Most On-Time Airlines in the US: 2026 Ranking
On-time performance is the single best signal of an airline's reliability. These rankings are built from US Department of Transportation Air Travel Consumer Reports, which track on-time arrivals, cancellations, and average delay length across every major US carrier. Delta leads the pack with disciplined hub schedules and significant schedule padding.
The Top 3 Most Reliable
Delta Air Lines
Disciplined hub schedules and built-in buffers.
SkyWest Airlines
Regional operations and shorter routes.
Alaska Airlines
Pacific Northwest weather mastery.
Full Ranking
| # | Airline | On-time | Cancel % | Avg delay | Why |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | DLDelta Air Lines | 83.7% | 0.8% | 33m | Disciplined hub schedules and built-in buffers. |
| 2 | OOSkyWest Airlines | 81.1% | 1.4% | 36m | Regional operations and shorter routes. |
| 3 | ASAlaska Airlines | 80.2% | 1.1% | 40m | Pacific Northwest weather mastery. |
| 4 | HAHawaiian Airlines | 79.4% | 0.7% | 38m | Pacific routes with low congestion. |
| 5 | WNSouthwest Airlines | 77.8% | 1.5% | 47m | Point-to-point recovery after disruptions. |
| 6 | UAUnited Airlines | 77.1% | 1.7% | 45m | Wide global network across hubs. |
| 7 | AAAmerican Airlines | 76.3% | 1.9% | 48m | Largest network with complex hubs. |
| 8 | G4Allegiant Air | 73.2% | 2.8% | 52m | Leisure-focused with older fleet. |
| 9 | NKSpirit Airlines | 72.0% | 4.1% | 55m | ULCC operating on tight margins. |
| 10 | F9Frontier Airlines | 71.4% | 3.8% | 58m | ULCC with schedule constraints. |
| 11 | B6JetBlue Airways | 70.1% | 2.1% | 62m | Northeast-concentrated, congested airspace. |
Disciplined hub schedules and built-in buffers.
Regional operations and shorter routes.
Pacific Northwest weather mastery.
Pacific routes with low congestion.
Point-to-point recovery after disruptions.
Wide global network across hubs.
Largest network with complex hubs.
Leisure-focused with older fleet.
ULCC operating on tight margins.
ULCC with schedule constraints.
Northeast-concentrated, congested airspace.
Methodology
Rankings are based on the latest Department of Transportation Air Travel Consumer Reports, which collect on-time arrival data from every reporting US carrier. A flight is counted as "on-time" if it arrives within 15 minutes of its scheduled gate arrival. Cancellation rate is the percentage of scheduled flights cancelled outright. Average delay length covers only flights that arrived late. Numbers are approximate and reflect rolling-year performance.
What Makes an Airline Reliable?
A handful of structural factors separate the most on-time carriers from the rest. Fleet age matters because newer aircraft suffer fewer mechanical delays. Hub structure affects how quickly an airline can recover when one airport gets backed up — carriers with multiple connecting hubs reroute crews and aircraft more easily.
Schedule padding is the under-appreciated lever: airlines that build realistic buffers into their block times technically show better on-time numbers even when the actual flight runs the same length. Delta and Alaska are particularly disciplined here. Weather and airspace exposure is the wildcard — Northeast hubs (JFK, LGA, EWR, BOS) sit under some of the most congested airspace in the world, which is why JetBlue and American struggle disproportionately despite being well-run airlines.
The takeaway: if reliability is your top priority, book a major-hub carrier (Delta, Alaska, Hawaiian) on a route that avoids the Northeast corridor and the late-afternoon thunderstorm window.
Looking at the Other End
Reliability is a spectrum. To see the inverse of this list — the airlines with the worst on-time records, highest cancellation rates, and longest delays — check our companion ranking of the most delayed US airlines.
Curious about the worst performers?
See which US carriers cancel most often and run the longest delays.