RouteOnTime

The Best and Worst Times of Day to Fly to Avoid Delays

By Editorial team · 2026-06-14

In short: The most reliable flights leave early in the morning, typically before about 9 a.m. On-time performance steadily decays through the day and is usually worst in the late afternoon and early evening, because delays accumulate as aircraft and crews fall behind. Booking the first wave of departures is the single easiest way to cut your delay risk.

If you could change one thing to improve your odds of arriving on time, it would not be the airline or even the route — it would be the departure time. The pattern is remarkably consistent across US airports: the earliest flights are the most reliable, and on-time performance erodes steadily through the day, bottoming out in the late afternoon and early evening. Book the first wave of departures and you tilt the odds in your favor before you even leave home.

Why does flying earlier mean fewer delays?

The mechanism is a single dominant delay cause: late-arriving aircraft. Most flights are operated by a plane that just flew somewhere else. If that inbound flight is late, your flight starts late too — and the airport’s posted “delay cause” for your flight will read late-arriving aircraft. We break the categories down in US flight delay causes explained, but the practical takeaway is simple:

On-time odds by time of day

The general shape of delay risk through a typical day looks like this:

Departure windowRelative delay riskWhy
Before 9 a.m.LowestAircraft overnighted; no inherited delay; airspace uncongested
9 a.m. – noonLow to moderateCascade beginning to build
Noon – 3 p.m.ModerateMid-day congestion; earlier slips accumulating
3 p.m. – 8 p.m.HighestFull-day cascade plus afternoon convective weather
After 9 p.m.Moderate but riskyFewer rebooking options if you misconnect or it cancels

This is a directional pattern drawn from how delays propagate, not a guarantee for any single flight — verify a specific carrier and date against the BTS source and see our methodology.

The late-flight trap: low delay risk isn’t the only risk

A flight at 9 p.m. might face only moderate delay risk on paper, but it carries a hidden danger: if it is delayed or cancelled, there may be no later flight to rebook you onto that night. An early-morning cancellation usually has same-day alternatives; a last-flight-of-the-night failure can strand you until tomorrow. When you weigh times, factor in recovery options, not just the raw delay odds.

How to use this when you book

A worked example

Say you are flying ATL → LAX, a strong route at about 80% on-time. Taking the 7 a.m. departure rather than a 5 p.m. one stacks two advantages: you start ahead of the day’s cascade, and if something goes wrong you have a full slate of later flights to be rebooked onto. The route is already reliable; the early slot makes it more so.

The bottom line

To minimize delays, fly early — ideally the first departures before 9 a.m. — and treat the late afternoon and early evening as the danger zone. Remember the late-flight trap: the last departure of the night may have low delay odds but the worst recovery options. Combine an early slot with a reliable route and a sensible connection buffer, and you have done nearly everything within your control. Start by checking what ‘on-time’ really means so you read the numbers correctly.

Frequently asked questions

What is the best time of day to fly to avoid delays?

The first departures of the morning, generally before 9 a.m. The aircraft and crew usually spent the night at the airport, so there is no late-arriving inbound flight to delay them, and the day's congestion has not built up yet.

What is the worst time of day to fly?

Late afternoon and early evening, roughly 3 p.m. to 8 p.m. By then, delays from earlier in the day have cascaded through the network, and any afternoon thunderstorms compound the problem.

Why are morning flights more reliable?

Late-arriving aircraft is the largest single cause of delays network-wide. The first flight of the day has no delayed inbound aircraft feeding into it, so it starts the cascade fresh rather than inheriting an earlier delay.

Does the worst day of the week matter too?

Somewhat. Peak business-travel days and Sunday evenings tend to be busier, but the time of day generally has a larger and more consistent effect on delay risk than the day of week.

Related articles

Last updated: 2026-06-14