United’s top 10 busiest domestic routes from San Francisco (and why #1 may not be what you think)

0 Shares
0
0
0

Simply Flying recently published a list of United’s top 10 busiest routes from San Francisco International Airport (SFO) based on planned flights in January 2025:

RankingRouteNumber of Flights
1SFO – Denver (DEN)302
2SFO – Newark (EWR)285
3SFO – Los Angeles (LAX)281
4SFO – Chicago (ORD)254
5SFO – Houston (IAH)238
6SFO – Las Vegas (LAS)201
7SFO – Washington, D.C. (IAD)187
8SFO – San Diego (SAN)184
9SFO – Burbank (BUR)175
10SFO – Seattle (SEA)160

While the number one route is clearly San Francisco to Denver, I’d argue that United’s top destination is from San Francisco to Los Angeles, with a total of 456 flights from San Francisco to Los Angeles International Airport (LAX) and Hollywood Burbank Airport (BUR) combined.

If you don’t know Los Angeles geography that well, while Burbank is its own city, Burbank is a part of Los Angeles County. For a lot of Los Angeles residents, including myself, Burbank’s Hollywood Burbank Airport is much easier and cheaper to get to than LAX (and with “Hollywood” in Burbank airport’s name, those in charge of the Hollywood Burbank Airport clearly want you to know that you’re essentially flying into Hollywood).

Map showing Hollywood Burbank Airport (BUR) outlined in blue, with Los Angeles International Airport (LAX) outlined in red.

As a reference point, I live in the Hollywood Hills and right now, an UberX to BUR would cost $39.54 and take 23 minutes, compared to $67.65 and 51 minutes for an UberX to LAX. In fact, I’m flying Tahiti to SFO to Los Angeles in three weeks and decided to fly from SFO to Burbank instead of SFO to LAX, even though flying into Burbank means that I’ll land about an hour later (for me, it’s worth it just to avoid the LAX traffic, a longer drive, and higher Uber fares).

So while Denver is currently United’s top domestic route from SFO, I think it’s clear that Los Angeles is United’s top domestic destination.

0 Shares
4 comments
    1. San Francisco to Seattle makes sense to me since I’m sure there are a ton of tech-related business flights (and also, having lived in San Francisco for almost a decade, a lot of people in SF used to live in Seattle and vice versa, so you’ve got a lot of people going back to see friends who wouldn’t otherwise be loyal to Alaska, Delta, etc.). With Vegas, not surprised either since Bay Area folks like to party and, similarly, would try to take those flight on their preferred airline. In my experience, United pretty much has a tight hold on SFO-based flyers who value status, with Alaska a distant second.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like