The smartest travelers avoid flying on these days: 10 US airport facts
What passengers don't notice
The smartest travelers avoid flying on these days: 10 US airport facts
What really happens to lost luggage? Where do unclaimed bags end up? What hidden rooms exist inside US airports, and who actually uses them? Why is Los Angeles Airport called "LAX" instead of just "LA"? You’ve probably wondered about at least one of these things while traveling. Here are 10 surprising facts about US airports that most passengers didn’t know.
Where does lost luggage go?
Few travel worries are as universal or as stressful as a lost suitcase.
In the US, airlines are required to actively search for lost or delayed baggage for up to 14 days. If it can’t be located, passengers may be compensated up to about $4,700 on domestic flights under current rules. But what happens when luggage is never claimed? After about 90 days, unclaimed bags can be sold at the Unclaimed Baggage Center in Scottsboro, Alabama, a 50,000-square-foot retail store that receives over 7,000 new items daily that have been left behind.
Secret rooms you’ll never see
Most travelers only see a small part of the airports they pass through. Behind the gates, restaurants, and crowded terminals lies an entire hidden world that regular passengers never access.
Many major airports have private crew lounges with dark sleeping rooms, showers, and quiet areas where pilots and flight attendants rest between flights. But that’s only a part of it. Large airports such as Los Angeles International Airport and Hartsfield–Jackson Atlanta International Airport also use restricted corridors and private entrances that allow celebrities, diplomats, and other high-profile travelers to move through the airport away from the crowds.
Families could walk all the way to the gate
Remember how different airports felt before the 2000s? Back then, you didn’t need a ticket or even an ID to walk all the way to the boarding gate. Families could greet loved ones as they stepped off the plane or stay until takeoff, waving goodbye through the windows.
That changed after the tragic events of September 11, 2001, when strict federal security rules permanently limited gate access to ticketed passengers only. Today, the TSA screens more than 2 million travelers a day, and airports operate under security measures that would have seemed unimaginable decades ago. Of course, those changes were necessary, but many still miss those emotional goodbyes and reunions.
The busiest day of the year
Let’s be honest: nobody enjoys arriving at a packed airport filled with long security and boarding lines. That’s why it helps to know which travel days are the busiest before booking a flight.
Year after year, the Thanksgiving travel period brings the heaviest airport crowds in the country. In fact, the Sunday after Thanksgiving has repeatedly set records for the highest single-day passenger volume in US history, with the TSA screening more than 3 million travelers in a single day. The Wednesday and Thursday before Thanksgiving are also notoriously crowded as millions of people head to their holiday destinations. The days just before Christmas and the weekend after New Year’s are another major rush period. If you’re hoping to avoid the worst congestion, consider flying several days before the holiday and returning after the weekend crowds clear out.
Times and days to avoid
Outside of the holiday season, certain days of the week are consistently more crowded at airports across the country. And chances are you’ve already guessed which ones.
Fridays and Sundays are usually the busiest travel days of the week, naturally, because that’s when millions of folks begin or end weekend trips. Fridays are especially tough, with congested terminals, longer security lines, and heavy afternoon flight schedules as travelers rush out of town. Sundays can be just as chaotic, as people return home at the same time, often creating some of the highest TSA checkpoint volumes of the week. And if a major holiday is approaching, the crowds only get worse.
The busiest on Earth
Airports across America are constantly busy, but the busiest airport in the entire world is also in the United States.
That title belongs to Hartsfield–Jackson Atlanta International Airport, in Atlanta, Georgia (ATL). Year after year, it ranks as the world’s busiest airport for total passenger traffic, handling more travelers than massive international hubs in places like Dubai, London, or Tokyo. Roughly 100 million passengers pass through ATL every year. One major reason is its location: approximately 80% of the US population lives within a direct two-hour flight of Atlanta, which makes ATL one of the country’s biggest connecting hubs.
Why "LAX"?
When we see "LAX," we instantly recognize it as the airport code for Los Angeles International Airport in California. The "L" and "A" are self-explanatory, but what about the "X"?
Surprisingly, it doesn’t actually stand for anything. Before the 1930s, most American airports used simple two-letter codes, and Los Angeles was originally just "LA." But as air travel expanded after World War II, they switched to three-letter identifiers to handle the growing number of airports. Rather than changing the code completely, Los Angeles simply added an "X" at the end. A few other airports did the same thing, which is why Portland International Airport became "PDX," and Phoenix Harbor International Airport became "PHX."
The largest
Airports are usually huge, but one airport in the United States stands far above the rest in sheer size.
That airport is Denver International Airport (DEN) in Colorado. Covering an astonishing 52 square miles, it is the largest airport in the United States by land area and one of the largest in the world, second only to King Fahd International Airport in Saudi Arabia (with approximately 300 square miles). Unlike many airports built near crowded cities or coastlines, Denver was constructed on a vast space of open land far from dense neighborhoods, and that extra area allows the airport to maintain massive runway systems. In fact, DEN is so large that the airport alone covers more land than the entire island of Manhattan, which is about 22.8 square miles.
The state with the most airports
We already know which airport is the busiest and which is the largest. But do you know which state has the most airports per person? The answer may sound surprising at first, but it actually makes perfect sense.
Although Texas has the highest total number of airports overall (over 2000), the state with the most airports per capita is Alaska. And considering its geography, that’s not shocking. Covering about 665,384 square miles but home to only around 740,000 residents, Alaska depends on air travel to connect remote communities spread across vast distances and rough terrain. As a result, Alaska has around 63 public airports for every 100,000 residents, or about one airport for every 1,500 people, by far the highest rate in the country.
The quietest, least crowded days
Flying on quieter days usually means shorter lines, less stress, and a much smoother airport experience overall.
According to OAG (the Official Airline Guide), Tuesdays and Wednesdays are consistently the least crowded days of the week to fly, largely because business travel slows down and most vacation travelers fly closer to the weekend. But when it comes to holidays, Thanksgiving stands out once again. While the days before and after the holiday are among the busiest travel periods of the year, Thanksgiving Day itself is surprisingly calm at most airports. By then, most Americans are already gathered with family, which leaves terminals far less crowded than usual.
You should be stopping on the road every 2 hours: Tips for nicer trips
Tips for smart travel
Bring a sleep mask! Ideas to make your traveling more comfortable
How exciting is leaving on a long-awaited trip? But let’s be honest, it can also be uncomfortable. Sleepless flights, long drives, rushed schedules, missing pens, wrong clothes, and forgotten essentials can quietly drain the joy out of any trip. So, today, let’s look at a few smart, small habits that can make all the difference.
Don’t forget your sleep setup
Long-haul flights expose you to bright cabin lighting, constant engine noise, awkward seat angles, and unfamiliar surroundings. All of them are enemies of rest!
So, you can always turn to the simple trio that changes everything: a comfortable eye mask to block disruptive light, supportive neck pillows to prevent the head drop, and noise-reducing headphones or earplugs that soften the relentless hum of the cabin.
"Micro-stops" in road trips
The classic road-trip fantasy involves long, uninterrupted drives. But driving fatigue builds gradually, attention fades, and it can quickly become exhausting.
So, experienced drivers now recommend "micro-stops": short, frequent breaks every hour or two instead of pushing for long stretches between stops. Short pauses to stretch, grab a coffee, or simply walk for five minutes reset both body and mind.
Adjust your seat as best you can
Many travelers just eagerly jump into their car and never think about it again. But your roadtrip would be so much more enjoyable if you made the small ergonomic tweaks that car seats are prepared for!
Make sure you spend a few minutes adjusting the seat just for you. You’ll feel a dramatic change in how the body feels after hours on the road. Particularly if you are the one driving!
Pack for accessibility
Nothing will ruin your mood worse than needing a pen that you know for sure that you brought… but is probably now sitting in the very bottom corner of your backpack.
You really don’t want to ruin the setup that you carefully managed to pack. Make sure you mindfully consider efficient packing before leaving home! What are you most likely to need, and when?
Layered clothing instead of heavy outfits
When we travel far away, especially by plane, or to distant places with entirely different weather, clothes can turn on us very fast. That’s why many advise avoiding bulky outfits and instead relying on layers: breathable base pieces, light sweaters, scarves, or packable jackets that can be added or removed without effort.
Extra tip: If you are traveling somewhere warm, pack some summer clothes in your backpack so you can change easily as soon as you get there!
Snack planning instead of random roadside food
Sure, you can stop for some fresh coffee at some point in your trip. But you know it doesn’t end there. Road trips often lead to impulse snacks: sugary treats, heavy meals, and energy crashes that follow.
Take this suggestion: plan ahead to pack simple combinations like nuts, fruit, yogurt, or sandwiches that balance protein and carbohydrates. Although, of course, you can leave room for some treat along the way!
Building buffer time into itineraries
Tight connections and packed schedules turn delays into major stress. Instead, be clever about leaving buffer time. That will give you and your group space to breathe, explore, or simply recover from unexpected hiccups. Maybe adding even 30 to 60 extra minutes between plans transforms the experience from rushed and reactive into relaxed and enjoyable.
Keep digital copies of documents
Before leaving home, make sure to scan important documents! A simple picture on your phone will do. This will become invaluable if anything goes missing. Save copies of passports, IDs, insurance information, and reservations. And, of course, make sure your phone is fully charged and that you stored your charger nearby, just in case.
Keep early schedules to avoid crowds
How about being the first to breakfast every day? Sure, sometimes we need the extra sleep. But the truth is that early risers often discover a quieter version of popular destinations.
If you set the alarm clock a bit sooner than you’d like, you’ll get yourself a whole day of arriving at viewpoints before the crowds, or dining without needing to stand in line.
Pack folding shopping bags
Trust us, at some point in your trip, you will need an extra bag! Think about snacks or unexpected shopping that you may make along the way. And, unless you are a very modern collector, you don’t really need to spend on yet another overpriced shopping bag.
Next time, before you leave home, make sure you pack one or two lightweight folding bags in an accessible corner of your travel kit.
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