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Portland (PDX) Terminal Map & Navigation Guide

Everything you need to navigate Portland: the official terminal map link, what airlines fly from each concourse, how to move between terminals, and gate-finding tips that save you backtracking. Verify your specific gate on your boarding pass — assignments change.

Folded printable terminal map cover for an airport navigation guide.
A printable terminal map you can fold and carry — concourses, gate ranges, and connections at a glance.

Where can I find the official Portland terminal map?

The PDX airport authority publishes the most up-to-date map on its official website. Use the link below before you travel so you know the terminal layout and gate locations before you clear security.

Official map

Portland official terminal map — airport authority website

Portland interactive map — searchable by gate, airline, or amenity

Maps are updated when terminals are renovated or new concourses open. Terminal 5 at LAX, for example, has been closed since October 2025 for reconstruction — always confirm your terminal from your boarding pass rather than relying on a saved map.

What is in each Portland terminal?

Here is what each terminal or concourse at PDX handles — which airlines fly from it, the gate range, and key amenities to know before you go.

Concourse B

9 gates (B3–B11). Home to Alaska Airlines and Horizon Air. Accessed via the south security checkpoint. Alaska Lounge is located near the concourse entrance. Compact concourse with limited dining.

View Concourse B map

Concourse C

18 gates (C5–C13, C15–C23) — the largest concourse at PDX. Primarily Alaska Airlines; also American Airlines, Hawaiian Airlines, and JetBlue Airways. Accessed via the south security checkpoint. Features moving walkways, a food court between C7–C9, and an Alaska Lounge across from gate C5. Handles roughly 40% of PDX traffic.

View Concourse C map

Concourse D

11 gates (D5–D15). Primary home of Delta Air Lines; also serves Frontier, Sun Country, and some domestic low-cost carriers. Also handles select international arrivals. Accessed via the north security checkpoint. Contains Delta Sky Club and the Escape Lounge (Priority Pass-eligible).

View Concourse D map

Concourse E

12 gates (E2–E13). Primary home of Southwest Airlines (expanded 2020); United Airlines also operates here. International and transborder carriers (Air Canada, Condor, Icelandair) depart from this concourse. Accessed via the north security checkpoint. United Club is located near gate E2. Gate E12 is the farthest point in the airport.

View Concourse E map

How do I get between terminals at Portland?

All four concourses are fully connected airside — no tram, shuttle, or re-screening required. An indoor concourse connector links the B/C side to the D/E side. There are two security checkpoints: south (for Concourses B and C) and north (for Concourses D and E). Walking end-to-end from Concourse B to E takes approximately 10–15 minutes. New permanent north and south concourse exits opened April 2026 as part of the PDX Next terminal renovation.

Timing tip

Always allow 15–30 minutes for any inter-terminal transfer at PDX — wait times for people-movers, buses, or security re-screening add up faster than the physical distance suggests. Build the buffer into your Leave-By time, not your gate arrival time.

How do I find my gate at Portland?

Choose your security checkpoint based on your concourse — use the south checkpoint for Concourses B and C (Alaska, American, JetBlue, Hawaiian) and the north checkpoint for D and E (Delta, Southwest, United, international). Picking the wrong checkpoint means a 10–15 minute airside backtrack through the connector. Both checkpoints offer TSA PreCheck lanes from 4 a.m. to 4 p.m.

A few habits that prevent last-minute sprints:

  • Open your airline app two hours before departure. Gate assignments update in the app before they appear on printed boarding passes and sometimes before terminal displays are updated.
  • Check departure screens immediately after clearing security. Every terminal at PDX has overhead departure boards near the checkpoint exit — confirming your gate here costs 30 seconds and can save a long detour.
  • Note which security checkpoint serves your concourse. At multi-concourse airports, entering through the wrong checkpoint can mean exiting security and re-queuing, which adds 20 minutes or more.
  • International arrivals follow the customs signs first. If you are connecting from an international arrival, clear U.S. Customs and Border Protection before looking for your domestic connection gate — the process is one-way.

What is the easiest way to navigate Portland?

Experienced travellers at PDX use a short checklist every time:

  • Review the map before leaving home. Open the Portland interactive map on your phone while you are still home so the terminal layout is familiar.
  • Know your terminal before you arrive. At airports with multiple separate buildings (JFK, LAX, DTW, MSP) confirm your terminal from your boarding pass — rideshare and taxi drivers need the correct terminal to drop you at the right curb.
  • Use automated people-movers instead of walking. At large airports with trains (ATL Plane Train, DFW Skylink, DEN AGTS) a single train ride replaces 20–30 minutes of walking. Look for signs to the train immediately after clearing security.
  • Follow colour-coded signage. Most airports (TPA Blue/Red, SEA North/South Satellite, PHX T3/T4) use colour or number coding from curbside through gates — picking the right colour zone at check-in means you do not cross the terminal twice.
  • Check the live TSA wait before you leave. Knowing the current security wait at PDX lets you time your departure so you arrive at the gate relaxed, not sprinting.

Common questions about Portland maps

Where can I find the official PDX terminal map?

The official Portland terminal map is on the airport authority website at https://cdn.portofportland.com/pdfs/PDX-TerminalMap-printable.pdf — an interactive version is also at https://www.flypdx.com/Map. Maps are updated when new gates or concourses open; always verify your specific gate on your boarding pass.

How do I get between terminals at PDX?

All four concourses are fully connected airside — no tram, shuttle, or re-screening required. An indoor concourse connector links the B/C side to the D/E side. There are two security checkpoints: south (for Concourses B and C) and north (for Concourses D and E). Walking end-to-end from Concourse B to E takes approximately 10–15 minutes. New permanent north and south concourse exits opened April 2026 as part of the PDX Next terminal renovation.

How do I find my gate at PDX?

Choose your security checkpoint based on your concourse — use the south checkpoint for Concourses B and C (Alaska, American, JetBlue, Hawaiian) and the north checkpoint for D and E (Delta, Southwest, United, international). Picking the wrong checkpoint means a 10–15 minute airside backtrack through the connector. Both checkpoints offer TSA PreCheck lanes from 4 a.m. to 4 p.m. Your boarding pass shows the exact gate. Open your airline app about two hours before departure — gate assignments sometimes change after check-in closes. Look for departure boards throughout the terminal for real-time gate information.

What is the easiest way to navigate PDX?

Use the official interactive map at https://www.flypdx.com/Map before you arrive to familiarise yourself with the layout. Choose your security checkpoint based on your concourse — use the south checkpoint for Concourses B and C (Alaska, American, JetBlue, Hawaiian) and the north checkpoint for D and E (Delta, Southwest, United, international). Picking the wrong checkpoint means a 10–15 minute airside backtrack through the connector. Both checkpoints offer TSA PreCheck lanes from 4 a.m. to 4 p.m.

What is in each PDX terminal?

Concourse B: 9 gates (B3–B11). Home to Alaska Airlines and Horizon Air. Accessed via the south security checkpoint. Alaska Lounge is located near the concourse entrance. Compact concourse with limited dining. Concourse C: 18 gates (C5–C13, C15–C23) — the largest concourse at PDX. Primarily Alaska Airlines; also American Airlines, Hawaiian Airlines, and JetBlue Airways. Accessed via the south security checkpoint. Features moving walkways, a food court between C7–C9, and an Alaska Lounge across from gate C5. Handles roughly 40% of PDX traffic. Concourse D: 11 gates (D5–D15). Primary home of Delta Air Lines; also serves Frontier, Sun Country, and some domestic low-cost carriers. Also handles select international arrivals. Accessed via the north security checkpoint. Contains Delta Sky Club and the Escape Lounge (Priority Pass-eligible). Concourse E: 12 gates (E2–E13). Primary home of Southwest Airlines (expanded 2020); United Airlines also operates here. International and transborder carriers (Air Canada, Condor, Icelandair) depart from this concourse. Accessed via the north security checkpoint. United Club is located near gate E2. Gate E12 is the farthest point in the airport.

Leave-By calculator

Know exactly when to leave for PDX

The TSA Wait Times Leave-By calculator folds the live PDX security wait, your drive time, and terminal navigation into one exact time to leave home — so you reach your gate without guessing.

See also: Live PDX TSA wait times · PDX terminals guide · PDX security tips

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