Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport

Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport is in the Southeast Michigan area of the United States of America and mainly serves Detroit.

Understand
Detroit Metro Airport is the second-largest hub for Delta Air Lines. Detroit, historically being a major center for the automotive industry, has good domestic connections to other U.S. destinations and is well connected to major airports in Europe and Asia. There are so many passengers from Asia that airport signs include Japanese, and some announcements are made in Japanese and Mandarin.

Airlines
The airport is divided into two separate buildings:
 * McNamara Terminal – Delta, Air France, SkyTeam partners
 * Concourse A – Delta, SkyTeam partners.
 * Concourses B and C – Delta Connection
 * North Terminal
 * Concourse D – Air Canada, American Airlines, Frontier Airlines, Lufthansa, Royal Jordanian, Southwest, Spirit, United

Ground transportation
Public transport connections to Detroit are not great. There are no trains, and buses are not very regular. Taxis into town cost about $45. Bus connections to Ann Arbor are slightly better, with buses every 1-2 hours - $15 one way. Lyft started to serve DTW on March 21, 2017.

By car
On the southeast quadrant of the I-94/I-275 interchange.

By rental car
All the major rental companies are on Lucas Drive, a 10-minute free shuttle bus ride from the terminals (you must to go up and down a couple of floors to get to the bridge between the terminal and the pick-up/drop-off point).

For refueling hire car returns there is a gas station near the companies corner of Middlebelt Road and Wick Road, however is often difficult to get to a pump at busy times. Alternatives off the I-94: from the east- Telegraph Road (north of exit) and from the west- Wayne Road (south of exit); from I-275 (south) on Eureka Road.

To/from Detroit and suburbs
The public transit service to Metro Airport is, to be frank, lousy, and should only be considered as a last resort. SMART is the transit operator for suburban Detroit. Route 125 Fort St-Eureka Rd alternates between serving the McNamara and North Terminals, but no single trip will serve both terminals; each terminal is served roughly once an hour during weekdays (give or take a few minutes), one to two hours on Saturdays, and a pitiful two to three hours on Sundays. The route continues through Southgate, Wyandotte, Lincoln Park, Ecorse, and River Rouge; only during weekday rush hours does the bus continue into downtown Detroit. At all other times, downtown-bound passengers should exit the bus at Fort Street and Outer Drive (please note this is not at the terminus of Route 125, but a little before it) and transfer to a DDOT bus (DDOT is the transit operator in Detroit city proper), specifically Route 19 Fort. There is one other SMART route serving the airport, and that is the 280 Middlebelt South, which only serves the North Terminal and travels mostly along Middlebelt Road through Romulus, Inkster, and Garden City; the service operates hourly on weekdays and Saturdays, and about once every 70 minutes on Sundays.

To/from Ann Arbor
AirRide, a joint operation between Michigan Flyer (see below) and Ann Arbor's public transit authority, provides coach service to Ann Arbor, serving both terminals. Service operates about once every 1-2 hours daily, with more limited schedules on holidays. Fares reserved in advance are $12 one-way and $22 round trip. Walk-on fares are $15 one-way, cash only and exact change required. Advance reservations will receive seating priority.

To/from East Lansing
Michigan Flyer provides coach service to East Lansing via Ann Arbor, serving both terminals. Service operates about once every two hours daily, with more limited schedules on holidays. Fares reserved in advance are $30 one-way and $50 round trip for a single passenger, or $50 one-way and $80 round trip for two passengers. Walk-on fares are $35 one-way for a single passenger or $60 one-way for two passengers, cash only and exact change required.

By train
There is no rail connection to Metro Airport.

Get around
In the McNamara Terminal, the ExpressTram shuttles travelers between the central area and the two ends of Concourse A every few minutes. Interestingly, it's located above the main floor rather than in a tunnel, and the cars are actually hovercrafts that ride on a cushion of air.

If you need to switch terminals (which you would only need to do if connecting between different airlines), there is a free shuttle between the terminals: look for blue and white vans that say "Westin - Terminal." However, you will have to re-clear security to enter the other terminal.

North Terminal
Once a barren wasteland full of boring chain restaurants, North Terminal finally has some gems of its own.

Connect
Metro Airport offers unlimited free Wi-Fi in both terminals. The free service requires users to view a 30-second advertisement every 45 minutes. Premium access with extra bandwidth allowances and no ads is available for a fee.

Cope

 * Kids' play areas (McNamara Terminal, gates A6, A18, B20, C6; North Terminal, gate D16)
 * Nursing rooms (McNamara Terminal, gates A25, A53, A63, A25, C2; North Terminal, gates D8, D15, D24). You must call by phone to request an access code, and may be asked for details of your boarding pass as well. The reasonably-sized rooms have a comfortable chair, sink, counters, and electrical outlets.
 * Religious reflection rooms (McNamara Terminal, concourse A center; North Terminal, gate D17)
 * Pet relief areas (McNamara Terminal, gate A34 and pre-security outside International Arrivals; North Terminal, gate D16 and pre-security at either end of Departures Level)
 * Smoking areas are only located outside, pre-security.

Sleep


There are also many hotels in suburbs surrounding the airport such as Romulus, Wayne and Allen Park.