O'Hare International Airport

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Template:Short description Template:Redirect Template:Use mdy dates Template:Use American English Template:Infobox airport

Chicago O'Hare International Airport Template:Airport codes is the primary international airport serving Chicago, Illinois, United States, located on the city's Northwest Side, approximately Template:Convert northwest of the Loop business district. The airport is operated by the Chicago Department of Aviation<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and covering Template:Convert.<ref name=FAA>Template:FAA-airport, effective September 4, 2025.</ref><ref>Template:Cite web FAA data effective September 4, 2025.</ref> O'Hare has non-stop flights to 249 destinations in North America, South America, the Caribbean, Europe, Africa, Asia, the Middle East and the North Atlantic region as of Summer 2024.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> As of 2024, O'Hare is considered the most connected airport in the United States, and fifth most connected airport in the world.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> It is also the world's fourth busiest airport and 16th largest airport.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> It is the airport with the most runways in the world.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Designed to be the successor to Chicago's Midway International Airport, itself once nicknamed the "busiest square mile in the world", O'Hare began as an airfield serving a Douglas manufacturing plant for C-54 military transports during World War II. It was renamed Orchard Field Airport in the mid-1940s and assigned the IATA code ORD. In 1949, it was renamed after aviator Edward "Butch" O'Hare, the U.S. Navy's first Medal of Honor recipient during World War II.<ref name="airways1">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="oharehistory"/> As the first major airport planned after World War II, O'Hare's innovative design pioneered concepts such as concourses, direct highway access to the terminal, jet bridges, and underground refueling systems.<ref name="RHBEIoCOIA"/>

O'Hare became famous during the jet age, holding the distinction as the world's busiest airport by passenger traffic from 1963 to 1998. It still ranks as one of the busiest airports in the world, according to the Airports Council International rankings.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In 2019, O'Hare had 919,704 aircraft movements, averaging 2,520 per day, the most of any airport in the world, in part because of a large number of regional flights.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> On the ground, road access to the airport is offered by airport shuttle, bus, the Chicago "L", or taxis. Interstate 190 (Kennedy Expressway) goes directly into the airport. O'Hare is a hub for American Airlines and United Airlines (which is headquartered in Willis Tower),<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> as well as an operating base for Frontier Airlines<ref name="Frontier focus city">Template:Cite news</ref> and Spirit Airlines.<ref name="Spirit focus city">Template:Cite news</ref>

History

Establishment and defense efforts

Template:See also

Grumman F4F-3 Wildcat on display in O'Hare's Terminal 2, restored in the markings of "Butch" O'Hare's plane

Soon after the opening of Chicago Municipal Airport in 1926, the City of Chicago realized more airport capacity would be needed. The city government investigated various sites in the 1930s but made little progress before America's entry into World War II.<ref name="airways1" />

O'Hare began as a manufacturing plant for Douglas C-54 Skymasters during World War II and adjoining Douglas Field Airport.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The site was originally known as a small German-American farming community known as Orchard Place. The Template:Convert plant, in the northeast corner of what is now the airport, needed easy access to the workforce of Chicago—the nation's second-largest city at the time, as well as needing railroads and location far from enemy threat. 655 C-54s were built at the plant, more than half of all produced. The airfield, from which the C-54s flew out, was known as Douglas Airport; initially, it had four Template:Convert runways.<ref name="airways1" /> This was also the location of the Army Air Force's 803rd Specialized Depot,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> a unit charged with storing many captured enemy aircraft; a few representatives of this collection would eventually be transferred to the Smithsonian Institution's National Air and Space Museum.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Douglas Company's contract ended with the war's conclusion. Douglas considered building airliners at Orchard but chose to concentrate civil production at its headquarters in Santa Monica, California.<ref name="airways1" /> With the departure of Douglas, the complex took the name Orchard (Douglas) Airport, and was assigned the IATA code ORD. The only remaining building of the Douglas Aircraft Factory is the Administration building now used by the City of Chicago, Department of Aviation.<ref name="ORDCode">Template:Cite web</ref>

The United States Air Force used the field extensively during the Korean War; the airport then had no scheduled airline service. Although not its primary base in the area, the Air Force used O'Hare as a fighter base; it was home to the 62nd Fighter-Interceptor Squadron flying North American F-86 Sabres from 1950 to 1959.<ref name="Air Force">Template:Cite web</ref> By 1960, the need for O'Hare as an active duty fighter base was diminishing, just as commercial business was picking up at the airport. The Air Force removed active-duty units from O'Hare and turned the station over to Continental Air Command, enabling them to base reserve and Air National Guard units there.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> As a result of a 1993 agreement between the City and the Department of Defense, the reserve base was closed on April 1, 1997, ending its career as the home of the 928th Airlift Wing and of the 126th Air Refueling Wing in 1999. At that time, the remaining Template:Convert site came under the ownership of the Chicago Department of Aviation.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Early commercial development

In 1945, Chicago mayor Edward Kelly established a board to choose the site of a new airport to meet future demand. After considering various proposals, the board decided upon the Orchard Field site and acquired most of the federal government property in March 1946. The military retained a small parcel of property on the site and the right to use 25% of the airfield's operating capacity for free.<ref name="airways1" />

Ralph H. Burke devised an airport master plan based on the pioneering idea of what he called "split finger terminals", allowing a terminal building to be attached to "airline wings" (concourses), each providing space for gates and planes. (Pre-war airport designs had favored ever-larger single terminals, exemplified by Berlin's Tempelhof.) Burke's design also included underground refueling, direct highway access to the front of terminals, and direct rail access from downtown, all of which are utilized at airports worldwide today.<ref name="RHBEIoCOIA">Template:Cite web</ref> O'Hare was the site of the world's first jet bridge in 1958,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> and successfully adapted slip form paving, developed for the nation's new Interstate highway system, for seamless concrete runways.

In 1949, the City renamed the facility O'Hare Airport to honor Edward "Butch" O'Hare, the U.S. Navy's first flying ace and Medal of Honor recipient in World War II.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> However, its IATA code (ORD) remained unchanged, resulting in O'Hare being one of the few IATA codes bearing no connection to the airport's name or metropolitan area.<ref name="ORDCode" />

Arrival of passenger service and subsequent growth

Scheduled passenger service began in 1955,<ref name="oharehistory">Template:Cite web</ref> but growth was slow at first. Although Chicago had invested over $25 million in O'Hare, Midway remained the world's busiest airport and airlines were reluctant to move until highway access and other improvements were completed.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The April 1957 Official Airline Guide listed 36 weekday departures from O'Hare, while Midway had 414. Improvements began to attract the airlines: O'Hare's first international terminal opened in August 1958, and by April 1959 the airport had expanded to Template:Convert with new hangars, terminals, parking and other facilities. The expressway link to downtown Chicago, now known as the Kennedy Expressway, was completed in 1960.<ref name="oharehistory" /> New TerminalsTemplate:Nbsp2 andTemplate:Nbsp3, designed by C. F. Murphy and Associates, opened on January 1, 1962.<ref name="complex">Template:Cite news</ref>

The biggest factor driving airlines to relocate their operations from Midway to O'Hare was the jet airliner; the first scheduled jet at O'Hare was an American 707 from New York to Chicago to San Francisco on March 22, 1959.<ref>Chicago Tribune March 22, 1959, part 1 p3, March 23 part 3 p19</ref> One-mile-square (2.6-kilometer-square) Midway had no space for the runways that 707s and DC-8s required. Airlines had been reluctant to move to O'Hare, but they naturally did not want to split their operations: in July 1962, the last fixed-wing scheduled airline flight in Chicago moved from Midway to O'Hare. Until United returned in July 1964, Midway's only scheduled airline was Chicago Helicopter Airways. The arrival of Midway's traffic quickly made O'Hare the world's busiest airport, serving 10 million passengers annually. Within two years, that number would double, with Chicagoans boasting that more people passed through O'Hare in 12 months than Ellis Island had processed in its entire existence. O'Hare remained the world's busiest airport until it was eclipsed by Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport in 1998.

O'Hare had four runways in 1955;<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Template:Convert runway 14R/32L opened in 1956 and was extended to Template:Convert a few years later, allowing nonstops to Europe. Runway 9R/27L (now 10L/28R) opened in 1968 and runway 4R/22L in 1971.

Post-deregulation developments

In the 1980s, after passage of US airline deregulation, the first major change at O'Hare occurred when TWA left Chicago for St. Louis as its main mid-continent hub.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Although TWA had a large hangar complex at O'Hare and had started Constellation nonstops to Paris in 1958, by the time of deregulation its operation was losing $25 million a year under competition from United and American.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Northwest likewise ceded O'Hare to the competition and shifted to a Minneapolis/St. Paul and Detroit-centered network by the early 1990s after acquiring Republic Airlines in 1986.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Delta maintained an O'Hare hub for some time, even commissioning a new ConcourseTemplate:NbspL in 1983.<ref name="airways2">Template:Cite web</ref> Ultimately, Delta found competing from an inferior position at O'Hare too expensive and closed its Chicago hub in the 1990s, concentrating its upper Midwest operations at Cincinnati.

The Terminal 1 underground tunnel connects Concourses B and C.

The dominant hubs established at O'Hare in the 1980s by United and American continue to operate today. United developed a new two-concourse TerminalTemplate:Nbsp1 (dubbed "The Terminal for Tomorrow"), designed by Helmut Jahn. It was built between 1985 and 1987 on the site of the original TerminalTemplate:Nbsp1; the structure, which includes 50 gates, is best known for its curved glass forms and the connecting underground tunnel between ConcoursesTemplate:NbspB andTemplate:NbspC.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The tunnel is illuminated with a neon installation titled Sky's the Limit (1987) by Canadian artist Michael Hayden, which plays an airy, slow-tempo version of Rhapsody in Blue.<ref>Chicago O'Hare International Airport Template:Webarchive. Reported Lost&Found. Retrieved June 24, 2020</ref> American renovated and expanded its existing facilities in TerminalTemplate:Nbsp3 from 1987 to 1990; those renovations feature a flag-lined entrance hall to ConcoursesTemplate:NbspH/K.<ref name="term3renov">Template:Cite book</ref>

The demolition of the original Terminal 1 in 1984 to make way for Jahn's design forced a "temporary" relocation of international flights into facilities called "TerminalTemplate:Nbsp4" on the ground floor of the airport's central parking garage. International passengers were then transferred by bus to and from their aircraft. Relocation finally ended with the completion of the 21-gate International Terminal in 1993 (now called TerminalTemplate:Nbsp5); it contains all customs facilities. Its location, on the site of the original cargo area and east of the terminal core, necessitated the construction of a peoplemover, which connected the terminal core with the new terminal as well as remote rental and parking lots.<ref name="airways2" />

Following deregulation and the buildup of the American and United hubs, O'Hare faced increasing delays from the late 1980s onward due to its inefficient runway layout; the airfield had remained unchanged since the addition of its last new runway (4R/22L) in 1971.<ref>Flightguide Vol. II, Revision 5/71, Airguide Publications/Monty Navarre, Monterrey CA</ref> O'Hare's three pairs of angled runways were meant to allow takeoffs into the wind, but they came at a cost: the various intersecting runways were both dangerous and inefficient. Official reports at the end of the 1990s ranked O'Hare as one of the worst-performing airports in the United States based on the percentage of delayed flights.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In 2001, the Chicago Department of Aviation committed to an O'Hare Modernization Plan (OMP). Initially estimated at $6.6 billion, the OMP was to be paid by bonds issued against the increase in the federal passenger facility charge enacted that year and federal airport improvement funds.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The modernization plan was approved by the FAA in October 2005 and involved a complete reconfiguration of the airfield. The OMP included the construction of four new runways, lengthening two existing runways, and decommissioning three old runways to provide O'Hare with six parallel runways and two crosswind runways.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The OMP was the subject of legal battles, both with suburbs who feared the new layout's noise implications as well as with survivors of persons interred in a cemetery the city proposed to relocate; some of the cases were not resolved until 2011.<ref name="airways3">Template:Cite web</ref> These issues, plus the reduction in traffic as a result of the Great Recession, delayed the OMP's completion; construction of the sixth and final parallel runway (9C/27C) began in 2016.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Its completion in 2020, along with an extension of runway 9R/27L completed in 2021, concluded the OMP.<ref name="OMPComplete">Template:Cite web</ref>

Expansion

Control tower and Terminals 3 and 2 seen from ATS (Airport Transit System)

In 2018, the city and airlines committed to PhaseTemplate:NbspI of a new Terminal Area Plan dubbed O'Hare 21. The plan calls for two all-new satellite concourses to the southwest of Concourse C, and to expand Terminals 2 and 5 with additional gates, lounges, and updates to operations all over the airport. (Terminal 5 has ten new gates in addition to its newly expanded facilities, plus two additional gates to each accommodate an Airbus A380.)<ref name="O'Hare21">Template:Cite news</ref> The expansion will enable same-terminal transfers between international and domestic flights, faster connections, improved facilities and technology for TSA and customs inspections and much larger landside amenities such as shopping and restaurants. A principal feature of the plan is the reorganization of the terminal core into an "alliance hub," the first in North America; airside connections and layout will be optimized around airline alliances. This will be made possible by the construction of the O'Hare Global Terminal (OGT) where TerminalTemplate:Nbsp2 currently stands. The OGT and two new satellite concourses will allow for expansion for both American's and United's international operations as well as easy interchange with their respective Oneworld (American) and Star Alliance (United) partner carriers, eliminating the need to transfer to Terminal 5.

The project will add over Template:Convert to the airport's terminals, add a new customs processing center in the OGT, reconstruct gates and concourses (new concourses will be a minimum of Template:Convert wide), increase the gate count from 185 to 235, and provide 25% more ramp space at every gate throughout the airport to accommodate larger aircraft.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> After an international design competition that featured public voting on five final architectural proposals, the Studio ORD group, led by architect Jeanne Gang (in collaboration with SCB, Corgan, Milhouse, and STL Architect), was selected to design the OGT,<ref>Template:Cite press release</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> while Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP will design SatellitesTemplate:Nbsp1 andTemplate:Nbsp2.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> By terms of the agreement, total costs of $8.5 billion for the project are to be borne by bonds issued by the city, which will be retired by airport usage fees paid by airlines. O'Hare 21 is scheduled for completion of the two satellite terminals in 2028, and overall completion in 2030.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>Template:Update inline

By November 2023, the project's cost had ballooned far over budget, leading both American Airlines and United Airlines to call for the global terminal project to be cancelled or scaled back.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> On May 3, 2024, American Airlines and United Airlines were able to reach an agreement with the City of Chicago to allow the project to continue. In the agreement, the replacement of Terminal 2 would be accelerated, while the addition of Satellite 2 concourse would be delayed. The replacement of Terminal 2 with the OGT was deemed more critical to complete first instead of the Satellite 2 concourse.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="Full Updated Timeline">Template:Cite news</ref> The design of Satellite 1 concourse was presented to the public on May 29, 2024, it was planned to complete Satellite 1 concourse by 2028.<ref name="designs for Satellite Concourse 1">Template:Cite news</ref>

Facilities

United Airlines Terminal 1, Concourse B
American Airlines Terminal 3 main hall

Terminals

O'Hare has four numbered passenger terminals with nine lettered concourses and a total of 215 gates, the most of any airport in the world.<ref name="ORDMap">Template:Cite web</ref>

Terminals 1–3 are connected airside via a walkway.<ref name="ORDConnect">Template:Cite web</ref> Terminal 5 is separated from the others by taxiways and does not have a walkway between it and Terminals 1–3; passengers transferring between Terminal 5 and the others can only do so landside via a shuttle bus or the Airport Transit System, requiring rescreening at security, or via an airside shuttle bus that runs between Terminal 5 and Terminals 1 and 3 every 15 minutes from 11:30 am to 9:30 pm.<ref name="ORDConnect" />

Runways

O'Hare has two sets of parallel runways, one on either side of the terminal complex. Each airfield has three parallel east–west runways (9L/27R, 9C/27C, and 9R/27L on the north side; 10L/28R, 10C/28C, and 10R/28L on the south side) and a crosswind runway oriented northeast–southwest (4L/22R on the north, 4R/22L on the south). The north crosswind runway, 4L/22R, sees limited usage due to intersecting 9R/27L and 9C/27C;<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> however, runway 22L is often used for takeoffs during what is called "west flow" on the main runways. The airfield is managed by three FAA air traffic control towers. O'Hare has a voluntary nighttime (22:00–07:00) noise abatement program.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

In 2015, runway 32R/14L was permanently closed after 72 years of service, in favor of the new runway 10R/28L. In 2019, runway 32L/14R was also closed.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Currently, O'Hare has the most runways of any civilian airport in the world, totaling eight.<ref>"FAA: Construction can start on new O'Hare terminals". (November 25, 2022). Hometown Register, p.A2 col.2</ref>

Hotel

The Hilton Chicago O'Hare is between the terminal core and parking garage and is currently the only hotel on airport property. It is owned by the Chicago Department of Aviation and operated under an agreement with Hilton Hotels, who extended their agreement with the city by ten years in 2018.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Ground transportation

The Airport Transit System shuttles passengers between the terminal core (Terminals 1–3), Terminal 5, and the O'Hare Multi-Modal Facility (MMF).<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The system, which re-opened on November 3, 2021, resumed round-the-clock service starting at 5 a.m. on Monday, April 18, 2022,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> after a nearly six-year renovation.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Meanwhile, free shuttle buses also continue to run 24/7 and contribute to congestion, boarding on the upper (departures) level of all terminals. The Bus Shuttle center, located on the ground level of the parking garage between Terminals 1–3 and directly opposite the Hilton Hotel, provides a temporary boarding location for local hotel shuttles and regional public transport buses.<ref name="MMF">Template:Cite web</ref> The O'Hare Multi-Modal Facility is the home of all on-airport car rental firms as well as some extended parking.<ref name="MMF"/> In addition, the Chicago-area commuter rail system, Metra, has a transfer station of its North Central Service (NCS) located at the northeast corner of the MMF; however, the NCS currently operates an occasional schedule on weekdays only.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The CTA Blue Line's north terminus is at Template:Cta and provides direct service to downtown via the Milwaukee–Dearborn subway in the Loop and continuing to west suburban Forest Park. Trains depart at intervals ranging from every four to thirty minutes, 24 hours a day.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The station is located on the lower level of the parking garage, and can be accessed directly from TerminalsTemplate:Nbsp1–3 via tunnel and from TerminalTemplate:Nbsp5 via shuttle bus.

Pace, Peoria Charter, Van Galder Bus Company, and Wisconsin Coach Lines operate bus service to O'Hare, stopping at the MMF.

Airline shuttle buses

Template:Bus icon Operator Destinations Refs
American Airlines (operated by Landline) Chicago/Rockford, South Bend<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> <ref>Trip connections with Landline</ref>

American Airlines offers "tarmac-to-tarmac" bus service between O'Hare and several airports within close proximity, which are considered too close for flights to be economically feasible. This is designed to facilitate connections through O'Hare, a major international hub for American Airlines. Passengers check their bags and clear security at their respective airport, and board a motorcoach that takes them directly to a gate past security at O'Hare. The service is operated by the Landline Company, and is booked through the regular American Airlines reservation system.

O'Hare is directly served by Interstate 190, which offers interchanges with Mannheim Road (U.S. 12 and 45), the Tri-State Tollway (Interstate 294), and Interstate 90. I-90 continues as the Kennedy Expressway into downtown Chicago and becomes the Jane Addams Memorial Tollway northwest to Rockford and the Wisconsin state line.

Cargo facilities

There are presently two main cargo areas at O'Hare. The South Cargo Area was relocated in the 1980s from the airport's first air cargo facilities, located east of the terminal core, where TerminalTemplate:Nbsp5 now stands. Many of the structures in this new cargo area then had to be rebuilt, again, to allow for the OMP and specifically runway 10R/28L; as a result, what is now called the South Cargo Area is located between 10R/28L and 10C/28C. This large collection of facilities, in three sections (Southwest, South Central, and Southeast), was established mainly by traditional airline-based air cargo; Air France Cargo, American, JAL Cargo, KLM, Lufthansa Cargo, Northwest and United all built purpose-built, freestanding cargo facilities,<ref name="manual">Template:Cite web</ref> although some of these are now leased out to dedicated cargo firms. In addition, the area contains two separate facilities for shipper FedEx and one for UPS.<ref name="manual" />

The Northeast Cargo Area (NEC) is a conversion of the former military base (the Douglas plant area) at the northeast corner of the airport property. It is a new facility designed to increase O'Hare's cargo capacity by 50%. Two buildings currently make up the NEC: a Template:Convert building completed in 2016,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and a Template:Convert building that was completed in 2017.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> A third structure will complete the NEC with another Template:Convert of warehouse space.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The current capability of the cargo areas provide Template:Convert of airside cargo space with parking for 40 wide-body freighters matched with over Template:Convert of landside warehousing capability. O'Hare shipped over Template:Convert in 2018, fifth among airports in the U.S.<ref>Template:Cite web (Select: O'Hare / 2081 / December)</ref>

Other facilities

In 2011, O'Hare became the first major airport to build an apiary on its property; every summer, it hosts as many as 75 hives and a million bees. The bees are maintained by 30 to 40 ex-offenders with little to no work experience and few marketable skills; they are primarily recruited from Chicago's North Lawndale neighborhood. They are taught beekeeping but also benefit from the bees' labor, turning it into bottled fresh honey, soaps, lip balms, candles and moisturizers marketed under the beelove product line.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> More than 500 persons have completed the program, transferring to jobs in manufacturing, food processing, customer service, and hospitality; the repeat-offender rate is reported to be less than 10%.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The CDA's Airport Airfield Operations section is based out of the Template:Cvt tall prototype tower architect I.M. Pei designed for the FAA in the 1960s-1970s.

Resthaven Cemetery, which predates the airport, is situated across from the FedEx facility. Over 300 people are interred at Resthaven, which was allowed to remain on the airport grounds post-OMP while another cemetery, St. Johannes, had to be relocated.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Airlines and destinations

Passenger

Template:Airport destination list

Cargo

Template:Airport destination list

Statistics

Top destinations

Template:Table alignment

Busiest domestic routes from ORD (January 2024 – December 2024)<ref name="Chicago_BTS">Template:Cite web</ref>
Rank Airport Passengers Carriers
1 Template:Flagicon New York–LaGuardia, New York 1,315,000 American, Delta, Spirit, United
2 Template:Flagicon Los Angeles, California 1,171,000 American, Spirit, United
3 Template:Flagicon Denver, Colorado 1,046,000 American, Frontier, Southwest, United
4 Template:Flagicon Dallas/Fort Worth, Texas 953,000 American, Frontier, Spirit, United
5 Template:Flagicon San Francisco, California 932,000 Alaska, American, United
6 Template:Flagicon Phoenix–Sky Harbor, Arizona 898,000 American, Frontier, Southwest, Spirit, United
7 Template:Flagicon Newark, New Jersey 852,000 American, Spirit, United
8 Template:Flagicon Boston, Massachusetts 845,000 American, Delta, JetBlue, United
9 Template:Flagicon Orlando, Florida 813,000 American, Frontier, Southwest, Spirit, United
10 Template:Flagicon Las Vegas, Nevada 812,000 American, Frontier, Southwest, Spirit, United
Busiest international routes from ORD (January 2024 – December 2024)<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Rank Airport Passengers Carriers
1 Template:Flagicon London–Heathrow, United Kingdom 1,094,460 American, British Airways, United
2 Template:Flagicon Toronto–Pearson, Canada 900,413 Air Canada, American, United
3 Template:Flagicon Cancún, Mexico 874,047 American, Frontier, Southwest, Spirit, United
4 Template:Flagicon Mexico City, Mexico 718,972 Aeroméxico, United, Viva, Volaris
5 Template:Flagicon Frankfurt, Germany 675,568 Lufthansa, United
6 Template:Flagicon Tokyo–Haneda, Japan 447,242 All Nippon Airways, Japan Airlines, United
7 Template:Flagicon Munich, Germany 436,877 Lufthansa, United
8 Template:Flagicon Paris–Charles de Gaulle, France 398,815 Air France, American, United
9 Template:Flagicon Dublin, Ireland 395,813 Aer Lingus, American, United
10 Template:Flagicon Guadalajara, Mexico 390,476 Aeroméxico, Viva, Volaris

Airline market share

Template:Table alignment

Top airlines at ORD (February 2023 – January 2024)<ref name="Chicago_BTS" />
Rank Airline Passengers Percent of market share
1 United Airlines 23,788,000 40.58%
2 American Airlines 13,342,000 22.76%
3 SkyWest Airlines 5,447,000 9.29%
4 Envoy Air 2,773,000 4.73%
5 Delta Air Lines 2,538,000 4.42%
Other 10,479,000 18.27%

Annual traffic

Template:Airport-Statistics

Traffic by calendar year<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Year Passenger volume Change over previous year Aircraft operations Cargo tonnage
2000 72,144,244 Template:DecreaseTemplate:00.64% 908,989 1,640,524
2001 67,448,064 Template:DecreaseTemplate:06.51% 911,917 1,413,834
2002 66,565,952 Template:DecreaseTemplate:01.31% 922,817 1,436,386
2003 69,508,672 Template:IncreaseTemplate:04.40% 928,691 1,601,736
2004 75,533,822 Template:IncreaseTemplate:08.67% 992,427 1,685,808
2005 76,581,146 Template:IncreaseTemplate:01.38% 972,248 1,701,446
2006 76,282,212 Template:DecreaseTemplate:00.30% 958,643 1,718,011
2007 76,182,025 Template:DecreaseTemplate:00.15% 926,973 1,690,742
2008 70,819,015 Template:DecreaseTemplate:07.03% 881,566 1,480,847
2009 64,397,782 Template:DecreaseTemplate:09.07% 827,899 1,198,426
2010 67,026,191 Template:IncreaseTemplate:03.83% 882,617 1,577,048
2011 66,790,996 Template:DecreaseTemplate:00.35% 878,798 1,505,218
2012 66,834,931 Template:IncreaseTemplate:00.04% 878,108 1,443,569
2013 66,909,638 Template:IncreaseTemplate:00.12% 883,287 1,434,377
2014 70,075,204 Template:IncreaseTemplate:04.45% 881,933 1,578,330
2015 76,949,336 Template:IncreaseTemplate:09.81% 875,136 1,742,501
2016 77,960,588 Template:IncreaseTemplate:01.31% 867,635 1,726,362
2017 79,828,183 Template:IncreaseTemplate:02.40% 867,049 1,950,137
2018 83,339,186<ref name="flychicago.com">Template:Cite web</ref> Template:IncreaseTemplate:04.40% 903,747 1,868,880
2019 84,649,115 Template:IncreaseTemplate:01.69% 919,704 1,788,001
2020 30,860,251 Template:DecreaseTemplate:063.54% 538,211 2,052,025
2021 54,020,399 Template:IncreaseTemplate:075.06% 684,201 2,536,576
2022 68,340,619 Template:IncreaseTemplate:026.50% 711,561 2,235,709
2023 73,894,226 Template:IncreaseTemplate:08.13% 720,582 1,906,463
2024 80,043,050 Template:IncreaseTemplate:08.56% 776,036 2,074,006

On-time performance (domestic major U.S. carriers only)

On-time performance by calendar year<ref name="Chicago_BTS" />
Year Percent of on-time flights Average delay (min) Percent of
cancelled flights
Departures Arrivals Departures Arrivals
2017 79% 81% 69.43 77.38 1.40%
2018 77% 77% 69.15 77.91 2.14%
2019 75% 75% 73.69 86.01 3.11%
2020 84% 85% 65.36 78.36 6.18%
2021 81% 82% 70.40 82.42 1.93%
2022 78% 79% 70.26 80.29 2.75%
2023 79% 79% 71.35 78.22 1.22%
2024 77% 78% 76.43 80.54 1.35%

Major accidents and incidents

The following is a list of major crashes or incidents that occurred to planes at O'Hare, on approach, or just after takeoff from the airport:<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

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  • On May 18, 2025, a DoorDash driver attempting to make a delivery in a red Hyundai Elantra made it past a gated security checkpoint and onto the secure roadways at O’Hare, driving a significant distance until stopping on the ramp next to a United jet parked at the gate. Although approached by baggage handlers, security did not respond for another 10 minutes. No guard was present at the checkpoint, according to the driver, who was following the GPS coordinates to his destination, and the guard who was responsible did not immediately report the matter. However, the driver was not cited, and the Chicago Department of Aviation ended its relationship with the security contractor, which also no longer employs the guard.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

See also

References

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Further reading

  • Bednarek, Janet Rose Daly. America's airports: airfield development, 1918-1947 (Texas A&M University Press, 2001).
  • Branigan, Michael. A History of Chicago's O'Hare Airport (Arcadia Publishing, 2011) online
  • Brodherson, David. "O'Hare Airport" Encyclopedia of Chicago. (2004) online
  • Brodherson, David. “All Airplanes Lead to Chicago: Airport Planning and Design in a Midwest Metropolis.” In Chicago Architecture and Design, 1923–1993: Reconfiguration of an American Metropolis, ed. John Zukowsky, (1993).
  • Cannon, Charles B. The O'Hare Story (1980).
  • Cidell, Julie. "When runways move but people don’t: The O’Hare Modernization Program and the relative immobilities of air travel." Mobilities 8.4 (2013): 528-541.
  • Cidell, Julie. "O'Hare International Airport and land use incompatibility." Bulletin of the Illinois Geographical Society 48.1 (2006): 1-19.
  • Doherty, Richard Paul. "The origin and development of Chicago-O'Hare International Airport" (PhD dissertation, Ball State University; ProQuest Dissertations & Theses,  1970. 7109048).
  • Kent, David E. Midway Airport (Arcadia Publishing, 2013) online

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