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Highway through the Nevada desert

Drive or Fly

Drive or fly from San Francisco to Las Vegas?

Our pick
✈️ Fly
1 traveler, one way
🚗 Drive
$64
8 hr 37 min · 508 mi
✈️ Fly
$110
5 hr 16 min door-to-door
In the air
1 hr 16 min
+ ~4h airport time

Flying comes out ahead — about 3 hr 21 min quicker door-to-door, though driving would save roughly $46.

The honest answer to “San Francisco to Las Vegas: drive or fly?” depends less on the flight time than on everything around it. A nonstop is only about 1 hr 16 min in the air, but getting to the airport, clearing security, boarding, and reaching your destination at the other end realistically adds around four hours. That pushes the true door-to-door flight time to about 5 hr 16 min, against roughly 8 hr 37 min for the drive.

On cost, a solo driver burns about $64 in fuel each way, while a one-way ticket runs near $110per person. Driving’s big advantage is that the cost is fixed per car, not per head — so the more people travel together, the more the maths tilts toward the road. On fuel alone, driving comes in cheaper than flying here even for a solo traveler. The table below shows how that plays out.

How the maths changes with your group

Who is travellingDrive (fuel, 1 car)Fly (airfare)Cheaper
Solo, one way$64$110🚗 Drive
2 travelers, round trip$127$440🚗 Drive
4 travelers, round trip$127$880🚗 Drive

Fuel assumes 28 mpg at $3.50/gallon; airfare is an estimate per person. Round-trip rows double both legs. Run your exact numbers in the Drive or Fly calculator.

Leaning toward the drive? Map evenly-spaced rest and fuel stops, find a halfway meeting point, or read the full San Francisco to Las Vegas distance & route guide. Pricing the fuel more precisely? Use the trip cost calculator.

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Frequently Asked Questions

For a solo one-way trip, driving is cheaper — about $64 in fuel to drive versus roughly $110 to fly. The gap narrows or flips as you add travelers, since one car carries everyone while airfare is charged per seat.