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Best Time to Book Flights in 2025: Save Hundreds (Data-Backed)

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Hey there, let’s talk about something that has probably happened to you: You find a great flight deal, let’s say, $580 round-trip to Lisbon. You think, “I’ll sleep on it.” Two days later? It’s $820.

Sounds frustrating, right? I have been in that shoe severally.

But here’s the good news: you don’t have to play guessing games anymore. After digging into the latest data from sources like CheapAir, Google Flights, and even the U.S. Department of Transportation, I’ve put together a simple, guide to help you book your flights at just the right time. This will help you to keep more money in your pocket and still get to that your dream destination.

Let me walk you through exactly what works all the time.

When Should You Book Your Flight?

If you’re flying domestic airline (U.S., Canada, etc.)

Aim to book 1 to 3 months before your trip.
And if you want the absolute sweet spot? Around 54 days out.

This is not a random tip, listen, it comes from CheapAir’s 2023 Airfare Study, which analyzed nearly a billion fares. Booking too early (like 6 months ahead) often means you’re paying “early-release” pricing. Wait too late (under 3 weeks), and airlines know you’re desperate, so prices skyrocket.

Now, here’s a real example: A round-trip from Chicago to Denver in August 2024 averages $298 if you book in May… but $475 if you wait until July. That’s $177 you could spend on tapas in Denver instead!

Best time to book International Flights

Give yourself more time and book that flight 2 to 5 months ahead.
For long-haul trips (like U.S. to Europe or Asia), 4–5 months is your ideal window.

As The Points Guy explains, international fares tend to stabilize around the 150-day mark and then climb steadily as seats fill up.

One exception is that if you are heading to a major event (like the FIFA World cup), book 6+ months early. Those flights sell out fast and get expensive fast.

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Alt text: Infographic showing best time to book domestic and international flights in 2025

(This helps with accessibility and image SEO.)


Does it really matter what day you book your flight?

Guess you’ve heard this: “Book on Tuesday at 3 a.m., that’s when airlines drop prices!”

I hate to break it to you, but that’s mostly a myth now.

Today’s airline pricing runs on real-time demand not weekly cycles. In fact, Google Flights confirms that the day you book has almost no impact on your fare.

But here’s what matters anyway: the day you actually fly.

Cheapest days to fly (based on data):

  • Fly Domestic on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Saturdays.
  • Fly International on Tuesdays and Wednesdays.

Want to know the most expensive days to fly? Its clearly Fridays and Sundays, all thanks to weekend travelers and business folks heading home.

What’s my secret sauce?; I open Google Flights’ price calendar, shift my dates by just one day, and often save $100+ without changing my plans much at all, write this in your diary, its helpful.

Match your travel dates to the right season

Not all times of year cost the same not even for the same destination. Here’s how to plan smart and be on top of your travel game:

When You Want to TravelWhen to BookWhy It Works
Summer (June–Aug)By March–AprilAvoid the surge, schools are out, demand is high
Holidays (Thanksgiving, Christmas)4–6 months ahead (July – September)DOT data shows prices spike 3–4 weeks before
Shoulder seasons (April–May, Sept–Oct)2–3 monthsGreat weather, fewer crowds, lower prices
Off-peak winter (Jan–Feb)1–2 monthsAirlines discount tropical routes to fill empty planes

For example: A round-trip from NYC to Cancún in January averages $320 if you book this trip in November but $510 if you wait until December (Hopper, 2024).

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Alt text: Comparison of flight prices to the same beach destination in peak vs. shoulder season


Use these free tools as your guide

You don’t need to refresh flight pages all day. These tools will watch prices for you:

  1. Google Flights – Set price alerts and compare whole months at a glance.
  2. Hopper – Uses AI to predict if prices will drop (and sends you texts about when to buy).
  3. Skyscanner – Try the “Whole month” view to find your cheapest window.
  4. Kayak Explore – Tell it your budget, and it shows where you can go.
  5. Going (formerly Scott’s Cheap Flights) – Sends real error fares and flash sales straight to your inbox.

This is my personal routine, save it! I set a Google Flights alert and turn on Hopper notifications. Last month, that combo saved me $220 on a last-minute trip to Portugal.


These are times when you should book right away

Some trips just can’t wait. If any of these sound like you, book as soon as your plans are firm:

  • You’re traveling during a major event (Olympics, music festivals, World Cup)
  • You’re flying into a small or remote airport (fewer seats = faster sell-outs)
  • You need a nonstop flight or specific departure time
  • You’re traveling over U.S. holidays (Thanksgiving, Christmas, New Year’s)

According to the Bureau of Transportation Statistics, 78% of holiday flights are booked 60+ days ahead and prices can jump 30–60% in the final month.


✅ Before you hit that “Book button,” do this quick checklist

I do this every single time and it has saved me from hidden fees and regrets:

  • Open an incognito window (or clear cookies) to avoid dynamic pricing tricks
  • Check nearby airports—sometimes flying into Oakland instead of SFO saves $150
  • Visit the airline’s website directly—they sometimes offer lower prices than third-party sites
  • Read the fine print: baggage fees, change policies, seat selection costs
  • Consider a layover—a 2-hour stop can slash your fare by $200+

🧳 Bonus tip: Use a travel credit card with trip protection. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has great info on what your card might cover.


Here’s the bottom line

You don’t need luck or a travel agent to find cheap flights. You just need to know:

  • Domestic? Book 1–3 months out
  • International? Book 2–5 months out
  • Flying midweek? You’ll likely pay less
  • Set alerts? You’ll never overpay again

With these strategies mentioned here, backed by 2024 data from the most trusted sources you’re not just booking a flight. You’re booking smarter, calmer, and cheaper.

If this helped you;

Save it for your next trip. Share it with a friend who’s always stressed about flight prices. Or drop a comment below. I’d love to hear your best booking hack!

Wishing you smooth skies and full savings,

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