I once had a 9-hour layover in Dubai that I hadn’t planned for at all.
My original connection had been rerouted the night before, and by the time I landed at DXB with a full day to kill, I had 2 choices: sit in the terminal eating overpriced airport food and scrolling my phone until my eyes glazed over, or actually do something with the time.
I chose the second option, took the metro into the city, had one of the best lunches of that entire trip, and made it back to the gate with an hour to spare.
That layover taught me something I’ve carried into every long connection since: the gap between 2 flights doesn’t have to feel like dead time.
The trip that Dubai layover was part of had started on an Air New Zealand Business Premier flight — which, for the record, made the rerouting considerably less painful than it might have been in economy. A comfortable flight followed by an unplanned city day is a very different experience from arriving exhausted with nothing sorted. The lesson stuck.
One thing I now sort before every trip, especially on itineraries with long layovers or multi-country routes: an international eSIM. Whether I was navigating Dubai on that unplanned afternoon, or figuring out transport connections across Europe on night train routes, having data running from the moment I landed.
The approach looks different depending on who you’re travelling with. Solo travellers tend to want quiet, control, and the freedom to move at their own pace. Couples and families need options that keep stress low and logistics simple.
Digital entertainment like offline films, audiobooks, puzzle apps — is always worth setting up before takeoff regardless, because airport Wi-Fi is never as reliable as it looks on the sign.
Here’s how to make the most of a long layover, whatever yours looks like.
READ ALSO: Digital Tools For Modern Traveller How Digital Nomads Create A Cosy Home How To Avoid First-Time Travel Mistakes
At A Glance
- Figure Out How Much Time You Actually Have
- 8 Things To Do During Long Layovers
- 1. Explore The Whole Airport
- 2. Use A Lounge Without Flying Business Class
- 3. Turn Your Layover Into A Short City Adventure
- 4. What To Do When You’re Stuck Inside The Airport
- 5. Download Entertainment Before You Fly
- 6. Make The Layover Productive Without Burning Out
- 7. Try Local Food Instead Of Random Fast Food
- 8. Rest, Reset, And Protect Your Energy
Figure Out How Much Time You Actually Have
Before choosing things to do during a long airport layover, calculate your usable layover time. Do not count the full time between flights. Subtract time for getting off the plane, passport control, baggage checks if needed, another security screening, walking between terminals, and boarding. Add a safety buffer for delays.
Here are a few suggestions on how to spend a long layover based on the time you have:
| Layover length | Best plan |
|---|---|
| Under 4 hours | Stay near your gate, eat, charge devices, stretch, or check the list of online casinos and play a few games |
| 4-5 hours | Explore the airport, use a lounge, shower, and rest |
| 6-8 hours | Consider a nearby district if transport is fast |
| 8+ hours | Plan a city stop, airport hotel, or deeper reset |
For U.S. domestic flights, carry a REAL ID-compliant license or another accepted ID, such as a passport. Without it, security can take longer and may disrupt your connection.
8 Things To Do During Long Layovers
1. Explore The Whole Airport
Large airports are no longer just halls of gates and fast food. Many now invest in local restaurants, art installations, wellness zones, observation decks, pop-up events, and interactive spaces. This makes airport layover entertainment ideas easier to find when leaving the airport is not realistic.
I always open the airport map in the official app or website before I land. Search by terminal, food type, lounge, shower, children’s area, quiet room, or art walk.
Easy airport activities include:
- Find the best local restaurant instead of the closest chain;
- Walk between terminals to stretch after sitting;
- Look for public art or gardens;
- Visit an observation deck or window area;
- Find a quiet zone for reading;
- Buy a small local souvenir.
2. Use A Lounge Without Flying Business Class
I’ve found that a lounge can completely change the mood of a long connection. You get seating, snacks, drinks, Wi-Fi, power outlets, cleaner bathrooms, and often a calmer space than the terminal. Some lounges also offer showers, nap rooms, work areas, and family rooms.
You do not always need a business class ticket. Common access options include day passes, Priority Pass, credit card travel perks, airline membership, and paid third-party lounges.
Check the rules before you travel. Popular lounges can be full during peak hours, and some limit access to 3 hours before departure. Book ahead when possible.
Book your executive lounge here
3. Turn Your Layover Into A Short City Adventure
A layover of 6 to 8 hours or more can be enough for a small city adventure if the airport is close to town and transport is reliable. I always keep the plan tight during a layover. Choose a few nearby experiences instead of chasing every famous landmark.
Good short layover ideas include a waterfront walk, market, food hall, compact museum, historic district, well-known cafe, or short walking tour.
Before leaving, check visa and transit rules, baggage storage, train or taxi time, traffic patterns, and return security wait times. Do not risk your flight for a “proof I was there” photo. The best long layover travel tips protect the next leg of the trip.
4. What To Do When You’re Stuck Inside The Airport
Not every layover gives you the option to leave. Sometimes the connection is too short, the hour too late, the destination too remote, or the visa situation too complicated to step outside. That’s fine — the airport itself can be a perfectly decent place to spend a few hours if you approach it with the right mindset.
The first thing worth doing is finding a shower room and getting changed. It sounds small, but the difference between spending 6 hours in yesterday’s flight clothes versus fresh ones is significant. Most major international airports have paid shower facilities airside — Dubai, Singapore Changi, Amsterdam Schiphol, and Frankfurt all do them well.
Try these practical options:
- Book a chair massage or quick spa treatment;
- Use a shower room and change clothes;
- Try sleep pods or reclining rest zones;
- Walk a full terminal loop;
- Visit a meditation room;
- Use game zones or family play areas;
- Shop for local snacks and souvenirs;
- Repack your carry-on.
The goal is not to fill every minute. The goal is to feel better when you board.
5. Download Entertainment Before You Fly
Airport Wi-Fi can be slow, congested, or limited. Power outlets can be occupied. I always download what I need before my first flight, not after landing.
Good downloads include films, series, podcasts, audiobooks, ebooks, offline maps, language lessons, boarding passes, hotel details, and travel planning apps. Add music if you sleep better with headphones.
| Item | Why it helps |
|---|---|
| Power bank | Keeps your phone useful during delays |
| Charging cable | Avoids buying an overpriced replacement |
| Headphones | Makes noisy gates easier to handle |
| eSIM or roaming plan | Reduces dependence on airport Wi-Fi |
| Offline entertainment | Works during weak connections |
6. Make The Layover Productive Without Burning Out
Long layovers can be useful for digital nomads, remote workers, and travellers returning to a full inbox. Look for a quiet zone, work pod, coworking lounge, library-style seating area, or calm restaurant with outlets.
Keep the task list small. A layover is good for editing photos, clearing unread emails, checking bookings, organising receipts, or planning the next travel day. Avoid stressful calls unless you have a lounge or private pod.
Set a work limit. After that, eat, walk, stretch, or rest. Turning the whole layover into work can leave you more tired than doing nothing.
7. Try Local Food Instead Of Random Fast Food
Food is one of the simplest ways to feel connected to a place, even if you never leave the airport. Many terminals now include local chefs, regional dishes, craft coffee, bakeries, food halls, and small brands from the city.
Search the airport dining guide before choosing. Look for dishes linked to the destination, such as seafood, noodles, pastries, barbecue, or local coffee.
Eat with your next flight in mind. Very heavy meals can feel uncomfortable in the air. Drink water, especially after long-haul flights. Limit alcohol if you are crossing time zones, landing late, or trying to sleep.
8. Rest, Reset, And Protect Your Energy
Sometimes the best layover plan is not entertainment. It’s recovery. Long flights, dry cabin air, jet lag, and crowded terminals can drain energy fast.
Look for sleep pods, airport hotels, shower facilities, quiet seating, or wellness rooms. Change into clean socks, wash your face, apply moisturiser, refill your water bottle, and stretch. Compression socks can help long-haul travellers feel more comfortable during extended sitting.
For overnight layovers or connections of 8 to 10 hours or longer, an airport hotel may be worth the cost. A real bed, shower, and door that closes can be better than trying to “tough it out” under bright terminal lights.
Families should plan to rest early. Couples can split tasks. Solo travellers should choose visible, safe rest areas and keep valuables secure.
The best layover isn’t the busiest one. It’s the one that fits your route, your energy, and how much you actually want to deal with on that particular travel day.
Who you’re travelling with matters too. Going solo gives you complete freedom to move at your own pace and change plans on a whim. Travelling with a group means coordinating more people and more luggage — worth factoring in before you plan an ambitious city escape.
One thing worth sorting before any trip with a long connection: travel insurance that covers missed connections and disruptions. It happens more often than expected, and having coverage in place means you’re not making expensive decisions under pressure at a gate desk at midnight.
Long layovers get considerably easier once you stop treating them as dead time. With even a loose plan, they can make the whole travel day feel smoother — and occasionally, genuinely memorable.





