How to book flights with a layover on purpose
Book a layover flight by searching for your destination on flight booking sites, filtering for connections, then selecting a flight with a layover long enough for your needs (usually 2-6 hours). Some people book two separate one-way tickets to maximize layover time in a specific city. Price layover flights the same way you'd price direct flights—compare total cost, not just the layover length.
- Decide your layover city and duration. Pick where you want to stop. Common layover cities are major hubs like Chicago, Atlanta, Dubai, or Frankfurt. Decide how much time you need: 2-3 hours for a quick walk around the airport, 4-6 hours to leave the airport and explore a neighborhood, 8+ hours for a real half-day in the city. Write this down before you search.
- Search for connecting flights on standard booking sites. Use Google Flights, Kayak, Skyscanner, or your airline's website. Enter your origin and final destination. Look for "1 stop" or "connecting flight" results. Check the layover duration in the flight details—it will show in parentheses (e.g., "2h 15m layover").
- Filter by layover duration and location. Most booking sites let you filter by layover time. Set your minimum (e.g., 4 hours) and maximum. If you want a specific layover city, filter by that airport code. This narrows results to flights that match your plan.
- Check baggage rules for connecting flights. If you're flying with a checked bag, verify it will be checked through to your final destination. Ask the airline during booking or read the fine print. If your bags don't transfer automatically, you'll need to collect and recheck them during your layover—this adds 1-2 hours.
- Book two separate tickets for maximum control. If you want a long layover (12+ hours) or need flexibility, book two one-way flights instead of one connecting flight. Use Google Flights or Kayak to search one-way from origin to layover city, then one-way from layover city to destination. This lets you choose your layover length exactly and isn't protected if the first flight is late, so build in extra time.
- Check visa requirements for your layover country. If you're leaving the airport during your layover, you'll need appropriate entry documentation. Some countries require a visa even for a 6-hour stop. Check your layover country's entry rules before booking. If you're staying airside (in the terminal), you typically don't need a visa.
- Confirm your airline's connection policy. Call the airline or check their website for minimum connection times at your layover airport. Most require 45 minutes for domestic connections, 90 minutes for international. Your booked flight should already meet this, but confirm, especially if you're traveling with tight timing or missed connections before.
- Book and plan your layover activity. Complete your booking. Note your layover duration, terminal information, and which gate you're departing from (this updates closer to travel). Look up what's within a 30-minute walk of your layover airport, or search "best layover activities in [city]". Download offline maps of the airport and nearby neighborhoods.
- What's the difference between a layover and a stopover?
- A layover is 1–6 hours; you're connecting to another flight the same day. A stopover is 24+ hours; you're staying overnight. This guide covers layovers. Stopovers are booked differently—sometimes as two separate tickets, sometimes as a special routing through airlines like Iceland's WestJet or Turkish.
- What happens if my first flight is late and I miss my connection?
- If you booked one ticket (a booked connection), the airline is responsible for rebooking you on the next available flight to your destination, usually at no charge. If you booked two separate one-way tickets, you're on your own—the airline has no obligation. This is the trade-off for freedom with two separate bookings.
- Do I have to leave the airport during my layover?
- No. You can rest in the terminal, eat at airport restaurants, use airport lounges (if you have access), or sleep on a bench. Leaving is optional. Many people with short layovers or tight connections don't leave.
- Can I check my bags all the way to my final destination?
- Usually yes, if you book one ticket. The airline checks your bag to your final destination. If you book two separate tickets, you must collect and recheck your bags during the layover—add 1–2 hours for this. Ask the airline when you book.
- Is a layover flight actually cheaper than a direct flight?
- Sometimes. Layover flights can be 5–20% cheaper because airlines use off-peak time slots or the connection is via a less popular route. Compare the final price of both options—don't assume layover is cheaper. A direct flight with poor timing might be cheaper than a layover flight with good timing.
- How do I know if I need a visa for my layover?
- Check the government website for your layover country's entry requirements. If you don't leave the airport (airside), most countries don't require a visa—you're in transit. If you're leaving the airport, you need the same entry document as if you were landing there. When in doubt, contact the layover country's embassy or consulate.