Currently, American Airlines is scheduled to operate 1,054 transcontinental flights this August—an average of 34 per day or 238 weekly—offering more than 107,000 seats for coast-to-coast travel. The most frequented route is between New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK) and Los Angeles International Airport (LAX), with 279 flights scheduled for August using Airbus A321-200 aircraft. Other significant routes for American include JFK-San Francisco (124 monthly flights), Boston-Los Angeles (93 monthly), and JFK-Santa Ana John Wayne Airport (daily).
Delta Air Lines will operate a total of 1,349 transcontinental flights this August—43 daily or 304 weekly—with over 274,000 seats available during the month. Delta's busiest route is also between New York JFK and LAX with a total of 289 scheduled flights operated primarily by Boeing widebody jets like the 767-400ER. The airline also runs frequent services on routes such as Boston-Los Angeles (110 direct monthly flights), JFK-San Francisco, and Boston-San Francisco.
United Airlines leads among the Big Three with almost 1,700 scheduled transcontinental services this August—54 daily or about 383 each week—amounting to nearly 374,000 seats offered during the month. Its most heavily trafficked route is between Newark Liberty International Airport and San Francisco International Airport with an average of ten daily departures each way. Newark-Los Angeles follows closely behind as United’s second-busiest cross-country connection.
Other airlines also compete on these long-haul domestic routes. Alaska Airlines provides service between Newark and San Francisco alongside United; JetBlue has recently suspended its operation on that route but offers seasonal competition elsewhere; Spirit Airlines operates year-round between Newark and Los Angeles; while both Frontier Airlines and JetBlue offer direct service from JFK to LAX.
From Boston’s Logan International Airport there are nonstop options from American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, JetBlue Airways, Spirit Airlines, United Airlines—and for westbound travelers heading further north or south along California’s coastline or inland destinations like Santa Ana.
Transcontinental services play an important role in connecting distant cities across time zones for business travelers as well as tourists. These routes help feed passengers into airline hubs where they can continue onward internationally or domestically with just one stopover.
The direction of travel affects flight times due to prevailing winds known as jet streams: eastbound journeys are generally shorter than westbound ones because planes benefit from tailwinds when flying toward Europe or back toward eastern U.S cities from California.
These nonstop links remain central for many large U.S.-based carriers’ operations—serving business needs as well as facilitating tourism across thousands of miles within North America.