If you booked a flight anytime in the past few decades, you may have heard a rumor that it’s less expensive to book flights on Tuesday. As it turns out, this flight booking tip is an old myth that isn’t backed by any data and doesn’t reflect modern booking practices. New insights from travel platforms suggest that there are far more effective ways to save on airfare.
To uncover the mystery behind the outdated Tuesday flight deal myth, I chatted with Jesse Neugarten, flight expert, founder and CEO of Dollar Flight Club, and Tiffany Funk, Travel Expert and point.me Co-Founder. Below, Neugarten and Funk share how to use modern flight booking tools to use to actually save money.
“The myth to book flights on Tuesdays for cheaper fares dates back to the pre-internet days, when flight prices were manually updated each week,” says Funk.
“This continued even into the early days of online booking, but now it’s been years since this has been true. Airfare is adjusted constantly, sometimes by the minute, based on complex algorithms. I’ve seen fares go from $800 to $300 on a random Friday and then increase to $900 the next day — for reasons that may only be known to the airline’s computers,” she shares.
All in all, airfare pricing is complex, and it only makes sense that people seek an easy way to understand it so they “feel like they have a chance to beat the system.” While Funk says it’s an understandable rationale, she also warns that it may just lead to paying more than you need for your next flight.
Years ago, when airlines pushed out fare updates in predictable batches, the Tuesday flight hack might have worked. Though it was a convenient shortcut at the time, Neugarten says it was designed for a different era.
Today, “Fares move constantly, so a single ‘best booking day’ doesn’t hold up. The myth persists because it’s simple and shareable, which is way easier than explaining dynamic pricing,” he shares.
“So many factors can impact the cost of a flight, including how much competition there is on that route (if more airlines fly that same route, prices tend to be lower), how much demand there is for a particular flight (which is impacted by seasonal trends), and how far in advance you’re booking,” Funk says.
“Many people mistakenly believe that prices drop at the last minute because airlines will want to fill unsold seats. That rarely happens; in fact, usually it’s the opposite, as flights are full and travelers looking for a last-minute flight often need to get on that flight regardless of cost, so they are willing to pay more, ” Funk shares.
Funk notes that award flights are the one exception: “Unlike with cash fares, you can often find great points deals even at the last minute. When it comes to cash flights, a flight for travel in peak summer or over the busy winter holidays, booked at the last minute, is nearly guaranteed to cost more than a flight for travel in the off-season booked several months in advance.”
Today’s dynamic pricing allows airlines to “reprice constantly as seats sell, competitors adjust, and demand shifts,” says Neugarten. “That volatility breaks the old Tuesday rule. Instead, on the traveler side, modern alerts and predictive guidance help you buy inside the best windows without endlessly refreshing.”
Booking flights today isn’t like it used to be — and Funk says it won’t ever return to the simplistic methods of the past. Today, “too many real-time inputs drive prices. However, what will change is how people buy: AI agents that monitor your exact route, alert you within your risk tolerance, and even handle rebooking. Subscription travel models will bundle those features with perks so you don’t have to chase sales or myths,” she shares.
While the Tuesday flight myth isn’t the best strategy to save on flights today, using other modern strategies can help you save. Neugarten says what really matters more than the day you book is how far in advance you buy your seat, the day you fly, and the real-time demand on your route.
Rather than booking on a specific day, aim to fly midweek when you can, which routinely beats weekends. Midweek departures (Mon-Wed) typically undercut weekend flights because leisure traffic peaks on Fridays and Sundays.
“Seasonality, demand spikes (holidays, events), route competition, aircraft constraints, and fuel costs all show up in the fare. In Dollar Flight Club’s deal database, shifting your travel dates beats trying to time a specific day to buy,” he says.
At Dollar Flight Club, Neugarten says the best results happen when members combine flight price alerts and flexibility. Search flexibility, such as looking at nearby airports, adjusting departure and arrival days, and one-stop layovers, can unlock cheaper inventory. Setting price alerts early and using tools to alert you when prices drop far outweighs trying to book your flight on a specific day of the week.
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