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Home»Economy»TSA Wait Times: the Airports With the Longest Delays and How to Check
Economy

TSA Wait Times: the Airports With the Longest Delays and How to Check

primereportsBy primereportsMarch 22, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
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TSA Wait Times: the Airports With the Longest Delays and How to Check
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If you’re flying in the US, get ready to stand in line.

Airports across the US are continuing to see lengthy waits at security checkpoints as scores of TSA workers call out due to missed paychecks.

A partial government shutdown has left the Department of Homeland Security and its Transportation Security Administration unfunded and their agents unpaid at the height of the spring break travel season.

As many as 10% of all TSA agents called out on several days this week, DHS updates showed, with absence rates averaging as much as 20% in some airports. A DHS spokesperson told Business Insider that some airports, such as William P. Hobby Airport in Houston, had seen absence rates as high at 40.8%.

Security lines in affected airports are spiking unpredictably from day to day, and sometimes even from hour to hour.

“The current unpredictability is being driven by unpredictable staffing levels, basically, how many TSA officers are showing up for work on any given day,” Sheldon H. Jacobson, the founder professor of engineering at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and an expert on aviation security and airport security screening, told Business Insider.

“TSA officers have historically been cross-trained to do many different tasks, so the number that show up is the key factor,” Jacobson said.

How long are the TSA delays?

Delays at TSA checkpoints across the US have been unpredictable in recent days, with some airports hit much harder and wait times varying from day to day.

On Sunday morning, Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, the world’s busiest by passenger numbers, had wait times of more than two-and-a-half hours.

The situation had worsened over the weekend, with scenes similar to footage of huge lines shared by local meteorologist Ella Dorsey on Friday.

Atlanta has been among the worst-affected airports since the shutdown began, with over a third of TSA staff not showing up on some days.

The airport said there had been congestion at the international checkpoint due to domestic travelers trying to bypass long lines in the domestic terminal. The airport said domestic travelers should use the domestic checkpoints.


Passengers in line at Fort Lauderdale airport.

Passengers faced lengthy lines at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport on Thursday, March 19. 

Taylor Rains/Business Insider



Some passengers traveling through Houston’s George Bush Intercontinental Airport had to wait up to two hours early Sunday.

Lines at checkpoints at JFK, the New York area’s biggest airport, ranged between 17 and 30 minutes on Saturday afternoon, but by Sunday morning the wait time was 75 minutes.

JFK said it has “deployed additional customer care staff into terminals to help manage queues, assist passengers, and keep people moving as efficiently as possible.”

At Newark Liberty International Airport, passengers waited in lines for up to 44 minutes. LaGuardia had the lowest wait times among the major tri-state airports, ranging from “no wait” to four minutes on Saturday, extending to 20 minutes on Sunday morning.

Denver, home of the fourth-busiest airport in the US, also had short lines of five minutes or less, on Saturday evening. By Sunday morning, this had risen to 15 minutes.

At Los Angeles International Airport, the nation’s fifth-busiest travel hub, waits were listed as “0” minutes on Sunday.

On Saturday afternoon, wait times at Dallas-Fort Worth were capped at 13 minutes, extending to 22 minutes on Sunday.

Some airports have so far avoided the hourslong lines. Business Insider’s Taylor Rains flew out of Las Vegas last week and saw minimal TSA lines.


The empty TSA line at Las Vegas airport.

The general and TSA PreCheck lines at Las Vegas airport were empty on Monday night. 

Taylor Rains/Business Insider



However, the unpredictable delays mean travelers should plan for long waits even if their airport hasn’t yet experienced problems. Airports like Denver and Seattle have asked the public for food, gift cards, and basic supplies to support TSA staff working without pay.

How to check TSA wait times

The easiest way to avoid the stress of missing your flight is to give yourself extra time in the airport. Many airports are advising travelers this week to arrive up to three hours before their flight, even for domestic flights.

Many airports, including major hubs like Atlanta, Houston, JFK, Newark, Philadelphia, Dallas-Fort Worth, and Denver, have been posting TSA wait times live on their websites.


Long security lines at Houston Hobby Airport.

Travelers at Houston Hobby Airport faced lines up to three hours long earlier in March. 

Brett Coomer/Houston Chronicle via Getty Images



These can also provide more specific insights. For example, DFW’s website shows the wait times at each checkpoint.

You can also use the MyTSA mobile app. It provides estimated wait times in 15-minute intervals based on average checkpoint data. The app, however, will use historical data if the live data cannot be retrieved. The TSA also says it is not “actively” managing its sites during the partial shutdown, and so the app may not always be updated.

How long will the TSA delays persist?

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said airport delays could get worse.

“As we get into next week and they’re about to miss another payment, this is going to look like child’s play, what’s happening right now,” Duffy said on CNBC.

Some airports could be forced to close, both Duffy and Adam Stahl, the TSA’s acting deputy administrator, said.





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