Flight Support · United States

Runway Ranch Airport

2MO9
Kansas City, United States
38°57'00.0"N 94°27'00.7"W
ICAO 2MO9

LFS coordinates 24/7 flight support at Runway Ranch Airport (2MO9) in Kansas City, United States. From flight planning and CAA permits to contract fuel, ground handling, crew hotac and concierge, every service is delivered through a single point of contact and consolidated on a single invoice.

Airport specifications
Longest runway
1,320 ft
402 m
Runways
1
active runways
Field elevation
Coordinates
38.9500, -94.4502
38°57'00.0"N 94°27'00.7"W
Operating hours
Contact OPS
Customs hours
Not AOE
Curfew
None on file
LFS coverage
Partner network
About Kansas City

Operational context

Runway Ranch Airport (2MO9) serves Kansas City, United States. Its longest runway measures 1,320 ft (402 m), supporting light aircraft and turboprops.

For crew, LFS coordinates ground transport, vetted hotac and visa support in Kansas City. For passengers, VIP terminal access, concierge and security screening can be arranged on short notice. All services are delivered through a single LFS account manager and consolidated on a single invoice.

Services at 2MO9
Flight Dispatch
  • OFP & route optimization
  • Weather & NOTAM brief
  • ETOPS / EDTO planning
  • Fuel & payload calculations
Permits & Slots
  • Overflight clearances
  • Landing permits
  • Slot coordination
  • Diplomatic & charter approvals
Contract Fuel
  • Negotiated into-plane pricing
  • Single consolidated invoice
  • Fuel quality assurance
  • 24/7 release coordination
Ground Handling
  • Marshalling, GPU, stairs
  • Lavatory & potable water
  • Baggage & security
  • VIP terminal access
Crew & PAX
  • Hotac & ground transport
  • Visas & immigration support
  • Catering coordination
  • Concierge & meet-and-greet
24/7 OPS
  • Live trip dashboard
  • Document delivery
  • eAPIS / GENDEC filing
  • On-the-ground supervision
Other airports in United States
VIEW ALL →
Operating into 2MO9?
Submit your trip — typical quote in under 30 minutes.
Request service