Traffic & Transit
New Hampshire Highways May Be Especially Congested This Thanksgiving: Here’s Why
Most people will be traveling by car. AAA projects that 73 million people, or nearly 90% of all holiday travelers, will take road trips.
NEW HAMPSHIRE — Granite Staters traveling for Thanksgiving are expected to encounter record crowds on the highway this year, as some travelers opted to drive instead of flying to their destinations, according to AAA estimates.
In its 2025 Thanksgiving travel forecast, the auto club projects 81.8 million people will travel at least 50 miles from home over the Thanksgiving travel period that starts Tuesday and continues through Monday, Dec. 1.
The domestic travel forecast includes an additional 1.6 million travelers compared to last Thanksgiving, setting a new overall record. Thanksgiving is the single-busiest holiday for travel, compared to others like Memorial Day and July 4.
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Most people will be traveling by car. AAA projects that 73 million people, or nearly 90 percent of all holiday travelers, will take road trips. That’s about 1.3 million more people on the roads than last year, and the number could be higher if some air travelers decide to drive instead of fly due to lingering disruptions at airports from the government shutdown.
Approximately 6 million people, 2 percent fewer than last year, are planning to fly. YOURSTATE residents who have booked Thanksgiving air travel should check for delays and cancellations with a tracking service such as FlightAware before leaving for the airport.
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While flight reductions at high-traffic airports have been lifted with the reopening of the government, travelers may experience some lingering travel disruptions, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy has said.
New Hampshire residents who are driving somewhere for Thanksgiving should anticipate heavy traffic on both Tuesday and Wednesday, according to the transportation data company INRIX. Travelers returning home on Sunday should expect heavy traffic most of the day.
Here are the worst and best times to travel during the seven-day holiday period:
- Tuesday: worst, 12-9 p.m.; best, before noon.
- Wednesday: worst 11 a.m.-8 p.m.; best, before 11 a.m.
- Thanksgiving Day: minimal traffic impact expected
- Friday: worst, 1-7 p.m.; best, before 11 a.m.
- Saturday: worst, 1-8 p.m.; best, before 10 a.m.
- Sunday: worst, 11 a.m.-8 p.m.; best, before 11 a.m.
- Monday, Dec. 1: noon-8 p.m.; best, after 8 p.m.
Travel delays should be expected in the top 10 Thanksgiving destinations, AAA said. They are Orlando, Florida; Fort Lauderdale, Florida; Miami; Anaheim/Los Angeles; Tampa, Florida; New York City; San Francisco; Honolulu; Las Vegas; and Atlanta.
Editor's note: This post was scripted by another Patch staffer, not New Hampshire's editor, for publication on New Hampshire sites.
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