Las Américas International Airport (MDSD/SDQ) METAR & TAF
Live METAR, TAF & runway wind for Las Américas International Airport.
Get the current MDSD (SDQ) weather for Las Américas International Airport in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. The decoder below pulls the live METAR and TAF, breaks them into plain language, and uses the published runway headings to show which runway end is best lined up with the reported wind. It is the same operational weather language tested across the EASA ATPL Meteorology and Flight Planning syllabus.
Las Américas International Airport airport facts
- ICAO code
- MDSD
- IATA code
- SDQ
- Location
- Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic
- Elevation
- 59 ft
- Runways
- 1
- Coordinates
- 18.430, -69.669
- Timezone
- America/Santo_Domingo
Las Américas International Airport runways
Las Américas International Airport has 1 published runway (17/35). The longest runway, 17/35, is about 11,000 ft (3,353 m) long. SkyStudy uses these runway headings with the live METAR wind to show the best-aligned runway end.
| Runway | Length | Surface | Headings |
|---|---|---|---|
| 17/35 | 11,000 ft | ASP | 17 (161°) / 35 (341°) |
Want to work a runway scenario by hand? Open the wind component calculator to get headwind, crosswind, and the gust case for any heading.
How to read the MDSD METAR
A METAR always follows the same order, so once you know the pattern you can read any station — including MDSD — at a glance:
- Station & time — the ICAO code (MDSD) and the observation time in UTC (Zulu).
- Wind — direction in degrees true and speed in knots, with gusts after a G. This is what SkyStudy matches against the Las Américas International Airport runways above.
- Visibility & weather — prevailing visibility, then any precipitation or obscuration codes.
- Cloud — cover and base in hundreds of feet AGL (FEW, SCT, BKN, OVC).
- Temperature / dewpoint and the altimeter setting close out the report.
This is the same operational weather language tested across EASA ATPL Meteorology and Flight Planning. Prefer a guided walkthrough? Use the full METAR & TAF decoder.
MDSD weather — frequently asked questions
What is the ICAO code for Las Américas International Airport?
The ICAO code for Las Américas International Airport in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic is MDSD, and its IATA code is SDQ. Pilots use the ICAO code MDSD to request the METAR and TAF for this airport.
How do I read the MDSD METAR?
Read the MDSD METAR in order: station and time, then wind (direction in degrees true and speed in knots), visibility, weather and cloud, temperature and dewpoint, and finally the altimeter setting. The decoder above turns the raw MDSD METAR into this plain-language order automatically.
Where does the MDSD weather data come from?
The live METAR and TAF are pulled from the public NOAA Aviation Weather Center feed, the same authoritative source used in flight planning, and refreshed every few minutes. SkyStudy then layers its runway and wind logic on top.
How many runways does Las Américas International Airport have?
Las Américas International Airport has 1 published runway (17/35). SkyStudy combines these runway headings with the live MDSD wind to show which runway end is best aligned right now.
Is the MDSD METAR and TAF decoder free?
Yes. SkyStudy publishes this MDSD weather page as a free tool. If you are studying for EASA ATPL exams, the same METAR and TAF language appears in Meteorology, Flight Planning, and Operational Procedures — and SkyStudy turns it into practice questions and mock exams.
Nearby major airport weather
Turn live weather into ATPL exam readiness.
The METAR and TAF language you just decoded for MDSD runs straight through EASA ATPL Meteorology, Flight Planning, and Operational Procedures. SkyStudy turns it into practice questions, mock exams, and spaced repetition so it sticks for the exam.
Operational notice
Weather tool notice
SkyStudy weather pages are informational only. They do not replace official weather products, NOTAM briefings, aircraft limitations, operator procedures, or instructor and company guidance.
- Verify live weather and operational data with official sources before flight.
- Check runway, aircraft, and operator limits separately before making any go or no-go decision.
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