The short version: On most domestic US flights, a free meal in economy is a thing of the past. What you’ll actually get is free snacks and drinks once the flight is past a few hundred miles, plus a buy-on-board menu on longer routes. The rare exceptions are a few premium transcontinental routes where American and Delta still include an economy meal.
If you’re flying across the country and hoping for a hot tray, temper your expectations. US airlines phased out free domestic economy meals more than a decade ago. But that doesn’t mean you’ll go hungry — here’s exactly what each major carrier hands out for free versus sells, so you can decide whether to eat at the gate.
The honest answer
Free domestic meals in economy essentially disappeared after the airlines shifted to buy-on-board menus in the 2010s. In 2026, the model across the big US carriers is consistent:
- Snacks and non-alcoholic drinks are free — but usually only once you’re past a distance floor (each airline sets its own, roughly 250–350 miles).
- Fuller food is buy-on-board on longer flights, typically sandwiches, wraps, and snack boxes in the $8–$14 range.
- A free economy meal only appears on a handful of premium transcon routes.
The domestic routes that still include a meal
These are the exceptions worth knowing:
- American Airlines serves a free Main Cabin meal on flights to and from Hawaii, and on JFK to and from Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Orange County (SNA).
- Delta provides a complimentary cold meal on its premium coast-to-coast routes — think JFK to Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Seattle — with the best version going to Delta Comfort passengers.
Outside of these marquee routes, don’t count on a free domestic meal in economy on any US airline.
What each carrier gives you free vs sells
American — Free Biscoff cookies or pretzels and drinks on flights over about 250 miles. Fresh food (sandwiches, snack boxes) is for purchase on flights beyond roughly 1,100 miles; American expanded its buy-on-board lineup in spring 2026.
Delta — Free snacks and drinks on longer flights (Delta raised its service floor to roughly 350 miles in 2026, dropping service on its shortest hops). Its “Flight Fuel” plates run about $14 and appear on flights over 1,500 miles. First Class gets a free hot meal on routes over 900 miles.
United — Free snacks and drinks on flights over about 300 miles, with a buy-on-board menu on longer domestic routes.
Southwest — Free snacks and drinks on all flights, but no meal service and nothing to buy.
JetBlue — The most generous free snack spread in US economy, with unlimited-style snacks and drinks, but full food (EatUp boxes) is for purchase on domestic routes.
Alaska — No free economy meal, but a genuinely good buy-on-board menu on flights of roughly two to three hours or more.
Spirit and Frontier — Everything, including water, is for purchase.
How to eat well anyway (without overpaying)
Buy-on-board food is convenient but pricey and hit-or-miss. The budget-savvy move is to bring your own — it’s cheaper, healthier, and guaranteed:
- Pack from our list of the best healthy snacks to bring on flights.
- Eat a proper meal before you fly using our pre-travel eating guide so you’re not relying on the cart at all.
- Bring an empty water bottle to fill after security — free water beats paying for it onboard.
Related reading
- How long does a flight have to be to get a meal?
- Which airlines still serve free meals in economy
- Do you get meals on overnight and red-eye flights?
FAQ
Do domestic flights have meals anymore? Rarely for free. Most domestic economy flights offer free snacks and a buy-on-board menu. The only free economy meals are on select premium transcon routes flown by American and Delta.
How long does a domestic flight need to be for free snacks? It varies by airline — roughly 250 miles on American, 300 on United, and about 350 on Delta as of 2026. Below those floors, you may get little or nothing.
Which domestic airline has the best free food? For free snacks in economy, JetBlue is the most generous. For an actual included meal, you’ll need one of American’s or Delta’s premium transcontinental routes.
Can I bring my own food on a domestic flight? Yes. Solid foods pass security fine; just keep gels and liquids under 3.4 oz. Bringing your own is the cheapest and most reliable option.
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