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The Epoch Times
The Epoch Times
18 Apr 2023


NextImg:The ABCs of Red-Eyes

You’ve seen those humorous T-shirts reading: ¨There are 10 types of people in the world—those who understand binary and those who don’t.” That also applies to travelers: They either love or hate red-eye flights. In case you’re from a different planet and don’t already know, a red-eye is a long-haul flight that operates overnight on which you’re supposed to get your night’s sleep. If you love them, you can find at least a few on many long-haul nonstop routes of—say—five or more hours duration. And even if you hate them, you can’t avoid them on many busy long hauls.

Why Love? Many travelers prefer red-eye flights to cut travel costs for either or both of 10 reasons:

Why Hate? The reasons to hate often mirror the opposites of the “love” reasons:

On popular routes, you often arrive at your destination early in the morning—zonked and suffering from jet lag — far too early to check into your hotel. I’ve seen too many groups of bleary-eyed travelers sitting around London hotel lobbies forlornly waiting for their rooms.

Where You Find Them. You can find at least a few red-eyes on almost all long-haul trips and you can’t avoid them on many, especially eastbound. The reason is clear: When you cross time zones going east, you set your watch ahead—three hours on a domestic transcon, five to six to Europe from the Eastern zone, eight to nine from the Pacific zone, and eight and more on a transpacific flight. That means only the shortest of those trips can be scheduled for reasonably convenient daytime departure and arrival local times. You encounter them on:

Avoiding red-eyes. If you’re as averse to red-eyes as I am, you’ll try to find a daytime nonstop from the U.S. or Canada to Europe. And last week the blog Simpleflying.com conveniently published a tabulation of eastbound daytime transatlantic nonstops for this summer. They fly to only three European cities from only six U.S. and Canadian cities:

Not all those flights operate daily. Also, you can fly nonstop from several U.S. and Canadian points to the Azores. In years past, you could fly daytime New York to Paris, Toronto and St. John’s to London, and New York to Dublin, but apparently not this year.

Another way to avoid red-eyes is to fly westbound only. I did that once in business class on a frequent flyer round-the-world award. But that’s too much for most travelers. Clearly, on many long-haul routes, there’s a red-eye in your future. Live with it.