Flight time & jet lag: Seattle to Houston
Seattle (SEA) → Houston (IAH) · 3,013 km (1,872 mi) · medium haul · intra north america
The flight from Seattle (SEA) to Houston (IAH) takes 4h 03m to 4h 42m covering 3,013 km. Houston is 2 hours ahead of Seattle, making this a light-severity jet lag route traveling east. Full circadian adjustment typically takes 2 days.
- Route:
- Seattle (SEA) → Houston (IAH)
- Distance:
- 3,013 km (1,872 mi)
- Flight time:
- 4h 03m to 4h 42m gate-to-gate
- Time difference:
- +2 hours
- Jet lag severity:
- light (2 zones crossed)
- Recovery time:
- ~2 days
- Direction:
- eastbound
- Route type:
- medium-haul, intra north america
- Origin timezone:
- America/Los_Angeles
- Destination timezone:
- America/Chicago
Seattle to Houston: Route overview
This medium-haul route from Seattle (SEA) to Houston (IAH) covers 3,013 km in approximately 4h 03m to 4h 42m, crossing 2 time zones eastbound. With only a 2-hour time difference, most travelers adjust within a day, though the medium-haul journey may still cause travel fatigue. The route transitions between temperate and subtropical climate zones, so expect a significant change in daylight duration and intensity that influences your circadian adjustment strategy.
What makes the Seattle–Houston route different
With only 2 hours of time difference, this route sits at the threshold where jet lag is barely noticeable for most travelers. The bigger factor is likely the 4h 03m to 4h 42m flight duration itself and any associated sleep deprivation.
Arrival strategy for Houston
Arriving in Houston after a 2-hour eastward shift, your body will think it is 2 hours earlier than the local clock shows. If you arrive in the morning, push through fatigue and get outside in bright daylight. If you arrive in the evening, eat a light meal and go to bed at the local time — you may wake early, but resist getting up until at least 05:00.
Circadian rhythm analysis: Seattle → Houston
When you arrive in Houston, your circadian rhythm is still running on Seattle time. At 09:00 Houston time, your body clock reads 07:00 — early morning on your body clock. You will feel groggy but functional, with energy building through the local morning. By 22:00 local time (when you should sleep), your body reads 20:00 — approaching your natural evening. Sleep onset should be achievable with proper wind-down routine. Your circadian system adjusts at roughly 1 hour per day, so expect 2 days for full alignment.
Your body clock in Houston (day 1)
How your body clock maps to local time upon arrival, before any adjustment.
| Houston Time | Your Body Clock (Seattle) | How You Feel | Recommendation |
|---|---|---|---|
| 06:00 | 04:00 | Early wake phase. Groggy, low energy. | Light physical activity helps. Coffee is acceptable if 8+ hours before target bedtime. |
| 09:00 | 07:00 | Morning alertness building. Moderate energy. | Good window for bright light exposure if adjusting eastward. |
| 12:00 | 10:00 | Peak morning alertness on body time. | Productive window. Use this energy for important tasks. |
| 15:00 | 13:00 | Post-lunch dip. Moderate energy. | Brief 20-min nap acceptable if severely fatigued. Avoid long naps. |
| 18:00 | 16:00 | Afternoon alertness on body time. | Good window for light exposure if adjusting westward. |
| 21:00 | 19:00 | Evening wind-down. Melatonin starting to rise. | Dim lights and avoid screens if you need to stay awake longer. |
| 00:00 | 22:00 | Natural sleep window on body time. | Ideal time to sleep if it aligns with local night. If not, use bright light to delay. |
| 03:00 | 01:00 | Deep sleep phase. Intense drowsiness likely. | If awake, use bright light to push clock forward. Avoid driving or complex tasks. |
Pre-departure preparation
To prepare for this 2-hour eastward shift to Houston, begin adjusting 2 days before departure. Each night, move your bedtime 60 minutes earlier and wake correspondingly earlier. Seek bright light immediately upon waking. On departure day, set your watch to Houston time and begin eating meals on that schedule. This pre-adjustment can reduce your recovery time by 1–2 days.
Your first 72 hours in Houston
Day 1 in Houston: Your body is ~2 hours off local time. Get bright sunlight in the morning. Avoid napping past 14:00. Eat at local mealtimes even if not hungry. Caffeine is fine before 14:00, not after. Day 2: ~1 hours off. Continue morning (07:00–10:00) light exposure. Sleep quality should improve. Day 3: ~0 hours off. You should feel mostly adjusted. Return to normal activities.
Recovery timeline
Full circadian adjustment for the Seattle → Houston route typically takes 2 days, based on the body's natural adaptation rate of ~1 hour per day for eastbound travel. During this period, expect gradually improving sleep quality, with the most noticeable symptoms (fatigue, difficulty concentrating, appetite changes) during the first 2 days. By day 2, most travelers report feeling fully synchronized with Houston's schedule.
Route Planner
Adjust departure date for DST-accurate results.
Business hours: Seattle vs Houston
Seattle and Houston share 7 overlapping business hours, providing a reasonable window for scheduling calls and meetings. The most productive overlap falls between 09:00 and 15:00 in Seattle (11:00–17:00 in Houston).
| Seattle | Houston |
|---|---|
| 09:00 | 11:00 |
| 10:00 | 12:00 |
| 11:00 | 13:00 |
| 12:00 | 14:00 |
| 13:00 | 15:00 |
| 14:00 | 16:00 |
| 15:00 | 17:00 |
- 09:00 Seattle / 11:00 Houston
- 12:00 Seattle / 14:00 Houston
Seasonal and climate factors
Flight times between Seattle and Houston can vary by 15–30 minutes seasonally due to shifting wind patterns along this medium-haul corridor. Houston at 30°N experiences moderate seasonal daylight variation. Summer offers longer evenings useful for westward adjustment, while winter's earlier sunsets support eastward adjustment schedules.
How the Seattle–Houston flight time is estimated
The 4h 03m to 4h 42m estimate for Seattle to Houston is derived from the 3,013-km great-circle distance. Medium-haul flights balance cruise and non-cruise phases, achieving effective speeds of 780–850 km/h. An additional 30–50 minutes accounts for taxi, takeoff, climb, descent, approach, and taxi at both SEA and IAH. Actual routing through controlled airspace may add 3–8% distance beyond the great-circle path due to air traffic corridors and restricted zones along the way.
Wind patterns and flight duration
Prevailing winds along the Seattle–Houston corridor have a moderate effect on flight time. The general west-to-east flow of upper-level winds at these latitudes provides a slight tailwind advantage.
Practical travel context
This medium-haul route connects Seattle (United States) with Houston (United States).
Frequently asked questions: Seattle to Houston
How long is the flight from Seattle to Houston?
What is the time difference between Seattle and Houston?
How bad is jet lag flying from Seattle to Houston?
Can I minimize jet lag on the Seattle to Houston route?
Is it better to fly during the day or at night from Seattle to Houston?
How long does jet lag last from Seattle to Houston?
What about the return flight from Houston to Seattle?
More questions about this route
Should I adjust my schedule before flying from Seattle to Houston?
What are the best business hours to schedule meetings between Seattle and Houston?
How is the Seattle to Houston flight time calculated?
Assumptions & notes
- Flight time based on Haversine great-circle distance (3,013 km) with speed heuristics.
- Cruise speed: 780–850 km/h + 30–50 min ground/air overhead.
- Time difference is approximate and may shift during DST transitions.
- Jet lag plan is general wellness guidance, not medical advice.
- Route: SEA (America/Los_Angeles) → IAH (America/Chicago)