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Mapped: Average Rent Across 100 U.S. Cities (2026)

2026-04-20 19:47:16

See more visuals like this on the Voronoi app.

Mapped rent prices across the U.S. in 2026, highlighting the most and least affordable cities.

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Mapped: Average Rent Across 100 U.S. Cities (2026)

See visuals like this from many other data creators on our Voronoi app. Download it for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

Key Takeaways

  • San Francisco, New York, and Boston top U.S. rents at over $3,500 a month.
  • Six of the 10 most expensive rental markets are in California.
  • The average across 100 cities is $1,843, with many Midwest and Southern cities below $1,200.

Rents across 100 U.S. cities range widely in 2026, from over $3,500 in the most expensive markets to around $1,200 in more affordable regions.

This map visualizes average monthly rent using Zillow’s Observed Rent Index (ZORI), via WalletHub. The data reflects smoothed, seasonally adjusted rents across all residential property types as of February 2026.

With the U.S. average at $1,843, renters in the most expensive cities are paying more than double the national benchmark.

California Accounts for Most of the Highest Rents

California cities dominate the upper end of the rental market, accounting for six of the 10 most expensive locations.

Rank City Average Rent (2026)
1 San Francisco, CA $3,830
2 New York, NY $3,706
3 Boston, MA $3,510
4 Irvine, CA $3,361
5 San Jose, CA $3,222
6 Jersey City, NJ $3,048
7 Miami, FL $2,964
8 Chula Vista, CA $2,904
9 San Diego, CA $2,893
10 Santa Ana, CA $2,804
11 Los Angeles, CA $2,742
12 Anaheim, CA $2,711
13 Naples, FL $2,677
14 Honolulu, HI $2,548
15 Oakland, CA $2,527
16 Washington, DC $2,406
17 Riverside, CA $2,346
18 Chicago, IL $2,292
19 Long Beach, CA $2,287
20 Seattle, WA $2,187
21 Newark, NJ $2,121
22 Gilbert, AZ $2,049
23 Saint Petersburg, FL $2,048
24 Modesto, CA $2,042
25 Stockton, CA $2,010
26 Sacramento, CA $2,006
27 Tampa, FL $1,968
28 Silver Spring, MD $1,954
29 Virginia Beach, VA $1,953
30 Katy, TX $1,896
31 Atlanta, GA $1,888
32 Bakersfield, CA $1,887
33 Lawrenceville, GA $1,881
34 Orlando, FL $1,857
35 Chandler, AZ $1,848
36 Reno, NV $1,830
37 Denver, CO $1,818
38 Nashville, TN $1,772
39 Henderson, NV $1,772
40 Vancouver, WA $1,769
41 Marietta, GA $1,742
42 Philadelphia, PA $1,734
43 Plano, TX $1,717
44 Portland, OR $1,710
45 Baltimore, MD $1,708
46 Knoxville, TN $1,708
47 Charlotte, NC $1,705
48 Boise, ID $1,703
49 Las Vegas, NV $1,695
50 Fresno, CA $1,693
51 Aurora, CO $1,689
52 Spring, TX $1,679
53 Colorado Springs, CO $1,667
54 Durham, NC $1,651
55 Minneapolis, MN $1,638
56 New Orleans, LA $1,625
57 Dallas, TX $1,591
58 Jacksonville, FL $1,576
59 Richmond, VA $1,574
60 Raleigh, NC $1,567
61 Phoenix, AZ $1,556
62 Fort Worth, TX $1,554
63 Mesa, AZ $1,554
64 Houston, TX $1,542
65 Austin, TX $1,531
66 Pittsburgh, PA $1,516
67 Lexington, KY $1,487
68 Saint Paul, MN $1,485
69 Tallahassee, FL $1,484
70 Arlington, TX $1,462
71 Columbia, SC $1,459
72 Albuquerque, NM $1,457
73 Spokane, WA $1,456
74 Winston-Salem, NC $1,445
75 El Paso, TX $1,441
76 Rochester, NY $1,434
77 Corpus Christi, TX $1,433
78 Cincinnati, OH $1,425
79 Kansas City, MO $1,418
80 Columbus, OH $1,415
81 Omaha, NE $1,403
82 Tucson, AZ $1,399
83 Milwaukee, WI $1,398
84 Lubbock, TX $1,388
85 Greensboro, NC $1,382
86 Buffalo, NY $1,381
87 San Antonio, TX $1,361
88 Indianapolis, IN $1,356
89 Louisville, KY $1,352
90 Cleveland, OH $1,344
91 Saint Louis, MO $1,326
92 Detroit, MI $1,318
93 Baton Rouge, LA $1,312
94 Lincoln, NE $1,293
95 Oklahoma City, OK $1,255
96 Memphis, TN $1,234
97 Tulsa, OK $1,207
98 Fort Wayne, IN $1,160
99 Wichita, KS $1,125
100 Toledo, OH $1,060
-- 🇺🇸 U.S. Average (100 Cities) $1,843

At $3,830 per month, San Francisco renters pay more than twice the national average, putting it at the top of the ranking alongside New York and Boston, where rents also exceed $3,500.

Other California cities like Irvine, San Jose, and San Diego also rank near the top. High demand, limited housing supply, and strong local economies continue to drive elevated prices across the state.

Coastal Premiums Remain Intact

Beyond California, other coastal cities also command high rents. New York City and Jersey City remain among the most expensive, reflecting their proximity to major job centers.

Miami has also emerged as one of the priciest markets in the Southeast, fueled by population growth and migration trends.

Affordability Concentrated in the Interior

In contrast, the most affordable rental markets are largely located in the Midwest and South.

In cities like Toledo, Wichita, and Tulsa, average rents remain near or below $1,200, roughly one-third the cost of renting in San Francisco. This gap highlights how location alone can dramatically change a renter’s cost of living, even within the same country.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

If you enjoyed today’s post, check out It Takes 25 Years to Save for a Home in California on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.

Why Europe Will Miss Its 2030 Digital Skills Target

2026-04-20 12:32:47

Why Europe Will Miss Its 2030 Digital Skills Target

Key Takeaways

  • The EU is off track to hit its 80% digital skills target by 2030 at current growth rates.
  • 10 countries saw declines in basic digital skills between 2022 and 2025.
  • Progress is uneven: while some countries are improving quickly, others are moving backward.

Europe’s push to build a digitally skilled population is losing momentum. At the current pace, the region is unlikely to meet its 2030 target.

The chart above, created by The European Correspondent using European Commission DESI data, shows how basic digital skills have changed across EU countries from 2022 to 2025, along with projected progress to 2030. While some countries are making rapid progress, others are slipping, with 10 EU nations reporting outright declines, leaving the EU on track to fall well short of the 80% goal.

This uneven progress points to a growing divide across the bloc. As digital skills become essential for jobs and public services, parts of Europe may fall further behind.

How Digital Skills are Evolving Across Europe

At the current pace, the EU would need to increase digital skills adoption nearly nine times faster to meet its 80% target by 2030, highlighting how far off track the region is despite recent gains.

Country % with basic digital skills (2022) % with basic digital skills (2025) Change (2022–2025)
Hungary 49.1 58.9 9.80
Czechia 59.7 69.1 9.42
Estonia 56.4 62.6 6.24
Belgium 54.2 59.4 5.16
Bulgaria 31.2 35.5 4.34
Lithuania 48.8 52.9 4.07
Netherlands 78.9 82.7 3.76
Germany 48.9 52.2 3.30
Finland 79.2 82.0 2.81
Ireland 70.5 72.9 2.42
Spain 64.2 66.2 2.02
Malta 61.2 63.0 1.79
EU average 53.9 55.6 1.64
Poland 42.9 44.3 1.37
Austria 63.3 64.7 1.35
Denmark 68.7 69.6 0.97
Portugal 55.3 56.0 0.66
Italy 45.6 45.8 0.15
Greece 52.5 52.4 -0.08
Romania 27.8 27.7 -0.09
Sweden 66.6 66.4 -0.16
Cyprus 50.2 49.5 -0.75
France 62.0 59.7 -2.29
Slovenia 49.7 46.7 -2.97
Luxembourg 63.8 60.1 -3.65
Slovakia 55.2 51.3 -3.87
Croatia 63.4 59.0 -4.42
Latvia 50.8 45.3 -5.46

At the top of the rankings, the Netherlands and Finland lead with around 80% or more of adults possessing basic digital skills, followed closely by Ireland and Denmark. At the other end, Romania and Bulgaria remain the lowest, with fewer than half of citizens meeting the baseline threshold.

ℹ “Basic digital skills” refers to the ability to perform tasks across four domains—information, communication, problem-solving, and software use, based on the EU’s DESI framework.

Which Countries Are Moving Forward and Backward?

A notable warning sign: 10 EU countries are moving in reverse. Latvia, Croatia, Slovakia, and others reported lower shares of adults with basic digital skills in 2025 than in 2022, an unexpected shift from what was once steady progress.

On the other side of the ledger, Hungary led the bloc with a 9.8 percentage-point gain, followed closely by Czechia at 9.42 points. Estonia and Belgium also posted notable improvements. That mix of momentum and backsliding makes the regional picture look less like a steady climb and more like a very uneven Wi-Fi signal.

Why the 80% Target Matters

The EU’s 80% target is part of its broader Digital Decade program, designed to ensure citizens can work, learn, and access services in an increasingly digital economy. The European Commission says just 55.6% of the EU population currently has at least basic digital skills, while policymakers have warned that nearly half of EU adults still lack them even as 90% of jobs require some level of digital ability.

The stakes are economic. With roughly 90% of jobs now requiring some level of digital skills, countries that fall behind risk slower growth, weaker job markets, and reduced access to essential digital services.

Ranked: The World’s 15 Largest Defense Budgets

2026-04-20 01:12:31

See more visualizations like this on the Voronoi app.

Bubble graphic showing the world's 15 largest defense budgets by country in 2025.

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Ranked: The World’s 15 Largest Defense Budgets

See visuals like this from many other data creators on our Voronoi app. Download it for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

Key Takeaways

  • The U.S. spends $921B on defense, more than the next eight countries combined.
  • The world’s top 15 military budgets surpassed $2 trillion for the first time.
  • Europe is driving the fastest growth, with spending rising sharply across NATO.

For the first time on record, the top 15 military spenders allocated more than $2 trillion to defense in 2025.

Total global defense spending also reached a record $2.6 trillion, signaling a major shift in geopolitical priorities.

Using data from the International Institute for Strategic Studies, this visualization ranks the 15 countries driving this surge in military spending.

While the U.S. still operates on an entirely different scale, the biggest shift is happening in Europe, where countries are no longer just maintaining military capacity but expanding it significantly.

The $2 Trillion Arms Race: Defense Spending by Country

The U.S. defense budget reached $921 billion in 2025, larger than the combined military spending of China, Russia, Germany, the UK, India, Saudi Arabia, France, and Japan.

Looking ahead, Donald Trump has proposed increasing defense spending to $1.5 trillion by 2027, although this plan has not been enacted. If realized, this would represent roughly 90% higher spending than the Cold War peak in real terms.

China ranked second globally with $251.3 billion in defense spending in 2025. Its share of Asia’s military spending has climbed to 44%, up from 39% in 2017, highlighting its expanding regional influence.

Below is the breakdown of the 15 nations with the largest defense budgets in 2025.

Rank Country Defense Budget 2025 (USD)
1 🇺🇸 United States $921.0B
2 🇨🇳 China $251.3B
3 🇷🇺 Russia $186.2B
4 🇩🇪 Germany $107.3B
5 🇬🇧 United Kingdom $94.3B
6 🇮🇳 India $78.3B
7 🇸🇦 Saudi Arabia $72.5B
8 🇫🇷 France $70.0B
9 🇯🇵 Japan $58.9B
10 🇺🇦 Ukraine $44.4B
11 🇰🇷 South Korea $43.8B
12 🇮🇹 Italy $40.1B
13 🇮🇱 Israel $39.7B
14 🇦🇺 Australia $37.3B
15 🇵🇱 Poland $33.2B

Russia’s defense budget reached $186.2 billion in 2025, rising by more than $40 billion in a single year and equivalent to 7.3% of GDP.

However, spending is expected to decline in 2026, the first drop since the invasion of Ukraine. With a growing deficit, the country faces mounting economic pressure, though higher oil prices have recently provided some relief.

Europe’s Expanding War Chest

With Russia’s ongoing war in Ukraine and pressure from the U.S., European NATO members have committed to spending 3.5% of GDP on defense by 2035.

This would translate to roughly $1.2 trillion by 2035, the largest defense buildup among these countries since the Cold War.

Outside of Russia, Europe holds six of the world’s 15 largest defense budgets, led by Germany ($107.3 billion) and the UK ($94.3 billion). Both countries increased spending by tens of billions between 2024 and 2025.

What was once gradual growth has become a sharp acceleration, making defense one of the fastest-growing spending categories across advanced economies.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

To learn more about this topic, check out this graphic on the world’s largest armies in 2026.

Ranked: Teacher Salaries Around the World

2026-04-19 22:47:31

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Which countries pay teachers the most? This global comparison reveals major gaps in educator salaries worldwide.

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Ranked: Teacher Salaries Around the World

See visuals like this from many other data creators on our Voronoi app. Download it for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

Key Takeaways

  • Top teacher salaries exceed $170K in some countries, with starting pay near $100K.
  • Germany and Switzerland also offer six-figure peak salaries, far above most OECD countries.
  • In lower-paying countries, starting salaries can fall below $30K with limited long-term growth.

In some countries, teaching is a six-figure career. In others, salaries remain far lower even after decades of experience.

This chart compares statutory salaries for upper secondary teachers across OECD countries, using PPP-adjusted 2022 dollars. Data comes from the OECD’s Education at a Glance 2025 report.

To put this in perspective, the highest-paid teachers earn more than double the OECD average top salary of about $76,000, highlighting how wide the global pay gap can be.

Where Teacher Pay Reaches Six Figures

Luxembourg stands far ahead, with starting salaries near $100,000 and top pay reaching over $170,000.

Germany and Switzerland also offer six-figure peak salaries, but still trail Luxembourg by a wide margin. This gap shows how much outliers can skew global comparisons.

Country Starting Salary After 15 Years Top of Scale
🇱🇺 Luxembourg $99,621 $137,418 $173,165
🇩🇪 Germany $90,567 $107,491 $122,251
🇨🇭 Switzerland $90,469 $137,378
🇲🇽 Mexico $61,856 $75,953 $75,953
🇳🇴 Norway $61,833 $69,446 $77,382
🇦🇹 Austria $61,742 $83,166 $126,691
🇪🇸 Spain $61,074 $70,856 $87,304
🇹🇷 Türkiye $59,766 $67,091 $77,396
🇩🇰 Denmark $59,762 $77,664 $77,664
🇳🇱 Netherlands $58,805 $102,711 $121,026
🇦🇺 Australia $57,477 $81,842 $92,959
🇺🇸 United States $52,893 $76,442 $83,410
🇸🇪 Sweden $51,479 $58,755 $67,678
🏴 Scotland $51,285 $64,368 $64,368
🇨🇦 Canada $50,077 $87,285 $87,299
🇫🇮 Finland $48,930 $61,685 $65,386
🇮🇸 Iceland $48,176 $61,204 $61,204
🌍 OECD Average $47,339 $63,925 $76,535
🇫🇷 France $47,220 $53,086 $74,214
🇮🇪 Ireland $43,344 $70,865 $81,631
🇳🇿 New Zealand $41,726 $67,121 $67,121
🏴 England $41,468 $63,995 $63,995
🇵🇹 Portugal $41,321 $52,740 $87,367
🇮🇹 Italy $40,947 $50,917 $63,432
🇱🇹 Lithuania $39,107 $44,970 $51,172
🇰🇷 S. Korea $37,773 $65,765 $104,786
🇸🇮 Slovenia $36,597 $56,323 $67,365
🇯🇵 Japan $34,863 $54,168 $68,276
🇨🇴 Colombia $31,723 $57,853 $57,853
🇮🇱 Israel $31,176 $44,444 $63,367
🇨🇱 Chile $30,977 $46,525 $57,433
🇭🇺 Hungary $30,692 $34,949 $42,039
🇵🇱 Poland $28,712 $41,355 $43,101
🇨🇿 Czechia $27,348 $30,359 $35,962
🇨🇷 Costa Rica $26,678 $33,673 $40,668
🇧🇷 Brazil $24,526
🇸🇰 Slovakia $23,371 $26,913 $30,102
🇬🇷 Greece $23,363 $30,627 $45,153
🌐 Dataset Average $47,265 $63,165 $76,219

Mid-Tier Countries Show Strong Growth Potential

While starting pay is moderate in countries like Canada and the Netherlands, long-term earnings can rise significantly. In Canada, salaries increase from roughly $50K to over $87K, one of the largest jumps in the dataset.

The Netherlands also shows one of the steepest pay progressions in the dataset.

Where Teacher Pay Falls Furthest Behind

At the lower end of the scale, starting salaries in countries like Slovakia, Greece, and Brazil can fall below $30K. Even at peak levels, earnings often remain below the OECD average, highlighting major disparities in how education systems compensate teachers.

In some countries, salaries increase very little over time, limiting long-term earnings. This can contribute to teacher shortages, lower retention, and differences in education quality.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

If you enjoyed today’s post, check out Comparing Education Levels Across 45 Countries on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.

Mapped: America’s Best States to Live In

2026-04-19 19:42:13

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Map showing U.S. states by their quality of life based on 51 indicators.

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Mapped: America’s Best States to Live In

See visuals like this from many other data creators on our Voronoi app. Download it for free on iOS or Android and discover data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

Key Takeaways

  • Massachusetts ranks #1, but several Midwest states now dominate the top 10.
  • Idaho and Wisconsin outperform major coastal states on overall livability.
  • Many of the most affordable states rank near the bottom, highlighting a “livability paradox.”

What makes a state a great place to live in 2025?

Using data from WalletHub, which evaluates 51 metrics across affordability, economic opportunity, safety, and health, this map ranks all 50 U.S. states by quality of life.

The results point to a shift in where Americans can achieve the highest standard of living. While coastal states still lead in income and infrastructure, many Midwest and Mountain states are rising by combining affordability, safety, and economic stability.

Ranked: Where Quality of Life Is Highest in America

Massachusetts tops the ranking thanks to a combination of high incomes, leading healthcare access, and a dense network of top universities, but coastal states no longer dominate the list.

States like Idaho (#2) and New Hampshire (#7) show that quality of life is increasingly driven by safety and economic stability, not just taxes or climate.

Below is the full breakdown of all 50 states, ranked by their total score. Figures are rounded.

Rank State Total Score
1 Massachusetts 60.2
2 Idaho 60.2
3 New Jersey 59.8
4 Wisconsin 59.7
5 Minnesota 58.7
6 Florida 58.5
7 New Hampshire 58.2
8 Utah 57.9
9 New York 57.9
10 Pennsylvania 57.9
11 Wyoming 57.9
12 Iowa 56.2
13 Maine 56.2
14 Virginia 56.2
15 Montana 55.2
16 North Dakota 54.6
17 Illinois 54.6
18 South Dakota 54.1
19 Colorado 53.6
20 Nebraska 52.9
21 Vermont 52.7
22 North Carolina 52.3
23 Kansas 52.2
24 Connecticut 52.1
25 Rhode Island 52.1
26 Ohio 51.6
27 Georgia 51.6
28 Missouri 51.2
29 Indiana 51.2
30 Michigan 51.1
30 Arizona 51.0
32 California 50.5
33 Delaware 50.0
34 Maryland 49.8
35 Hawaii 49.4
36 Washington 49.2
37 Kentucky 47.5
38 Texas 47.2
39 Oregon 47.2
40 Tennessee 47.0
41 Alabama 47.0
42 West Virginia 47.0
43 Oklahoma 46.3
44 South Carolina 45.7
45 Nevada 44.6
46 Alaska 44.2
47 Mississippi 43.5
48 Arkansas 42.1
49 Louisiana 40.6
50 New Mexico 39.7

One of the clearest trends in the 2025 rankings is the rise of the Midwest as a quality-of-life leader.

With Wisconsin (#4) and Minnesota (#5) in the top five, the region stands out for balancing strong economic, health, and educational outcomes with relatively better affordability.

States Ranking Near the Bottom

The lowest-ranked states cluster into a clear pattern at the bottom of the map.

New Mexico (#50) and Louisiana (#49) remain the only states to score around 40 points, hampered by systemic gaps in healthcare infrastructure and safety.

Moreover, the bottom quartile of the list contains many of the nation’s most “affordable” states. This creates a “livability paradox”: states with the lowest costs often rank poorly overall, as weaker healthcare, safety, and economic mobility offset their affordability advantages.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

To learn more about this topic, check out this graphic on average salary by state.

Ranked: The Busiest U.S. Airports by Flights

2026-04-19 00:24:20

Ranked: The Busiest U.S. Airports by Flights

This was originally posted on our Voronoi app. Download the app for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

Key Takeaways

  • Chicago O’Hare sees a takeoff or landing every 37 seconds, the fastest pace in the U.S.
  • Four major hubs each handle more than 700,000 flights annually.
  • Airport rankings shift when measured by flight frequency instead of passenger volume.

Most airport rankings focus on passenger traffic, but that only tells part of the story. A different metric, aircraft movements, shows how often planes are actually taking off and landing.

Using Federal Aviation Administration data, this visualization by Julie Peasley ranks the busiest U.S. airports by total flights in 2025.

At the top, Chicago O’Hare operates at an almost continuous pace, with a takeoff or landing every 37 seconds.

U.S. Airports With the Most Flights

Here’s a look at America’s top airports by flights:

Rank Airport Airport Code Aircraft operations (2025)
1 Chicago O’Hare ORD 857,392
2 Atlanta Hartsfield-Jackson International ATL 805,268
3 Dallas/Fort Worth International DFW 743,394
4 Denver International DEN 705,469
5 Harry Reid International LAS 586,871
6 Los Angeles International LAX 580,996
7 Charlotte Douglas International CLT 574,193
8 Miami International MIA 502,771
9 Phoenix Sky Harbor International PHX 487,143
10 John F. Kennedy International JFK 468,570
11 Houston Intercontinental IAH 457,843
12 Seattle–Tacoma International SEA 435,896

Chicago O’Hare leads by a wide margin, followed by Atlanta and Dallas/Fort Worth. Notably, the top four airports all exceed 700,000 annual operations, underscoring their immense throughput and operational complexity.

To put this in perspective, here’s how quickly flights move at the top airports:

  • O’Hare (ORD): every 37 seconds
  • Atlanta (ATL): every 39 seconds
  • Dallas/Fort Worth (DFW): every 42 seconds
  • Denver (DEN): every 45 seconds

Even small differences translate into tens of thousands of additional flights per year.

Why the Busiest Airport Isn’t Always the Most Crowded

Passenger rankings favor bigger planes. Flight rankings favor more planes. That’s why airports like Chicago O’Hare and Denver rise to the top. They move aircraft more frequently, not just more people.

For context, some of the world’s busiest passenger airports do not appear at the top of this list. That’s because larger aircraft can carry more people per flight, reducing total movements even at high-traffic hubs.

O’Hare’s lead comes down to frequency. Over a full day, that 37-second pace adds up to more than 2,300 flights, far ahead of any other U.S. airport.

Meanwhile, airports like Phoenix Sky Harbor and Charlotte Douglas also rank highly because of their roles as connecting hubs, handling constant waves of arrivals and departures throughout the day.

The Role of Connectivity and Hub Strategy

Airports with strong airline hub operations naturally generate more aircraft movements. Carriers schedule tightly coordinated banks of flights to maximize connections, leading to frequent takeoffs and landings.

According to broader aviation analysis, highly connected airports tend to prioritize network efficiency over sheer passenger volume. This helps explain why hubs like Denver and Dallas/Fort Worth rank so highly, since they act as central nodes in national air travel.

Just How Busy Is “Busy”?

To put these numbers in perspective, even the 10th-ranked airport, New York’s JFK, handles a flight roughly every 67 seconds. At the top end, O’Hare’s near-continuous operations require precise coordination between air traffic control, ground crews, and airlines.

This near-constant flow of aircraft highlights how modern air travel depends on precision and coordination at scale. As flight demand grows, the busiest airports aren’t just moving more people. They’re managing an increasingly nonstop stream of planes.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

For more aviation insights, check out U.S. Airports with Most Bird Strikes on the Voronoi app.