How to Survive the World’s Most Stressful Airport
3rd Dec 2025
Why Some Airports Are a Nightmare — And How to Survive Holiday Travel in One Piece
Not all airports are created equal. A recent global study ranked one U.S. airport as the most stressful in the world and when you dig into the reasons, the findings aren’t hard to believe. Delays, long check-ins, confusing security, crowded terminals all of these already make travel a headache. But mix in holiday rushes, frenzied crowds, and festive pressure to get home in time for Christmas, and it’s no wonder many of us dread the journey.
Below are why airports feel more stressful than ever and how you can make travel as smooth (and calm) as possible.
What Makes Some Airports Truly Stressful
The study that ranked the airport as the most stressful considered multiple factors: frequency of delays and cancellations, efficiency of check-in and customs/immigration, ease of access, baggage-claim satisfaction, and passenger experience during security screening. The airport’s low overall score reflected serious weaknesses across almost every category, including frequent delays and poor customer experience at key touchpoints.
Security screening and airport access getting to and from the terminal emerged among the lowest-rated aspects. On top of that, many flights experienced significant departure delays and a number of cancellations over the past year.
With such systemic inefficiency, what should have been routine travel often turned into a test of patience, endurance, and frustration for thousands of travellers.
Holiday Travel: Stress Multiplied
Now imagine all that — and multiply it. Holiday travel pushes airports beyond breaking point. As Christmas approaches, terminals swell with families flying to see loved ones, students heading home, business travellers rushing through last-minute commitments.
Queues grow longer, security lines crawl, overhead bins fill up, and every delay feels magnified. Add unpredictable weather, heavier baggage because of gifts and winter clothes, and the pressure to be on time for flights and suddenly what should be a joyful journey becomes a stress test.
For many, the holidays are both a countdown to celebration and a countdown inside crowded terminals. Anxiety rises, patience thins, and tempers flare. The magic of the season can easily dissolve among crowds, delays, and uncertainty.
How to Make Airport Travel Less Stressful — Even During Christmas
You can’t always avoid chaos, but you can prepare for it. Over the years, frequent travellers have honed strategies to stay calm under pressure. Here are some of the most effective:
First, leave extra time. Build in buffer time for traffic, heavy airport traffic, long check-in and security queues. On busy travel days, treat the journey as if your flight departs 30–60 minutes earlier than it actually does.
Second, pack smart and travel light. Avoid overpacking. Bring carry-on essentials: water bottle (empty before security), a snack or two, reading material, headphones or music, and sanitisers. Little comforts help when delays or long waits are inevitable.
Third, use online tools. Check in online, download your airline’s app, and keep track of gate assignments and real-time updates. Being informed reduces surprise and panic when things go wrong.
Fourth, stay hydrated and move a little. Airports can be dehydrating, especially with heating or air conditioning. Drinking water and stretching or walking as you wait can keep your mood and energy steadier.
Fifth, practise small calming rituals. Whether it’s a short breathing exercise, a calming playlist, or a warm drink once you’re through security small rituals help keep stress levels down when travel chaos hits.
Finally, accept what you can’t control. Delays, crowds, cancellations they happen. When travellers accept that some aspects are out of their hands, it removes a lot of anxiety. Plan what you can (time, documents, comfort kit) and treat the rest as part of the journey.
Why Airports Should Step Up — And What That Could Look Like
Let’s be candid: travellers shouldn’t always have to solve the chaos themselves. If airports and airlines cared more about the human cost of travel, stress levels would drop for everyone.
Consider what better service could look like: improved check-in desks, better staffing during peak travel days, clearer signage, faster security flow, more efficient customer service. Imagine terminals designed for comfort with adequate seating, clean restrooms, water refill stations, quiet zones, and reliable updates when flights are delayed.
During peak seasons especially, that kind of investment should be mandatory. Not as optional extras, but as basic infrastructure. Because behind every bag on the carousel is a person trying to get home — often under pressure to make holiday plans, meet loved ones, or escape weeks of stress.
A smooth airport isn’t just a convenience. It’s humane travel infrastructure. It’s mental health support. It’s dignity.
Final Thought: Travel Smart, Stay Calm — And Treat Others With Kindness
Airports are rarely the fun part of travel. But if we recognise what makes them stressful, we can take steps to soften the impact — for ourselves and for others.
This holiday season, as you pack your bags, remember: travel doesn’t have to feel chaotic. With some planning, a calm mindset, and a few survival strategies, even the world’s most stressful airports can feel manageable.
And if enough of us speak up — ask for better facilities, demand fair staffing, call out mismanagement — maybe next year we’ll see fewer “most stressful airport” labels. Maybe next year travel starts to feel human again.