and prohibited items.

Traveler tips for Tyndall Air Force Base

If you have a connecting itinerary through Tyndall Air Force Base, build in a buffer that matches the airport's class. Medium hubs typically run a single linear terminal and a handful of concourses; 45 minutes is a reasonable minimum domestic connection for most carriers here.

  • Book the right airport. Travelers comparing flight options should look beyond the obvious nearby large hub, a closer medium or regional airport like Tyndall Air Force Base can shave an hour off the total door-to-door time even when its ticket price is slightly higher.
  • Read the operating carrier. When a flight is sold under a major carrier's code but flown by a regional partner, the operating carrier is normally disclosed on the booking page; this distinction matters for elite-status benefits and irregular-operations rebooking.
  • Watch the weather. Weather delays at this airport propagate to and from the connecting hubs in the carrier's network, track the inbound aircraft, not just your departure board.
  • Confirm baggage rules. Some regional aircraft (especially turboprops and small regional jets) gate-check carry-on bags as a matter of routine because of overhead-bin capacity. Pack medications, electronics, and valuables in the bag you intend to keep on your person.

Nearby airports

If Tyndall Air Force Base doesn't fit your schedule or routing, the closest alternative public-use airports are listed below. The first column is sorted by approximate great-circle distance from this airport.

AirportCityStateCodesClass
Sandy Creek Airpark Panama City FL 75FL / - Regional
Northwest Florida Beaches International Airport Panama City Beach FL ECP / KECP Medium hub
Whiskey Throttle Field Panama City FL US-7151 / - Regional
Stock Island Airport Panama City FL US-1833 / - Regional
Crystal Village Airport Wausau FL 2FL0 / - Regional
Costin Airport Port St Joe FL A51 / - Regional

Internal references