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JFKDetailed guide

John F Kennedy International Airport (JFK) Airport Guide

New York, United States · KJFK

John F. Kennedy International is New York City’s primary long-haul gateway, handling the bulk of the city’s intercontinental traffic across six operating terminals connected by the free AirTrain.

It is a major hub for JetBlue (Terminal 5), Delta (Terminal 4) and American (Terminal 8), with a multi-year redevelopment adding new Terminal 1 and Terminal 6 facilities.

For a longer, hand-written walkthrough, see our in-depth New York airport guide.

Lounges

  • JetBlue lounges / Priority Pass partners (T5)Priority Pass, pay-in
  • Delta Sky Club (T4)Delta premium, SkyMiles, Amex Platinum
  • Chelsea / American Flagship Lounge (T8)oneworld premium, Amex

WiFi

Free unlimited WiFi is available throughout all terminals.

Airlines

Notable carriers operating at John F Kennedy International Airport:

JetBlueDeltaAmerican AirlinesBritish AirwaysLufthansaEmirates

John F Kennedy International Airport operates 6 passenger terminals.

Getting to & from JFK

Train: AirTrain to Jamaica/Howard Beach, then LIRR or subway (A/E)(~50–65 min to Midtown)from $11
Taxi: Flat metered fare to Manhattan(45–90 min (traffic))~$70 + tolls/tip
Rideshare: Uber/Lyft from designated terminal pickups(45–90 min)

Transit & visa requirements

  • The United States has no sterile international transit — every connecting passenger must clear U.S. immigration and customs, then re-check bags.
  • That means you need a valid U.S. visa or an approved ESTA (for Visa Waiver Program nationals) even if you are only connecting through JFK.

Check visa requirements by country →

Hotels near JFK

Need a room near the airport for an early departure or a long layover?

Things to do during a layover

Got time between flights? See our dedicated JFK layover guide. In short:

Short layover (under 3 hours)

Stay airside at John F Kennedy International Airport. Clear security to your connection early, then find a lounge or quiet seating area near your departure gate.

Medium layover (3–6 hours)

Enough time to relax in a lounge, eat a proper meal and explore the terminal’s shops and amenities without rushing your connection.

Long layover (6+ hours) — consider visiting New York

With a long layover you may have time to leave the airport and see New York, provided your nationality and routing allow you to clear immigration. Confirm transit visa rules first, and leave a generous buffer to return.

JFK — Frequently Asked Questions

No. The U.S. has no airside transit, so all connecting passengers must clear immigration. You need a valid visa or an approved ESTA to transit JFK, even without leaving the airport.

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