Flight time
The non-stop flight from Chicago, United States to New York, United States takes about 2h 4m in the air, covering roughly 1,144 km. Here is the distance, the time difference, and what your body clock will read on arrival.
Counting only time in the air, Chicago to New York is about 2h 4m non-stop. That figure comes from the 1,144-kilometre great-circle distance — the shortest line over the curve of the Earth — stretched by a small margin for real routing and divided by typical jet cruise speed, with taxi, climb, and descent folded in. On a real schedule the block time can run longer or shorter: headwinds, air-traffic routing, and the specific aircraft all move the number. The westbound leg of a long route into prevailing winds is often the slower of the two directions.
New York is 1 hour ahead of Chicago (+01:00 relative to the origin). Flying eastbound, that offset adds to the apparent trip length: the 2h 4m you spend in the air looks longer on the arrival clock. When the wheels touch down, your body is still on Chicago time — which is exactly the figure the live calculator below shows as the body-clock reading. The gap can shift by an hour around daylight saving transitions, since the two regions rarely change their clocks on the same weekend.
Crossing 1 time zone eastbound is enough to feel. As a rule of thumb the body re-syncs about one time zone per day, so plan for a few days of adjustment. Eastbound travel — losing hours, going to bed earlier than your body wants — is the harder direction for most people. Shifting your sleep earlier for a couple of nights before you fly, and chasing morning light at the destination, both help. For a personalised light, sleep, and meal plan, see the jet lag calculator.
The 1,144 km figure is the great-circle distance, computed with the haversine formula between the two city coordinates. On a flat map it can look like a curve, because the shortest real-world path bows toward the pole rather than following a straight line of latitude — which is why Chicago-New York flights often track far north or south of where the map suggests. Real flown distance is a touch longer, around 1,213 km here, once airways and weather routing are added. To unwind the time-zone math on your own specific flight, enter the boarding-pass times below.
Enter your real departure and arrival times, each in its own local clock, to strip out the time-zone shift and get the true duration.
True flight time
19h
Chicago to New York · 1,144 km great-circle
Flying east, the destination clock is 1h ahead. So a 19h flight appears to take 20h on the wall. When you land, your body still thinks it is 05:00 back in Chicago.