Flensburg-Schäferhaus Airport
Flensburg, Germany · IATA FLF · ICAO EDXF
Pet relief area & accessibility
Pet relief area information for Flensburg-Schäferhaus Airport (FLF) in Flensburg, Germany. Outside of the United States, pet relief area provision is set by the airport operator rather than national regulation, so amenities at Flensburg-Schäferhaus Airport vary by terminal and have changed over time. International hubs typically provide at least one outdoor pet relief area on the landside (pre-security) curb, often near the long-term parking shuttle stop or the taxi rank. Some terminals also designate a small grass patch on the airside near the smoking area for transit passengers travelling with assistance animals. Before you fly, contact Flensburg-Schäferhaus Airport passenger services or check the airport's official website for the current location and opening hours of their pet relief area. If you are connecting through Flensburg on a long-haul itinerary, ask the airport's special-assistance desk whether they can escort you between terminals so that you can use a relief area without re-clearing immigration. If you arrive at FLF and cannot find the marked pet relief area, ask any uniformed airport staff member or visit the airline's customer service desk — they can radio operations and direct you to the closest facility. Always carry waste bags, a small bottle of water, and a collapsible bowl. After using the relief area, give your pet a few minutes of quiet time before re-entering the carrier so the boarding process feels predictable rather than rushed.
Travel-day timing & what to expect
Travelling through Flensburg-Schäferhaus Airport (FLF) with a pet means thinking about three windows of time: arrival, security, and boarding. Arrive at the Flensburg terminal at least 90 minutes before a domestic departure or three hours before an international departure when you have an animal in the cabin — the extra time covers the carrier inspection at the security checkpoint, a final relief-area visit, and the airline's documentation review at the gate. At the security checkpoint you will be asked to remove your pet from the carrier and carry them through the metal detector while the empty carrier passes through the X-ray belt; small dogs and cats can usually be held in your arms, larger service animals walk through on a short lead. After clearing security in Germany, head to the post-security pet relief area to give your animal a chance to drink and stretch, then go directly to your gate so the gate agent can verify your reservation and apply the in-cabin pet tag to your carrier. If you are flying with a pet in the cargo hold, plan to drop them off at the airline's dedicated cargo-acceptance facility (which is usually a separate building from the passenger terminal) at least four hours before departure — staff at FLF will walk the animal, check the kennel hardware, attach a live-animal label, and load them into a climate-controlled holding area before transferring them to the aircraft.
Quick reference
| IATA code | FLF |
|---|---|
| ICAO code | EDXF |
| City | Flensburg |
| Country | Germany |
| Coordinates | 54.7733, 9.3789 |
Before you fly
Confirm your airline's pet program before you book — every carrier publishes a slightly different cabin carrier limit, in-cabin pet count, and breed-restriction list. Browse the airline pet policies for the carrier you plan to fly, and review the guides library for country-specific import rules and carrier preparation tips. The information on this page is editorial and should be confirmed with the airport's official passenger services desk before travel.