US Trends

how early should i get to airport

For most flights, plan to be at the airport 2 hours before domestic and 3 hours before international , then adjust based on how busy your airport, airline, and time of day are.

Quick Scoop

  • For domestic flights (same country):
    • Standard advice: arrive about 2 hours before departure.
* If you have **only carry‑on and online check‑in done** , frequent travelers sometimes cut this to **1–1.5 hours at smaller, quieter airports** , but it is riskier at big hubs.
  • For international flights :
    • Common rule of thumb: 3 hours before departure.
* Very busy airports (LAX, JFK, ATL, big European/Asian hubs) or flights to the US/Canada often need **2.5–3+ hours** due to extra document and security checks.
  • Big, busy airports vs. small ones :
    • Major cities and mega‑hubs (New York, LA, Atlanta, Chicago) tend to justify the full 2–3 hours because security and bag‑drop lines can spike suddenly.
* Smaller regional airports can be much quicker; experienced travelers sometimes show up closer to **60–90 minutes** for domestic when they know the airport well.

Factors that should make you go earlier

  • You are:
    • Checking bags or flying a budget airline that often has long lines.
* Traveling at **peak times** (early morning rush, Sunday evenings, holidays, school breaks).
* Flying **internationally** with visas or extra document checks required.
* Unfamiliar with the airport layout or driving/parking situation.
  • In those cases, add 30–60 minutes on top of the usual guideline so delays at parking, check‑in, or security do not threaten your boarding time.

A good mental shortcut:

  • Domestic: “2 hours unless I know this airport is tiny and easy.”
  • International: “3 hours , more if it’s a huge or chaotic airport or a very important trip.”

TL;DR: If you are unsure or it is an important trip (honeymoon, expensive vacation, tight connection), err on the earlier side; waiting at the gate is almost always better than sprinting through the terminal and gambling on a missed flight.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.