You know going into it that Christmas travel can be exasperating: crowds and winter weather often do not play well together. But some trips are worse than others, so Treetopia dug through Department of Transportation data to identify the best and worst airports, routes, and days for Christmas travel, based on the number and length of delays encountered in last year’s holiday season.
Best Airports for Christmas Travel
The 10 best airports for Christmas travel averaged 23 to 31 percent of flights delayed for an average of five to 13 minutes and from zero to 3.3 percent of flights cancelled.
You can probably ignore the two airports in sunny Hawaii, where delays are almost always short and cancellations rare. Otherwise, it’s a mix of location and size that doesn’t show much of a pattern. The top 10 list includes three important connecting hubs—Detroit, Minneapolis/St. Paul, and Washington/Dulles—which makes those who chose one of them to connect, very lucky.
The Worst Airports for Christmas Travel
The 10 worst airports averaged really heavy delays, with just over half of the flights to more than three-quarters of all flights delayed. The delays weren’t trivial, ranging from 13 to 25 minutes. And four of the 10 averaged more than one percent of all flights cancelled.
This list is surprising on three points:
- It does not include any of the three New York area airports, JFK, La Guardia, or Newark, that perennially top biggest-delay airport lists.
- Several airports located in relatively benign climates scored poorly: Dallas/Love looks especially bad, with a combination of near-top 70 percent of flights delayed, 3.4 percent of flights cancelled, and an average delay of 25 minutes. Houston/Hobby, Albuquerque, and El Paso also manage to earn poor scores. This may be due to problems at the other end of the flight—there’s no way to tell.
- Southwest Airlines seems to be especially prone to problems: It’s the dominant carrier at nine of the 10 worst airports, Albuquerque, Baltimore-Washington, Burbank, Chicago/Midway, Dallas/Love, Houston/Hobby, Nashville, Oakland, and St Louis, and a big player at El Paso.
Best and Worst Days to Travel
No surprises here: Just look at a calendar or our prior story. But basically:
- The best days to fly are Christmas Day, Christmas Eve, two days and six days before Christmas, and the day after Christmas. Differences are not enough to alter your travel plans.
- The worst day to fly is three days after Christmas, followed by two and four days after and four and five days before. Delays range from 48 to 57 Percent of flight, at 17 to 24 minutes, with just under one to more than four percent of flights cancelled.
Best and Worst Airlines for Christmas Travel
Delta Airlines beat legacy lines United and American, as it seems to do by most measures these days. And American scored well below Delta and United.
Southwest scored the highest percentage of delayed flights, at 64 percent; this jibes with the poor scoring at airports where Southwest is the biggest player.
JetBlue didn’t cancel any flights, but suffered relatively high percentage of delays and long delays. People speculate that JetBlue’s frequent poor scores on delays are due to the fact that its two main bases, Boston and New York/JFK, are notoriously overcrowded and susceptible to winter difficulties.
Best and Worst Routes
Treetopia also tabulated the best and worst point-to-point routes, but that information is of little relevance to most travelers. If you want to fly from Dallas to Miami, for example, you probably wouldn’t switch to flying from Detroit to Minneapolis because the delays are fewer and shorter. This tabulation falls into the “possibly interesting but irrelevant” category.
The Takeaway
If, as is likely, you’ve already made your Christmas travel flight arrangements, these tabulations probably won’t affect your plans. At best (or worst, depending on your viewpoint), they may make you worry a bit more if you’re heading to/from/through one of the worst airports on one of the worst days.
But if you still haven’t made arrangements, still plan to fly somewhere, and have to make connections, you can expect less misery at Detroit, Minneapolis-St Paul, or Washington/Dulles than at other hubs. And you can try to find flights on the low-traffic days, if your schedule permits.
The main take-away from the “10 worst airports” list is less about airports and more about Southwest. It may be one of the nation’s favorite airlines, but it seems to be more prone to delays than the other big lines.
Delay data from 2018 are obviously heavily influenced by weather patterns in 2018. The situation in 2019 will be a lot different if the weather patterns are substantially different, a likely possibility.
More from SmarterTravel:
Consumer advocate Ed Perkins has been writing about travel for more than three decades. The founding editor of the Consumer Reports Travel Letter, he continues to inform travelers and fight consumer abuses every day at SmarterTravel.