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Husband Claims His Wife Is A Jerk For Wanting To Arrive 4 Hours Early For Their Flight

by Layla Bui
November 19, 2025
in Social Issues

Planning your first international honeymoon should be exciting, but for one couple, it quickly turned into a disagreement over something seemingly simple: how early should they leave for the airport?

With their flight to Japan fast approaching, the wife wanted to arrive four hours before departure to ensure plenty of time for potential delays, bad weather, and even time to relax before their long flight.

Her husband, a nervous first-time international traveler, insisted that waiting around the airport would only worsen his anxiety, claiming two hours before departure was plenty of time.

But when the reality of their airport experience left them with hours to spare, was she right to push for the extra time, or did she go too far? Keep reading to see how this tension played out.

A wife wants to arrive 4 hours early for their flight, but her anxious husband disagrees

Husband Claims His Wife Is A Jerk For Wanting To Arrive 4 Hours Early For Their Flight
not the actual photo

'AITA for wanting to leave early to the airport for our first international flight?'

Me (F31) and my husband (M32) are going on our first trip to Japan for our honeymoon/1st year wedding anniversary.

Our flight is in less than 2 days and we are in disagreement as to how early we should be arriving to the airport.

Our flight departs LAX airport at 11:30am and I want to be at the airport by 7:30am (4 hours before departure).

He wants to be at the airport by 9:30am (2 hours before departure).

For context, he has never flown international and is afraid of flying so his anxiety is very high right now.

He claims he doesn’t want to end up waiting at the airport extra time before the flight

because the anticipation will make his anxiety worse.

I myself am anxious that if we don’t allow ourselves extra time for things to go wrong and for possible traffic delays

(we live 1.5 hours away from LAX) then we could end up missing our flight.

For further context, I have planned this entire trip myself with very little input from him.

By his choice because he has been anxious just thinking about flying for 12 hours on a plane.

I researched, purchased the tickets, booked hotels and excursions,

prepared the itinerary and arranged for our ride to and from the airport.

I am adamant about arriving 4 hours early due to a stormy weather forecast, government shutdown chaos,

possible traffic delays as we approach the Los Angeles area

and also to allow time to eat breakfast and relax before the flight.

He says I am selfish (an a__hole?) and don’t care about his anxiety

for possibly making him wait at the airport for a longer time before the flight. Am I the a__hole?

UPDATE: We left our house with the intentions of getting there 4 hours early.

We left early enough that we missed the heavy rain pour down and accidents that followed near the LA/LAX area.

Everything went smoothly and we were at our gate within an hour.

We ended up with 3 hours to k__l before our flight (husband was not happy about this of course) but he got over it quickly.

We got breakfast, sat down and relaxed.

My brother, who dropped us off, got stuck in loads of traffic on the way back unfortunately.

Anyways, we made it to Japan and enjoying every second of it!!

From the moment we book a big trip, different anxieties quietly move into the passenger seat. In this story, the OP and her husband are trekking toward their first international flight (excited, nervous, hopeful) and they find themselves on opposing tracks because each is navigating fear in their own way.

At the emotional heart of this disagreement is the dance between anticipation and preparation. The OP wants to leave home early to build a buffer of time against traffic, weather and the unknown.

Her husband, new to flying internationally and anxious about the machine of travel itself, fears that being early will give his mind too many hours to stew in worry. They’re both trying to mitigate risk, just in different realms. He sees waiting as risk; she sees rushing as risk.

Psychological research explains both of these behaviors. The article “How Uncertainty Causes Anxiety” explains that our brains evolved to predict and minimise uncertainty, and when prediction fails, anxiety rises. “Your brain is a prediction machine… anxiety is your brain’s response to uncertainty.”

Another piece, “Avoidance Maintains Anxiety,” shows that short‑term safety tactics (like avoiding waiting) can paradoxically fuel longer‑term fear: “Avoidance may help you feel safer in the short term but can keep you feeling anxious over time.”

These ideas map right onto the couple’s stand‑off: one prepares for uncertainty (by arriving early), the other avoids the anticipation of it.

Looking at it through a fresh lens: the OP’s husband fears the internal turbulence of anxiety, the buzz of waiting, the unknowns of new skies. The OP fears external turbulence, traffic near Los Angeles International Airport, weather delays, and check‑in chaos.

Their conflict isn’t about time; it’s about the version of risk they each feel more vulnerable to. She’s protecting the external world; he’s protecting the internal world.

Considering both perspectives, the decision to err on the side of arriving four hours early emerges not as selfishness, but as pragmatic alignment with the bigger risk. The OP carried the logistics and planning of the trip; she owns the contingency.

When everything fell into place, leaving early allowed them to avoid heavy rain and delays, the outcome validated her concern and effort. The husband’s anxiety did surface, but he managed and the trip began smoothly, reinforcing that the buffer was helpful.

Let’s dive into the reactions from Reddit:

These commenters strongly agreed that given the size of LAX, the uncertainties of international flights, and current airport conditions, 4 hours is justified

crackerfactorywheel − NAH. It’s recommended that you get to the airport about 3 hours before an international flight.

I’d compromise and do that instead.

EDIT TO ADD- I missed that OP is flying out in the next couple of days

so the 4 hours makes more sense in context since TSA is still recovering from the government shutdown.

My judgment is still NAH but 4 hours makes more sense.

No-Giraffe49 − LAX is a mad house. Get to the airport 4 hours early; that's the earliest you can check in for your flight.

If you both have anxiety medications I suggest you have them with you.

Or a meditation app, calming music. Anything to help pass the time.

Filosifee − NTA - airlines explicitly tell you to arrive at least three hours early for an international flight.

If you’re flying in the next few days you absolutely need to get there 4 hours early because of the reasons you outlined.

-Sincerely, an Angeleno who has never gotten to LAX in less than 45 minutes and I live in Hollywood, not 1.5 hrs away.

Unfair_Bonus_3225 − I have a rule. If I don’t plan any of the trip then I roll with the trip planner’s agenda.

You put in how many ridiculous hours of research?

The man can roll into the airport two hours earlier than his preference.

It’s already a tough airport then add it the lingering traffic controller chaos + customs?

If he continues to complain then tell him you’re going to be at the airport 4 hours early.

He can plan one tiny portion of his trip and decide how to get himself to the airport in his desired 2 hour window.

NTA PS: Tell the man to get a prescription for an anti-anxiety.

Not being mean, there’s just no reason for him to spend so much time having anxiety over having anxiety.

Low-Television-7508 − Better too early than hyperventilating in a taxi

because everyone thinks things are back to normal and traffic is backed up to Nevada

Mountain-Republic728 − LAX is massive. International flights usually want 3/4 hours early.

Also given everything going on at airports it’s better to be safe than sorry

HedgieTwiggles − NTA You wanna know what broke me of getting to an airport the minimum suggested time (or less) before a flight?

Missing the first leg of my first international flight to Germany

(flight from Austin to… somewhere here in the US).

My partner had been in Munich for two weeks for work already. His work was done, so I was coming over.

The week we had planned was for our 20th anniversary.

I had forgotten about the construction of a parking garage going on at the airport at the time.

I’m also chronologically challenged and just left my house late.

I seriously expected my man to end the relationship over this. To this day, I’m grateful he did not.

I would not have blamed him had he decided he was done with me.

Oh… I arrived at the airport somewhere around 90 minutes before my flight.

Even though this first leg was domestic, my overall flight was international, so I missed the cutoff.

Things worked out, thankfully.

I got on a later flight and arrived in Munich Friday evening instead of Friday morning.

But there’s no reason for either of you to endure that kind of stress.

I get that he has a fear of flying and hanging around the airport is not a happy fun time for him.

But you don’t know what other delays might occur.

Traffic, accident, or some of the security scanners are down so there’s a giant line for the TSA screening.

Compromise, plan for 3 hours early, and see if you can gently encourage him

to get out the door early on the day of the flight. Congratulations on your nuptials!

I hope you have a wonderful and safe trip.

hulderking − The amount of anxiety you'll both feel if you have to sprint to your gate will be worse

than if you have to sit and wait for an extra hour. Always leave early, especially with how flights are right now.

LAX surely has things to do if you happen to be there too early.

always enjoy walking around the terminal before a flight to help tire out my legs. You'll be sitting for a LONG time.

This smaller group questioned if the issue was really just the timing

OfAnOldRepublic − As much as I hate to reduce a marital dispute like this to "you're right, he's wrong,"

I used to fly out of that terminal a lot for business, and... you're right.

Especially with the current disruption with flights, but in the best of times, LAX generally,

and that terminal particularly, are a crap shoot, and with your travel time as a consideration

planning to arrive 4 hours before your flight is the right move.

BUT, does your husband even really want to go on this trip? At all?

To a person with anxiety about planes, LAX to Japan would be nightmare fuel.

You're in the air for 12 hours, likely in the plane for closer to 14.

Add the time before the flight and the time to clear customs

and get out of the airport on the other side, and that's 20 hours of hell.

You said you've done all the planning, because he is anxious,

but are you sure that he's not trying to tell you something here?

It sounds like this trip is really important to you, but I strongly suggest that you sit down and talk with him,

and make sure he's not just agreeing so as not to disappoint you.

I'm afraid you're setting you both up for a horrible situation when he finally loses it

and can't get on the plane. Blessings on you both, whatever you decide. NAH

Strict_Lab_9235 − Maybe it's just me, but I think you may have a bigger problem here.

You seem over the moon to go to on this big adventure.

You've done all the planning, all the booking, all the research. All on your own.

Your spouse is so anxious about the whole thing that he can't even think about planning it with you,

and wants to delay even getting to the airport as long as possible.

Are you sure this is something he wanted to do? Or is he just going along with it because you're so excited?

I think you guys could use a heart to heart.

matchy_blacks − NTA Before the pandemic, I traveled internationally a few times a year.

For all of the reasons you mention, I’d try to get there by 730, too.

I’m a planner and preparer, and I’m usually responsible for other people who are _not_ prepared.

That extra time keeps me calm and lets me be more helpful to them.

If your husband’s anxiety is this bad, I suspect leaving the house later

isn’t going to reduce it because he knows he will have to go eventually.

I’d also respectfully suggest he check with a physician about a short-acting sedative like Valium.

This group offered compromise: arriving 3 hours early instead of 4, or staying at an airport hotel

CommentIndependent32 − Can you stay at an airport hotel the night before your flight so you are very close to the airport,

don't have to worry abt traffic and he can chill in the calm room a bit later in the morning?

chittychittyb − NAH, just compromise and get there 3h beforehand. You won’t miss your flight.

If you can’t compromise then E S H.

gfdoctor − NTA the recommended time before an international flight is 3 hours. Perhaps settle on that?

Extension-Cup-3529 − I get both sides - and while personally I’d get there way early too

- would a compromise be to go the day before and get a hotel closer to the airport?

That way the travel time isn’t as much of a factor?

Depending how close you get to the hotel there might even be a shuttle from the hotel to the airport.

So, was the wife in the right for pushing the four-hour rule? While it’s easy to sympathize with her desire to avoid stress, her husband’s anxiety deserves a little more understanding too. Was she being a bit overboard? Or was she just trying to make sure everything went smoothly?

What do you think? Would you insist on arriving hours early or let your partner take the lead on timing? Share your thoughts below!

 

Layla Bui

Layla Bui

Hi, I’m Layla Bui. I’m a lifestyle and culture writer for Daily Highlight. Living in Los Angeles gives me endless energy and stories to share. I believe words have the power to question the world around us. Through my writing, I explore themes of wellness, belonging, and social pressure, the quiet struggles that shape so many of our lives.

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