Houston, we’ve an issue — with everyone else.
The William P. Hobby Airport in Houston, Texas, and the newly transformed, $4 billion Terminal B in Recent York’s LaGuardia Airport are the one US airport properties to attain five stars in Skytrax’s rankings of airports internationally.
Hobby was lauded for its “excellent customer experience,” “broad range of seat decisions” and “upgraded interior décor finishes,” amongst other stellar amenities, while LaGuardia’s Terminal B won acclaim from Skytrax for its “spacious interiors, floor-to-ceiling windows, inspiring public art features, and iconic restaurants and shops.” LaGuardia earned 4 stars overall.
Luckily, the UK-based Skytrax didn’t award any US airports a meager one or two stars, but it surely gave greater than three dozen US airports the “fair or average” three-star rating, from Atlanta Hartsfield International Airport to Washington Reagan National Airport.
The five busiest US airports each received three stars — based on a rubric that features terminal design, cleanliness, passenger flow, seating, washrooms, family facilities, entertainment, WiFi, shopping, and dining, amongst other features.
Atlanta Hartsfield International Airport
The world’s busiest airport since 1998, the Atlanta airport got dinged for “inefficient and insufficient immigration and security staffing levels.” Skytrax was also unimpressed with its shower facilities, baggage delivery times, seating near check-in, and quiet/rest areas.
It’s hard to calm down when just this yr alone, an Atlanta passenger went on a profane rant about her period and a fired airport coffee shop employee was caught on video attacking two of her former managers.
The Atlanta airport, nonetheless, did earn praise for its “excellent range of fast-food options in addition to motivated and fascinating Information staff at key points within the airport.”
Dallas/Fort Price International Airport
DFW — the world’s second-busiest airport in 2022 by passenger traffic and the biggest hub for American Airlines — didn’t rating well with its food, beverage, and shopping options for the parts of the airport accessible to the general public and for its business-class lounges, quiet/rest areas, and transfer signage. It did get back pats for its efficient terminal layouts, immigration process, and staff service.
Denver International Airport
The Denver airport set a record last yr by welcoming greater than 77.8 million passengers, but Skytrax claims that these travelers struggle to maneuver through the airport. Transportation Security Administration processing is “often a slow pinchpoint within the departure process,” Skytrax argues, while “access to the B and C concourses is via the people mover train only.”
Some have even taken to completing running challenges inside the airport.
DIA transportation, specifically its rail service to downtown Denver and its bus, taxi, and rideshare programs, and the airport’s “unique tented roof structure and architecturally impressive Jeppesen Terminal” did win approval.
Chicago O’Hare International Airport
Skytrax notes that O’Hare is “conveniently connected” to the remainder of Chicago by trains, albeit the “L” has been plagued by crime, significant headways between trains, and filth as of late. Nevertheless, it’s the inconvenience of traveling between O’Hare terminals, the “relatively dated” terminal interiors, and the “poor” range of seating that caught Skytrax’s attention.
Los Angeles LAX International Airport
While the Tom Bradley International Terminal garners recognition for its “excellent natural light, appealing design features” and “good range” of food and beverage decisions, accessing LAX stays problematic.
“Drop-off roadways are sometimes congested. Security and immigration standards are incessantly slow and inefficient,” Skytrax grumbles.
Also receiving three stars are “inconsistent” Recent York John F. Kennedy International Airport and “slow” Newark Liberty International Airport.
“The infrastructure for the airport is dated, and post-security the facilities are limited for passengers,” Skytrax lamented about Newark.