2 Airports · 2 States · 51.9M Pax/yr
Airports in the Mid-Atlantic
The Mid-Atlantic region is home to 2 of the 50 busiest commercial airports in the United States, spanning Maryland and Virginia. Combined, these airports move roughly 51.9 million passengers a year.
How airline hubs concentrate in the Mid-Atlantic
Hub-airline strategy explains a lot about why some airports in the Mid-Atlantic have grown faster than others. The major hubs in this region are operated by Southwest Airlines and American Airlines, and the airports that host them tend to dominate both passenger volume and nonstop route coverage. Travelers based near a hub airport in the Mid-Atlantic typically enjoy the deepest schedule — more frequencies on popular city pairs, more nonstop options on niche routes, and easier rebooking when irregular operations strike — but also pay a modest premium on average fares because the hub carrier captures most of the local origin-and-destination market.
By contrast, non-hub airports in the Mid-Atlantic often offer more competitive low-cost-carrier service from Spirit, Frontier, Allegiant, JetBlue, and Southwest, with cheaper headline fares on point-to-point routes that a hub carrier might not bother with from a non-hub city.
Choosing between airports in the Mid-Atlantic
Travelers planning a trip into the Mid-Atlantic often have a meaningful choice between airports. A flight into a smaller secondary airport closer to the final destination can save hours of ground transportation but may cost more or have fewer nonstop options. A flight into the largest hub in the region typically offers the broadest schedule and the cheapest fares but a longer drive on the back end. The per-airport guides below cover terminal layouts, airline service, parking, ground transportation, and amenities so you can compare candidates against your specific itinerary.
Comparison checklist when picking among Mid-Atlantic airports: total drive time including likely traffic at the time of day you'll arrive, parking cost (which can add $100–$300 to a week-long trip), nonstop versus one-stop fare differential, time-of-day preference for departures and arrivals, and whether checked baggage or a tight connection makes the larger airport's deeper schedule worth the longer drive.
All 2 airports in the Mid-Atlantic, ranked
| Rank | IATA | Airport | City | State | Pax/yr |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| #22 | BWI | Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport | Baltimore | Maryland | 26.4M |
| #24 | DCA | Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport | Arlington | Virginia | 25.5M |