Seattle (SEA) Minimum Connection Time in 2026: One Terminal, a Bags-First Border
SEA's OAG MCT is 30-90 min and the single terminal is fully airside. The catch: international arrivals claim bags first, then recheck. Verified June 2026.
On this page
- Quick reference: published minimums vs realistic padding
- The easy direction: everything airside
- The hard direction: the bags-first border
- The two-hub wrinkle
- What if I’m on separate tickets at SEA?
- How Seattle compares to other major hubs
- When to add even more padding
- The verdict
- How SEA connections compare to other airports
- Sources and methodology
Seattle-Tacoma is two different airports depending on which direction you cross it. Connecting domestically, it is one of the simplest big hubs in the country: a single terminal, one security perimeter, and an underground train that puts every gate, including the North and South satellites, airside. Arriving internationally, it is a bags-first border crossing with an official recommendation that you give the connection two to three hours.
The published OAG floors split the same way: 30 minutes domestic-to-domestic, 60 domestic-to-international, 90 off an international arrival (OAG via ExpertFlyer, verified May 29, 2026). And SEA is a two-hub airport, so the carrier filings matter more than most places: Delta files 30/35/70/60 and Alaska files 40/60/90/80 for same-airline connections. A booking engine will happily sell you Delta’s 35-minute domestic-to-international connection. The airport’s own international-arrivals guidance says 120 to 180 minutes. Both are telling the truth about different directions.
Quick reference: published minimums vs realistic padding
| Connection type | Published OAG standard | Carrier filed (same airline) | Our realistic recommendation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Domestic to domestic | 30 min | Delta 30 / Alaska 40 | 45-60 min |
| Domestic to international | 60 min | Delta 35 / Alaska 60 | 75-90 min |
| International to domestic | 90 min | Delta 70 / Alaska 90 | 2.5 hrs (airport says 120-180 min) |
| International to international | 90 min | Delta 60 / Alaska 80 | 2-2.5 hrs |
| Separate tickets | n/a | n/a | 3 hrs domestic, 4 hrs international |
Published and filed values are OAG minimums (ExpertFlyer, 2026-05-29). The right column is our editorial recommendation, not an official figure.
The easy direction: everything airside
Sea-Tac’s domestic geography is a connection-friendly accident of having one terminal: Concourses A through D and the North and South satellites all sit behind a single security perimeter, with the underground satellite train linking the satellites to the main building. No US airport in this series beats it for domestic simplicity; even Atlanta’s Plane Train serves more distance.
The only domestic variable is satellite geography. Alaska’s operation leans on the North Satellite, Delta’s international and premium flying uses the South Satellite, and the train ride plus headways add real minutes to a satellite connection. The mental model: any gate pair within A-D is a walk; anything touching N or S adds 10 to 15 minutes; nothing requires re-screening.
The hard direction: the bags-first border
International arrivals (except precleared ones, more below) flow through the International Arrivals Facility, and the Port of Seattle’s official sequence is explicitly bags first:
- Claim your luggage first, whatever your connection status.
- Bring it through US Customs and Border Protection. Official guidance: processing can take 60 minutes or longer during peak periods.
- Recheck. Stay right for the Alaska and Delta agents at the recheck; other carriers may require exiting left to the landside ticketing counters.
- Clear TSA and emerge in Concourse A, from which every gate is reachable airside.
The airport’s own recommendation for this connection is 120 to 180 minutes, and it is the right number. Two refinements from the official pages: the IAF’s dedicated TSA checkpoint runs 6 a.m. to 9:45 p.m. Pacific (late arrivals use the main checkpoints), and if your bags are not tagged through, the recheck becomes a full landside check-in against your airline’s cutoff.
One quietly useful exception: passengers arriving on precleared flights, for instance from Toronto Pearson or Vancouver, where US preclearance happens before departure, land at SEA as domestic arrivals and skip the entire IAF sequence.
The two-hub wrinkle
SEA is the rare US hub where two carriers file materially different minimums. Delta’s 30/35 figures are among the most aggressive domestic filings we track; Alaska’s 40/60 are more conservative across a bigger network. The practical reads:
- A Delta-sold 35-minute domestic-to-international connection is legal and usually works with carry-on only, but it has zero slack; prefer the next option when booking by choice.
- Alaska’s hub breadth means its tight connections more often touch the North Satellite train; pad those mentally even though the filing says 40.
- Interline connections between the two (or anyone else) fall back toward the airport standard, and your bags’ transfer is the slowest link.
What if I’m on separate tickets at SEA?
The single-terminal layout softens the walk but nothing else: separate tickets mean baggage reclaim (after customs, if international), a landside re-check against the second airline’s cutoff, and a fresh TSA screen. Three hours domestic, four off an international arrival, and remember the IAF checkpoint hours if you land late.
How Seattle compares to other major hubs
| airport | published floor | fully airside? | realistic short-connection buffer |
|---|---|---|---|
| SEA (Seattle) | 30 min domestic (Delta files 30/35) | Yes (one terminal; train to N/S satellites) | 45-60 min domestic, 2.5 hrs off intl arrivals |
| SFO (San Francisco) | 50 min domestic (United files 35) | Yes (post-security walkways link ALL terminals) | 50-70 min United, 2.5 hrs off intl arrivals; pad for fog |
| ATL (Atlanta) | 55 min domestic | Yes (Plane Train) | 60-75 min |
| ORD (Chicago) | 30 min domestic | Mostly, T5 separate | 75 min |
| JFK (New York) | 30 min domestic | No (zero airside links) | 90-120 min |
| YYZ (Toronto Pearson) | 120 min all sectors (AC files 60-75) | No (LINK train is landside) | 75-90 min AC same-terminal, 2.5-3 hrs interline or US-bound |
| HKG (Hong Kong) | 60 min flat, all types | Yes (APM to Midfield + North Satellite) | 60-75 min one ticket, 90 min via Midfield |
Domestically, SEA plays in Atlanta’s league: one secure perimeter, trains doing the long hauls. Internationally it sits mid-pack: the bags-first IAF is more predictable than JFK’s terminal sprawl but slower than a precleared arrival, and the airport’s honest 120-180 minute guidance is the rare case of an official source out-padding ours.
When to add even more padding
- Peak international banks (afternoon trans-Pacific and Europe arrivals): CBP’s own 60-plus-minute peak warning applies exactly then.
- Morning Alaska bank (roughly 6-9 a.m.): security queues peak; typical waits run about 8 minutes off-peak and 30 at peak.
- Satellite-to-satellite connections: two train rides; add 15 minutes.
- Winter storm and de-icing days: less frequent than the East Coast, but SEA’s bank structure cascades when they hit.
The verdict
Domestically, Seattle is a top-three US connection airport: one terminal, everything airside, and hub carriers that trust it enough to file 30-and-40-minute minimums. Internationally, believe the airport, not the booking engine: bags first, customs that can run an hour at peak, a recheck, a re-screen, and a checkpoint that goes home at 9:45 p.m. Give an international arrival 2.5 hours and SEA is easy; give it 75 minutes and you are sprinting toward a closed door.
How SEA connections compare to other airports
- SFO minimum connection time guide for the other West Coast hub, now fully airside-connected
- Atlanta minimum connection time guide for the domestic gold standard SEA’s layout resembles
- Toronto Pearson minimum connection time guide for how preclearance turns your SEA arrival domestic
- Check any layover with the connection time calculator, or see the Seattle (SEA) airport profile
Sources and methodology
Published and carrier-filed minimum connection times are OAG STANDARD and carrier-exception values from the OAG MCT database, accessed via ExpertFlyer and verified May 29, 2026 (recorded per-field in our airport data, including the Alaska and Delta sector filings). The bags-first arrival sequence, CBP peak-processing warning, recheck options, IAF TSA checkpoint hours, Concourse A exit point, and the official 120-to-180-minute connection recommendation were verified against the Port of Seattle’s official international-connections guidance on June 10, 2026. Terminal, satellite-train, and layover-transport facts derive from our airport data file (verified April 2026). Realistic padding recommendations are our editorial synthesis and are labeled as such.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the minimum connection time at Seattle-Tacoma Airport?
How does an international arrival connection work at SEA?
Is SEA airport fully connected airside?
Is 45 minutes enough to connect at SEA?
Do Alaska and Delta have different connection rules at SEA?
What happens if my international arrival lands after the IAF checkpoint closes?
Can I leave SEA airport during a layover?
Travel research publisher and senior staff engineer
Caden Sorenson runs Travel Vient, an independent travel research and tools site covering airline carry-on policies, packing lists, and head-to-head airline, cruise, and destination comparisons, with everything cited to primary sources. He's a senior staff engineer with 15+ years of experience building iOS apps, web platforms, and developer tools, and a Computer Science graduate from Utah State University. Based in Logan, Utah.
Related guides
- San Francisco (SFO) Minimum Connection Time in 2026: The Hub That Quietly Fixed ItselfSFO publishes 50-105 min OAG minimums, but every terminal is now airside-connected by post-security walkways. What changes for connections. Verified June 2026.
- Atlanta (ATL) Minimum Connection Time in 2026: How Long Do You Really Need?ATL's published OAG MCT is 55 min domestic, 90 min international-to-domestic, and every concourse connects airside via the Plane Train, so those numbers hold.
- Doha Hamad (DOH) Minimum Connection Time in 2026: The 90-Minute Floor at a Transfer MachineDOH publishes a 90-minute OAG minimum for international connections, but the single airside terminal walks gate-to-gate in 1-14 minutes. Verified June 2026.
- Tokyo Haneda (HND) Minimum Connection Time in 2026: The Airline Picks Your TerminalHaneda's OAG MCT runs 30-90 min, but the real variable is geography: JAL in T1, ANA in T2, international in T3, all connected landside only. Verified June 2026.
- Hong Kong (HKG) Minimum Connection Time in 2026: The Flat 60-Minute HubHKG publishes a flat 60-minute OAG minimum for every connection type, the only mega-hub we track with one uniform floor. Verified June 2026.
Related comparisons
- Airline ComparisonAlaska vs Delta 2026: The Battle for the West CoastBoth are top 2 in US reliability, but Alaska's points are worth more while Delta has a far larger network. Which wins for West Coast travelers?
- Airline ComparisonLATAM vs Avianca 2026: South America's Two Giants ComparedLATAM has 371 aircraft and a Delta JV. Avianca has Star Alliance and a $800M transformation. We compare both for US-South America and intra-regional travel.
- Airline ComparisonAir Canada vs Delta 2026: Which Should You Fly?Delta wins on-time (80.9% vs 61.3%), carry-on on all fares, and network (1,000+ routes). Air Canada wins Aeroplan redemptions, recline, and Canadian coverage.
- Airline ComparisonAir France vs Delta 2026: JV Partners, Different CabinsAir France has La Premiere First and free Starlink Wi-Fi. Delta wins on-time and US feed. Both share SkyTeam, JV miles, and 110 transatlantic routes.