Flying from Europe to North America and back almost exclusively follows the same pattern: A long daytime flight from Europe to the United States and a shorter red-eye (=overnight flight) when coming back. Due to the time difference sometimes being larger than the actual flight time, the inbounds can be extremely exhausting. Even in business class, there is simply not enough time to get adequate sleep.
However, there is a way to circumvent that ordeal. Did you know that there are actually eighteen eastbound flights, that cross the Atlantic Ocean during the day? Before researching this piece, we knew that there were some, but we were surprised to learn how many. Henceforth, this list: With these flights, you’ll start early in the morning in America and are in Europe after sunset.
What Advantages Come with A Daytime Eastbound?
Admittedly, I have never booked nor boarded a daytime eastbound flight. Personally, I have no trouble sleeping in planes, even on short economy class flights, as long as there is a wall I can lean on. Nonetheless, there are still good reasons to choose a daytime flight over a red-eye:
- On short flights from the US East Coast to Europe, there is often less than six hours actual time in which sleeping is possible. If you still want to eat, watch a movie or have trouble falling asleep, your chances for relaxing slumber are rather narrow.
- A long flight in economy class is much less exhausting during the day – when your body is awake. Rather than at night, when your exhausted carcass urges you to rest. And the combination of a daytime flight and a night at your destination in a real (hotel-)bed is still cheaper than a business class ticket.
- While modern business class seats offer astonishingly comfortable bedding options: They cannot beat a hotel bed.
- Most red-eyes leave America in the late afternoon or even close to midnight. That means you either have to pay for an additional night in a hotel or see how you can fill that time. An additional problem is finding a convenient and safe place for your luggage during that time.
- Daytime flights can help to ease jet lag. In an ideal scenario, you board the early flight, stay awake during your time over the pond and fall sound asleep as soon as you’re home or in a hotel room.
- One of the best things when flying is looking out of the window. And while spying on the endless blue of the ocean isn’t the most thrilling experience, it is more entertaining than spotting darkness and strobe lights for six hours straight.
Of course, there are advantages of overnight flights, as well. The most important one: Arriving at nine or ten in the evening in Europe means you have little to no connecting flights available. Many people have no quarrel with red-eye flights and arrive rested well enough.
From an airline point of view, daytime east bounds are quite costly. Their aircraft have to spend one night in America and one night in Europe sitting on the ground, or in airline terms: losing money.

List of All Daytime Flights from America to Europe
All in all, we were able to find 13 flights that met our conditions (as of March 2025). Our requirements for this list are a departure time after 6 am and arrival on the same day. There are flights that arrive in Europe as late (or early) as 1 am. However, these can hardly be considered daytime flights.
American Airlines
American Airlines has reduced its offer to a single daytime flight to London. A Boeing 777 departs from New York in the morning and arrives in Great Britain after sunset.
- AA 142 | New York
JFK
– LondonLHR
| 09:35 – 21:40 (6h 55min)
(30 minutes later during the winter schedule)
Azores Airlines
Azores Airlines only takes you half the way across the Atlantic. A connection flight from the islands (most likely Ponta Delgada) to the European mainland will take three additional hours or even more. At least, it is rather easy to score one-way tickets for these routes. Compared to the last time we’ve published this list, the airline cut nearly all of their daytime flights – reducing the number von seven to one.
- S4 282 | Boston
BOS
– Ponta DelgadaPDL
| 11.45 – 20.50 (5h 5min)
Air Canada
During their summer schedule, Air Canada offers a daily service from Halifax to London, operated by a Boeing 737MAX (if they are not grounded again). During the winter schedule, there are two fewer weekly frequencies. Departing from Toronto or Montreal, only overnight flights are available.
- AC 868 | Halifax
YHZ
– LondonLHR
| 11:00 – 21:00 (6h)
(Roughly 40 minutes earlier during the winter)
Air Saint Pierre’s
The outlier of this article is easily this one: Air Saint Pierre’s flight from the French overseas territory of the same name to Paris. It’s operated each Tuesday between the end of June and early September by one of the airline’s Boeing 737-700 aircraft.
- PJ 638| St Pierre
FSP
– ParisCDG
| 10:30 – 20:05 (4h 35min)
(starts April 2024)
Avianca
Colombian Star Alliance member Avianca offers a rare flight daytime from Latin America to Europe. A Boeing 787-8 starts in the early morning in Bogotá and lands in Madrid just 30 minutes to midnight.
- AV 46 | Bogotá
BOG
– MadridMAD
| 07:00 – 23:30 (9h 30min)
(Daylight savings time leads to an earlier arrival during the winter schedule, at 22:35)
British Airways
Currently, British Airways offers two daily services that cross the Atlantic during the day. The flight from Boston arrives early enough to catch a handful of connecting flights to the European mainland.
- BA 178 | New York
JFK
– LondonLHR
| 07:50 – 19:45 (6h 55min) - BA 238 | Boston
BOS
– LondonLHR
| 07:25 – 18:55 (6h 20min)
Icelandair
Iceland is quite similar to the Azores: if you want to go to Europe, a flight to an island this far off the coast won’t necessarily help you. But in connection with a stopover on the island, it might be interesting. And your onward flight to Europe will be operated in daylight, too. Only the equipment (a Boeing 737MAX) might not be everybody’s cup of tea.
- FI 634 | Boston
BOS
– KeflavikKEF
| 12:35 – 21:45 (5h 10min)
jetBlue
jetBlue entered transatlantic competition three years ago and has been one of the most valued options for crossing the pond. The airline offers a daytime connection, too, and uses their Airbus A321LR fleet on it.
- B6 1107 | New York
JFK
– LondonLHR
| 08:21 – 20:45 (7h 24min)
(ten minutes earlier during the winter schedule)
LATAM
South American aviation giant LATAM offers the only daytime flight from Brazil to Europe, sending a Boeing 787-9 from Fortaleza to Lisbon. There is a similar flight from TAP from Recife, but the 4:40 departure time does not match our criteria.
- LA 8150 | Fortaleza
FOR
– LissabonLIS
| 06:15 – 17:00 (6h 45min)
(only during the summer)
Turkish Airlines
One might think that the distance that the distance between New York and Istanbul is too long to be traversed during a single day. And you’d be almost right, as Turkish Airlines’ Boeing 787 reaches the Bosporus only 30 minutes before midnight.
- TK 112 | New York
JFK
– IstanbulIST
| 06:45 – 23:25 (9h 45min)
(June until October 2025)
United Airlines
United’s only daytime offer is a Boeing 767 service from Newark to Heathrow:
- UA 934 | New York
EWR
– LondonLHR
| 08:30 – 20:40 (7h 10min)
(five minutes earlier during the winter schedule)
Virgin Atlantic
We are close to the rear-end of the alphabet and about to conclude our list. The last entry is Virgin Atlantic, deploying one of their Boeing 787 for a daytime rotation between – you might’ve guessed it – New York and London.
- VS 26 | New York
JFK
– LondonLHR
| 08:10 – 20:00 (6hrs 50min)
(one hour later during the winter schedule)
How Can I Book These Daytime Flights?
Usually, metasearch engines like Google Flights, kayak or Skyscanner don’t display these options, especially when London isn’t your final destination. The reason is the lack of matching connecting flights from Heathrow or Paris when arriving there at eight in the evening or even later.
For example, we want to go from Toulouse to New York early next year and found these €442 tickets from British Airways. But Google Flights simply doesn’t display American Airlines or British Airways daytime services, because you can’t make any connections to Southern France:

You can fix this by switching to the multistop search option. Instead of searching for a Toulouse to New York roundtrip, we are now looking for three flights: Toulouse to New York on the same day as above, New York to London two weeks later and London to Toulouse a day after that. And now, the daytime flight shows up, without increasing the price:

In the last step, you select the last flight to Toulouse and get your itinerary at the exact same price, but without the hassle of the dreaded red-eye and the benefit of an additional day in London:

In most cases, you have to continue your journey less than 24 hours after your transatlantic flight arrives. If you stay longer than 24 hours, your layover turns into a stopover and a different set of fare rules applies, most likely resulting in (much) higher prices.
If you are already living in one of the cities that receives daytime services, this might be both a blessing and a curse. On one hand, you don’t have to search for hotels or matching connection flights, but can go straight home after arriving. On the other hand, you will likely have to pay more anyway, since non-stop flights are usually more expensive than itineraries with a change of planes.
Have you ever crossed the Atlantic eastbound on a daytime flight? Would you like to share your experience? Or have we overlooked your favorite daytime connection? Don’t hesitate to tell us in the comments!
Translated by Felix
Cover Picture: Peer Linder
Comments (14)
Can you give examples from the West Coast?
from California to Italy, europe?
Hi Marilyn! There are no such flights from the West Coast. The time difference alone (8 hours to Great Britain, 9 hours to mainland Europe) would make that impossible.
Thanks for this list! I’m never a good sleeper on flights, and a transatlantic from NYC to LON you’re only likely to get 5 hours of sleep anyways, so I have appreciated the daytime flights to Europe. We’re in Philadelphia, hopefully they’ll add a daytime PHL to LON flight, as we have to head up to EWR to make it work. It seems like there are more options than a few years ago, so perhaps this is gaining traction.
How about a similar article for flying East from Asia (say Japan) to avoid traveling overnight?
Interesting suggestion. However, these are way more common than daytime Eastbound flights across the Atlantic.
Looks like there are more daytime flights from (South)East Asia to Europe than night time flights. So I don’t think it would make too much sense to list them all.
Edit: Just figured out that you mean Asia → US, not Asia → Europe. I don’t really see the appeal of that, as you’ll be flying through the night anyway, due to the time zone difference. But maybe I’m missing out on the benefits.
The flight from Boston to Keflavik is the best IMHO. The only people who are in the airport at that time are those who came off your flight and some security. Hostels and hotels are close by and so are some AirBnBs. IcelandAir has a great stopover plan, and you reach Oslo in the early afternoon in just over two hours.
There is also a very oddly-timed MIA-LIS on Thursdays only by TAP Portugal leaving MIA at 03:25 (yikes) but arriving LIS at a nice 16:45 that even allows for some onward connections same day.
That’s definitely an… interesting option. I wouldn’t count it as daytime flight though, having to wake up 1 am at the latest. 😅
Interesting article, you are so right about the sleeping, we always feel quite lively going from Europe to the US on a daytime flight. But the return flight is just exhausting, taking much more time to recover. I will have a look at these options nextime! 😀
Nice for those in the eastern US, but useless for those (millions!) of us who live in the western US, especially those who are served by regular nonstop service to Europe. How about addressing our issues sometime?
I found two more flights with Azores (I checked in June):
JFK OPO 1100 – 2230 B767 euroatlantic
JFK TER 1100 – 2045 A330 plus ultra
Can you also say what are these flight arriving 1:00 AM?
Hi Piotr! Thanks for your research! Could you give us a source for these flights? Google Flights does not display them – but it makes sense for Azores Airline to use their leased aircraft this way.
Hello,
I found them on skyscanner but you can also see directly on azores website:
JFK-OPO Flight S4276 eg. 9 June 2024
JFK-TER Flight S4234 eg. 8 June 2024
Thank you! I have added these connections to the article.