"When should I book?" is the most common question in cheap-flight searching - and the most over-mythologized. There's no single perfect day to buy. But there is a well-supported booking window, and staying inside it is worth real money. Here's the 2026 data.
How far in advance should you book a domestic flight?
Book domestic US flights 1 to 3 months before departure. The lowest average fares cluster around the 30-day mark. Buy much earlier than three months and you're often paying a premium for the "peace of mind" fare airlines charge early planners. Buy inside two weeks and prices climb steeply as the cheap seats sell out.
| When you book (domestic) | Typical pricing |
|---|---|
| 4+ months out | Higher - early-bird premium |
| 1-3 months out | ✅ Lowest (≈30 days is the sweet spot) |
| 2-3 weeks out | Rising |
| Inside 1 week | ❌ Most expensive |
How far ahead for international flights?
International trips need a longer runway: 3 to 5 months ahead for most destinations. Long-haul routes have fewer cheap seats per flight, so they sell out earlier. For peak summer to Europe or holiday travel to Asia, push that to 5-6 months. Interestingly, some last-minute international fares (1-2 weeks out) can dip on specific routes when airlines dump unsold long-haul inventory - but that's a gamble, not a plan, and it never applies to peak dates.
| When you book (international) | Typical pricing |
|---|---|
| 6+ months out | Slightly high but safe for peak season |
| 3-5 months out | ✅ Lowest for most routes |
| 1-2 months out | Rising |
| Inside 2 weeks | ❌ Usually expensive (occasional dump fares) |
Is booking last-minute ever cheaper?
Rarely. The "airlines slash prices to fill empty seats" idea is mostly outdated - modern revenue management assumes last-minute buyers (often business travelers) will pay more, so fares usually rise as departure nears. Don't build a planned vacation around a last-minute deal that may never come. The reliable money is made by booking in the window above and being flexible on dates.
The lever that beats timing: flexibility
Booking inside the right window gets you a fair price. Flexibility gets you a cheap one. Shifting your departure or return by a day or two routinely saves hundreds, because you can land on the cheapest days to fly (Tuesday, Wednesday, Saturday) instead of the dates you first had in mind. Pair the right window with the right weekday and you've stacked both savings.
Stop guessing the right time to book
Set a fare alert and search a whole month at once with FareFinderAI's free price calendar - buy the moment a fare hits the cheap zone for your route.
Search & Set Alerts Free →What about price-prediction tools?
Fare-search engines now include "prices are low/high, buy now or wait" predictors. They're a useful tie-breaker, not gospel - they're right often enough to be worth a glance, wrong often enough that you shouldn't override an already-cheap fare while waiting for a prediction to improve. If the price is good and inside your window, take it. We cover how to read these tools in our Google Flights tricks guide, and the alert side in our flight deal alerts guide.
Quick booking-window cheat sheet
- Domestic: book 1-3 months ahead, target ~30 days out.
- International: book 3-5 months ahead; 5-6 for peak/holiday.
- Fly midweek (Tue/Wed/Sat) to stack savings on top of timing.
- Set an alert instead of refreshing - buy when it pings cheap.
- Don't wait for last-minute deals on a planned trip; they usually don't come.
Frequently asked questions
The takeaway: think in windows, not magic dates. Book domestic 1-3 months out, international 3-5, fly midweek, and let an alert tell you when to pull the trigger.