How to Break Up a Long Flight (and Actually Beat Jet Lag Doing It)
Rules on this page last verified 2026-07-09. Airlines change things; we re-check and date it.
If you are staring down a 16-hour nonstop and wondering whether to just book the connection instead, you are asking the right question at the right time, before you have paid for either ticket. The honest answer is: it depends on the route, and on whether the layover you pick actually gives you a bed.
The short version
| The problem | Flights past roughly 14-15 hours push your body through a full night with no real sleep and no light-cycle reset |
|---|---|
| The fix | A layover of 10+ hours with an actual hotel bed, not just a lounge chair, resets you before the next leg |
| Where this matters most | US-Australia, US-Southeast Asia, US-India, US-Africa (the four route families with the worst nonstop options) |
| The catch most people miss | Several airlines will pay for that reset bed. You are not choosing between "cheap nonstop" and "expensive broken trip" |
| When to skip this | Short trips, tight connections, a sleeping kid, or a layover under about 8 hours where a hotel run costs more time than it saves |
Why 15+ hour routes actually hurt
Jet lag is not tiredness. It is your circadian clock (the internal system that governs sleep, hormones and alertness) arriving at a time zone before your body has caught up. The Sleep Foundation frames it as a mismatch between your internal clock's sleep and wake signals and the schedule your destination demands. The rule of thumb researchers cite is roughly a day of adjustment per time zone crossed, which is why a 6-hour shift feels manageable and a 12-hour shift (the kind you get flying to Australia, India or Southeast Asia) can take the better part of a week to fully clear.
An ultra-long nonstop compounds the problem in a way a broken trip doesn't: you are asked to sleep on demand, upright or half-reclined, through a stretch of hours your body still thinks is daytime, then step off the plane and function immediately. Research on jet lag interventions (published in a 2019 review of westward and eastward flight strategies) is built entirely around the idea of managed light exposure and timed rest, the exact things a packed economy cabin makes hardest to control.
There is also a plainer, less circadian reason some travel advisors give for breaking up long flights: extended immobility. Sheryl Hill of Depart Smart has pointed out that travelers at risk for blood clots, or anyone with a medical condition sensitive to long periods without moving, should treat ultra-long nonstops as a real consideration, not just a comfort preference.
The overnight-reset heuristic
Here is the rule that actually holds up: a 10+ hour layover with a real bed beats arriving wrecked. Not a 3-hour layover, not a lounge nap, an actual overnight stop where you lie down, sleep a real sleep cycle, and start the next leg during your destination's daytime instead of the middle of your own body's night.
Going's own guidance on long layovers backs the general shape of this: they note that a long layover "can break up an otherwise long flight, even helping to cut down on jet lag," and recommend at least 9 hours if you want to leave the airport at all once you account for immigration and transit time. Push that closer to a full night, and you are not just sightseeing, you are resetting.
The travel advisors AFAR spoke to for its nonstop-versus-layover piece describe the same instinct from the other direction. Sangeeta Sadarangani of Crossing Travel says a stopover lets her "stretch her legs, make calls and check emails, and have a healthier meal and nicer restroom than on board." George Morgan-Grenville of Red Savannah goes further on his own long economy routes: he'd rather "break up the trip, spend a night on the ground, exercise properly, and then continue on" than push through in one sitting.
Which routes this actually matters for
Not every long flight needs breaking up. It matters most on the route families where the nonstop option is genuinely brutal and a good connection is genuinely available:
- US to Australia (roughly 15-17 hours nonstop from the West Coast). A stop in Doha, Dubai or Singapore turns one overnight slog into two manageable legs.
- US to Southeast Asia (17-18+ hours nonstop from the East Coast to Singapore or Bangkok). Same logic, and the hub options are the same Gulf and Asian carriers.
- US to India (15-17 hours from the West Coast or a connection-heavy 18+ from the East Coast). Doha, Dubai, Istanbul and Addis Ababa all sit on natural routings between the US and Indian metros.
- US to Africa (14-17 hours to hubs like Johannesburg or Lagos, often already routed through a connection). Addis Ababa and Istanbul are frequently on the itinerary already; the only question is whether you claim what's offered there.
The punchline: airlines will often pay for the reset bed
This is the part most "beat jet lag" articles miss entirely: you are rarely choosing between a cheap nonstop and an expensive broken trip. On several of the routes above, the airline running the connection will put you up for free or near-free, specifically because they want you connecting through their hub instead of a competitor's.
| Brutal route | Hub with a free or cheap reset | What you get | Program |
|---|---|---|---|
| US West Coast to Australia | Istanbul (if routing allows) or Dubai | Free hotel, 20h+ connection (Turkish); free hotel, meals and transfers, 6-26h window (Emirates) | Turkish Airlines, Emirates |
| US East Coast to Singapore/Bangkok | Doha | Hotel from $14/night, 4 to 4 days, 96h free transit visa | Qatar Airways |
| US to India (any coast) | Addis Ababa or Dubai | Free hotel, meals, transfers on an 8-24h Addis connection; or Dubai's 6-26h Dubai Connect | Ethiopian Airlines, Emirates |
| US to Southern/West Africa | Addis Ababa | Free hotel, meals, transfers on Ethiopian metal, 8-24h connection | Ethiopian Airlines |
The mechanism is the same across all four rows: the airline needs you to choose its hub over a rival's, so it subsidizes the one thing that makes a broken trip better than a nonstop, an actual bed. See the full comparison of every airline stopover program for the complete rules on each.
When not to break up the trip
This is not a rule for every long flight, and treating it like one is how people end up worse off, not better.
- Short trips. If you are gone four days total, an extra overnight in a hub city eats a quarter of your vacation for a jet lag benefit you may not even need.
- Tight schedules on the ground. A conference, a wedding, a cruise departure, anything with a hard start time makes a broken trip riskier, not safer. A missed or delayed connection on day one of a multi-leg itinerary threatens the whole plan.
- A layover under about 8 hours. Immigration, hotel transfer, and the return trip can eat most of a short layover without leaving real sleep time. At that length you are often better off in the airport or a day-room, not chasing a full overnight reset.
- Kids asleep on the plane. If your child is already down and the nonstop gets you in near their normal wake time, breaking the trip to "help" jet lag can do the opposite: wake them mid-cycle for an unfamiliar hotel room.
Where people screw this up
- Picking any long layover and calling it a reset. A 5-hour layover in an airport chair does not reset a circadian clock. It just adds a fifth hour of sitting.
- Not checking whether the airline will pay for the hotel. Travelers routinely book their own overpriced airport hotel on a route where Turkish, Ethiopian or Emirates would have covered it for free had they asked.
- Forgetting immigration and transfer time. A "10-hour layover" can lose 2-3 hours to passport control, transport and hotel check-in before you sleep a minute.
- Treating this as a rule instead of a route-by-route decision. A 15-hour flight to London does not need this. A 17-hour flight to Bangalore probably does.
FAQ
Is a long layover always better for jet lag than a nonstop? No. It helps most on flights past roughly 14-15 hours where a genuine overnight reset is possible. On shorter routes, the extra transit time can cost more than it saves.
How long does jet lag actually last? The commonly cited rule is about a day per time zone crossed, though this varies by person and by direction (eastward trips tend to hit harder than westward ones).
Do I need a full hotel night, or does a day-room work? A day-room helps for a shower and a few hours off your feet, but the circadian benefit comes from an actual overnight sleep cycle, not a nap. If your layover doesn't stretch to a real night, treat it as a comfort stop, not a jet lag fix.
Which of these hub stopovers is easiest to add without extra cost? Emirates' Dubai Connect and Ethiopian's Addis hotel benefit are both free when you qualify, no separate purchase required beyond claiming them. Qatar's Doha hotel is cheap rather than free but has the lowest minimum layover (12 hours) of the group.
Next time you are staring at a 16-hour nonstop before you've bought anything, this is the moment to plan the reset on purpose instead of discovering it by accident at hour 14. Check the route against the table above, then read the specific program page for whichever hub fits your itinerary, most of them take two minutes to request and cost nothing you weren't already going to spend.