What Is a Positioning Flight, and When Is It Worth Booking?

Sometimes, there just aren’t good ways to use your points to go from A to B. If you live near a smaller airport, you’re well aware of the frustrations of trying to use miles to get to popular destinations or travel at peak times.

Rather than continually striking out when searching for award flights from where you are to where you want to go, you might have better luck searching for availability out of a different airport. Welcome to positioning flights.

With a positioning flight, you don’t book the ideal flight — you know, the one that’s not available. Instead, you book what is available and get yourself there.

In this guide, we’ll look at what a positioning flight is, how to book one, and things you should consider to make the process smoother while avoiding potential drawbacks.

Quick Overview

A positioning flight is a separate, self-booked flight that gets you to a better departure airport before your main journey begins. Travelers use them most often to access hub airports where premium award seats, lower cash fares, and more competitive routes are concentrated.

Let’s look at a concrete example: A Las Vegas (LAS) resident can fly Spirit to Los Angeles (LAX) starting at $37, then catch a nonstop American Airlines flight to Sydney (SYD), saving 34,000 AAdvantage miles (and avoiding a 12-hour layover) compared to booking the Las Vegas–Sydney itinerary directly.

The key risk is that there is no protection between your separate reservations. If the positioning flight is delayed, the airline operating your main flight has no obligation to rebook you at no charge or wait for your incoming flight to arrive. The solution is clear: Give yourself a generous time buffer and make sure you have travel insurance or a credit card with trip delay coverage.

What Is a Positioning Flight?

A positioning flight is a separate ticket you book independently to get yourself to a different airport before your main flight departs. Unlike a standard connecting itinerary — where both legs are on a single booking managed by 1 airline — a positioning flight is an entirely independent reservation. It may even be on a different carrier, purchased through a separate channel, and there is no interline protection between the 2 tickets.

LAX TBIT planes ANA Turkish British China Korean
Use different flights, airplanes, and airports to get the best deal. Image Credit: Ryan Smith

Why Use a Positioning Flight?

Hub airports give you something smaller cities simply can’t: competition. More carriers flying the same routes means lower cash fares, more award availability, and better premium cabin options. A traveler in Nashville (BNA) or Las Vegas often faces a limited set of departures and inflated pricing compared to what’s available out of New York City (JFK), LAX, or Dallas Fort Worth (DFW).

A positioning flight lets you shop from a much larger menu. The savings can show up as hundreds of dollars on a cash fare, tens of thousands of miles on an award redemption, or both. That’s why the math often works out even after accounting for the cost of getting there.

Positioning Flight Examples

Example 1: Cash Savings (Nashville to London)

A traveler based in Nashville looking for a nonstop business class fare to London (LHR) will find limited options and premium pricing, with fares around $1,900. There’s simply less transatlantic competition at a regional airport. The same route from JFK, a short (and often inexpensive) flight away, regularly prices several hundred dollars per person lower, thanks to the volume of carriers competing on that route. If a BNA-JFK positioning flight costs $89 and the nonstop JFK-LHR business class fare is $1,400, the traveler saves more than $400 even after accounting for the positioning flight.

Example 2: Points Savings (Las Vegas to Sydney in Business Class)

This is where positioning flights can get genuinely exciting. A Las Vegas resident searching for a business class award to Sydney using American Airlines AAdvantage miles can find availability — though it’s 162,500 miles plus $33.10. It also has a 13-hour layover in Los Angeles. Yuck.

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Pricing to start in Las Vegas. Image Credit: American Airlines

Booking the Los Angeles–Sydney flight alone prices at just 128,500 miles plus $27.50.

AA LAX SYD business example
Pricing for the nonstop flight from LAX. Image Credit: American Airlines

That’s a difference of 34,000 miles — worth $476 in our valuation of AAdvantage miles — simply because of where the search begins. The positioning flight from Las Vegas to Los Angeles? Spirit has it starting at $37.

LAS LAX flight examples
Price options for a positioning flight to LAX. Image Credit: Google Flights

The math is hard to ignore: Spend $37 and save 34,000 miles for a future trip. Even accounting for the small difference in fees ($33.10 versus $27.50), you come out ahead by quite a lot.

Risks of Positioning Flights

No Protection Between Tickets

This is the most important risk to understand. Because your positioning flight and your main flight are separate reservations, there is no airline-provided protection if things go wrong. A delay or cancellation on your positioning flight is entirely your problem to solve, and the clock on your main departure keeps ticking regardless.

Missing Your Main Flight

If a delayed positioning flight causes you to miss your long-haul departure, the costs can be severe. Award redemptions may be difficult or impossible to reinstate without fees. Last-minute cash fares — especially on international routes — can cost significantly more than the price you paid originally. The financial exposure is real, and it’s worth taking seriously before you commit to a positioning flight.

Additional Complexity and Logistics

A positioning flight adds another booking to manage, another check-in process, and — if you’re checking luggage — a baggage reclaim and recheck at the hub airport. Budget carriers, which are often the cheapest option for positioning flights, frequently charge separately for checked bags. If the timings require an overnight stay at the hub, that’s an additional cost to factor into your savings calculation.

Unexpected Disruptions Can Compound

Weather events, ground stops, and mechanical delays don’t operate on your schedule. What looks like a comfortable time buffer can disappear quickly during a busy travel period. Missing the positioning flight doesn’t just threaten your main departure — it can cascade through the rest of your trip, affecting hotel check-ins, onward connections, and time-sensitive plans at your destination.

How To Reduce the Risks of Positioning Flights

Book an Early Positioning Flight

The most effective way to protect yourself is to build in a serious time buffer — ideally 3 to 4 hours between your positioning flight’s scheduled arrival and your main departure. Taking a morning positioning flight for an evening long-haul is a well-tested approach. The inconvenience of arriving at the hub airport early is trivial compared to the cost of missing your main flight.

Plan Backups

Before you travel, spend 5 minutes researching options in case you miss your main departure. Is there another flight that day? What flights do partners offer? What would a last-minute cash fare cost? Knowing this in advance means you won’t be scrambling at the gate in a state of panic, but will be able to make an informed decision quickly.

Use a Credit Card With Trip Delay Coverage

Cards like the Chase Sapphire Reserve® and the Platinum Card® from American Express include trip delay protection that can reimburse you for meals, accommodation, and other necessary expenses if a covered delay causes you to miss a connection. This won’t recover a canceled award redemption, but it significantly limits the out-of-pocket financial pain of a disruption.

Get Travel Insurance

A comprehensive travel insurance policy that explicitly covers missed connections — including those caused by a delayed separate-ticket flight — is one of the best safeguards available when using positioning flights. Read the policy carefully before you rely on it. Not all policies cover separately ticketed flights by default, and you want to be certain of your coverage before you’re standing at a check-in counter with a problem.

When Does a Positioning Flight Make Sense?

Not every situation justifies a positioning flight, and it’s worth being honest with yourself about the numbers before you commit. A few conditions that typically all need to be true:

  • Genuine savings: The savings in cash or points — after accounting for the full cost of the positioning flight, including any baggage fees, transportation to the hub, and accommodation if required — genuinely exceed what you’d pay booking direct from home. If the difference is marginal, the added complexity and risk probably isn’t worth it.
  • Backups: The positioning airport is well-served from your home city with frequent, affordable flights. A hub with multiple daily departures gives you far more flexibility if something goes wrong than a route with a single daily service.
  • Buffer time: Your itinerary has enough buffer time to accommodate a realistic delay. A 2-hour buffer probably isn’t sufficient; aim for 3 to 4 hours, especially for international departures without a later flight from the airline that day.
  • Trip protections: You have the right coverage in place. Travel insurance or a credit card with trip delay protection means that, if things do go wrong, your financial exposure is manageable rather than catastrophic.

How To Book a Positioning Flight

Once those boxes are checked, book your main flight first. Award space and competitive cash fares move quickly. Then use Google Flights to find a positioning flight; low-cost carriers like Spirit, Frontier, and Southwest typically offer the most competitive fares on short domestic hops and are easy to modify if plans change. Lock in the positioning flight as early as you can, since budget carrier fares on popular routes can rise fast.

Frontier A320N Spirit A321N
Budget airlines are great for positioning flights. Image Credit: Alberto Riva

Final Thoughts

Positioning flights add genuine complexity and introduce real risk into your travel plans. For the right itinerary, though, the payoff can be substantial. Whether that’s hundreds of dollars saved on a cash fare or tens of thousands of points preserved for a future redemption, the strategy works when the conditions are right.

Do the math before you commit, give yourself enough time to absorb a delay, and make sure your coverage is in place. When all 3 boxes are checked, a cheap domestic flight can be one of the smartest purchases you make all year.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a positioning flight?

A positioning flight is a separate, independently booked flight that gets you to a better departure airport before your main journey begins. Rather than flying direct from your home city — where fares may be higher or award availability limited — you fly yourself to a major hub first, then catch your main flight from there. The tickets are entirely separate reservations with no airline protection between them.

What happens if my positioning flight is delayed?

If your positioning flight is delayed and you miss your main departure, you’re on your own. The airline operating your long-haul flight won’t rebook you for free. You need to rebook or purchase a new ticket at your own expense, which can be expensive on an international route at the last minute. If you have a credit card with trip delay coverage or a travel insurance policy that covers missed connections between separate tickets, that coverage can offset the financial damage — which is exactly why having it in place before you travel matters so much.

How much buffer time should I leave for a positioning flight?

At minimum, plan for 3 to 4 hours between your positioning flight’s scheduled arrival and your main departure. Less than 2 hours is not enough. It leaves no room to absorb a flight delay, claim checked luggage, and check in for an international flight. A common approach is to take a morning positioning flight for an evening long-haul, giving yourself most of the day as a buffer. The more frequent the service between your home city and the hub, the more flexibility you have if the first flight has a problem.

Should I check bags on a positioning flight?

If you can avoid it, don’t. Most low-cost carriers charge separately for checked bags, adding to your costs. More importantly, checked luggage complicates your connection — you need to collect your bags at the hub and recheck them for your main flight, which eats into your buffer time and adds stress if things are running late. Traveling with a carry-on only makes the whole process significantly smoother.