Yes, you can switch to another airport on many Southwest bookings, but it’s priced as a new route and the fare difference drives the cost.
Southwest makes it easy to edit a reservation, so travelers often assume an airport swap is a one-click tweak. It can be, yet the price and the options depend on what you’re changing: the city pair, the travel day, the flight time, or all three.
This walk-through shows what counts as “a different airport,” when the website will let you do it in minutes, when you’ll hit a wall, and how to avoid common headaches like losing track of travel funds or picking an airport that looks close on a map but adds a long ground ride.
Can I Change My Southwest Flight To A Different Airport?
Most of the time, yes. If your new airport is sold as a valid route in Southwest’s system, you can edit your trip and reprice it like you’re booking a new set of flights. Southwest usually does not add a separate airline change fee; the money side comes from the new fare and any tax changes tied to the route. Southwest also allows changes close to departure, which helps when plans shift late. :contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0}
There’s one big catch. The “same-day” tools people love for swapping to an earlier or later flight are built for time changes on the same city pair. Same-day confirmed change and same-day standby require the same origin airport and the same destination airport. :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}
Changing Your Southwest Flight To A Different Airport: What Counts As A Swap
People say “different airport” in a few ways. Southwest treats each case a little differently at pricing time.
Same metro area, different code
Think LAX vs. BUR, SFO vs. OAK vs. SJC, IAD vs. DCA vs. BWI. These are different airports in the system, even if you’d tell a friend they’re all “Los Angeles” or “San Francisco.” Switching between them changes the origin or destination airport code, which means a new itinerary.
Different city, same region
Dallas Love Field is Southwest’s home base, so many people book DAL when they really mean “North Texas.” Swapping to a different city’s airport changes the route, not just the terminal you’ll drive to.
Connection pattern changes
You might keep the same origin and destination airports and still see a new connection city after you change flights. That can change total travel time and can affect same-day options, since same-day benefits are tied to the same origin and destination airports. :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}
When An Airport Change Is Simple And When It Isn’t
In normal situations, you can edit your reservation online and pick a new set of flights. You’ll see the price difference before you confirm, which makes it easy to compare two airports side by side.
Simple: You booked direct and your new airport has inventory
If you booked on Southwest.com or the Southwest app, the Manage Trips tool usually lets you switch airports as long as seats are for sale on the new route.
Less simple: Third-party booking, group travel, or special cases
Tickets booked through some travel agencies, certain corporate tools, and some special passenger types can require agent help. When the app sends you to the airport counter, it’s often tied to fare rules, taxes, or how the ticket was issued.
Hard stop: Same-day change to a different airport
Same-day confirmed change and same-day standby are meant for switching departure times, not switching airports. Southwest says these benefits apply only when the origin and destination airports stay the same. :contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}
Costs And Credits: What You’ll Pay When You Switch Airports
The cost usually comes down to one thing: the fare on your original flights versus the fare on the new route on the new day and time. Southwest prices each segment, so a “small” airport swap can still move you into a higher fare bucket.
Fare difference
If the new itinerary costs more, you pay the difference at checkout. If it costs less, Southwest commonly issues the difference as travel funds on many fare types, while higher fare types may allow a refund to the original form of payment based on the rules of that fare.
Taxes and fees
Airport swaps can change taxes. A route that crosses borders or shifts between certain airports can change what’s collected. The checkout screen will show the updated total and tax lines.
What happens to EarlyBird and other add-ons
Extras can be tied to the reservation, yet a full reprice or a cancel-and-rebook flow can change what you see on the updated receipt. After you confirm the change, open the new confirmation email and scan it like you’re proofreading a contract: airports, dates, passengers, and add-ons. If something looks off, contact Southwest before travel day so the record can be corrected while seats still exist.
How To Change To A Different Airport On Southwest Step By Step
If the change is not a same-day swap, self-service is usually the smoothest path. Southwest’s help center page on changing or canceling flights spells out how close to departure changes are allowed and where to make them. :contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}
Step 1: Pull up the reservation
Open the Southwest app or Southwest.com, then go to Manage Trips. Enter your confirmation number and the passenger name exactly as it appears on the ticket.
Step 2: Choose Change and select the leg
Select Change. Then choose whether you want to change the outbound, the return, or both.
Step 3: Switch the airport code
When the airport fields open, pick the new origin or destination airport code. If you are switching both ends, change one side at a time so you can double-check travel time and stops.
Step 4: Compare flight times and stop details
Look past the departure time. Check arrival time, total duration, and any stop. An airport swap can add a long layover if the new city pair has fewer daily flights.
Step 5: Review the price screen
Southwest will show the fare difference and updated taxes. If the new price is lower, the screen will show travel funds or refund behavior tied to your fare.
Step 6: Confirm, then save proof
Finish the change, then save the updated itinerary email and take a screenshot of the confirmation screen. If you used travel funds, write down which fund number applied to which passenger so you can find it later.
Timing Moves That Save Stress
Airport swaps are easier when you make them early. Inventory is better, and you’re less likely to run into edge cases where the app asks for an agent. If you’re close to departure, still check the app first. Southwest allows changes close to takeoff, with a firm cutoff window. :contentReference[oaicite:5]{index=5}
Same-day benefits have their own clock
Same-day confirmed change and same-day standby are day-of-travel tools. They’re great for a time swap on the same city pair, not for moving to a new airport. Southwest also lists timing requirements for requesting same-day options, including lead-time rules for mobile changes. :contentReference[oaicite:6]{index=6}
Table: Common Airport Swap Scenarios And What To Expect
The table below covers situations travelers hit often, plus the lever that usually decides whether the swap stays smooth.
| Scenario | What Usually Works | What To Watch |
|---|---|---|
| Change LAX to BUR on a future date | Online change with fare difference | New route pricing can be higher at peak times |
| Change OAK to SFO for the same trip | Online change if seats are for sale | Different airport taxes can change the total |
| Switch return airport only | Change just the inbound portion | Ground ride plan can flip on you |
| Try to switch airports using same-day change | Not allowed under same-day benefit rules | Same-day benefits require the same origin and destination airports |
| Booked with points, want a different airport | Reprice in points; taxes adjust | Point cost can rise close to travel day |
| Companion Pass attached, need airport swap | Change the primary traveler, then confirm companion status | Recheck that both passengers show on the new flights |
| Wanna Get Away fare, new route is cheaper | Travel funds issued for the difference | Funds are tied to the passenger; store the confirmation |
| Multiple passengers on one record | Change all together if you want everyone aligned | Splitting can create separate credits and receipts |
Airport Choice Checks That People Miss
When you’re staring at three airports for the same city, the cheapest fare is not always the easiest day. These checks prevent a “good” swap that turns into a long drive or a missed connection.
Door-to-door time beats airfare in many cities
Compare the full door-to-door time. An airport with one extra daily flight can be worth a slightly higher fare if it keeps you out of rush hour or avoids a late-night arrival with limited rideshare.
Checked bag flow can change the day
If you travel with checked bags, airport layout matters. A smaller airport can mean shorter walks and faster curbside pickup. A bigger airport can offer more nonstop options, which can also reduce missed-connection stress.
Late departures have less recovery room
Late-day flights tend to stack delays across the network. If two airports price similarly, an earlier departure can leave more room to recover if something slips.
Same-day Options And Why They Won’t Move You To Another Airport
If you’re trying to switch airports on travel day, it’s tempting to look for a “same-day change” button and hope it covers everything. Southwest’s same-day change and standby program is clear: you can switch to another flight only when the origin and destination airports stay the same. :contentReference[oaicite:7]{index=7}
Here’s the clean way to think about it:
- Same-day change is a time swap when seats are open on the same city pair.
- Same-day standby keeps your original flight while you wait for a seat on an earlier flight on the same city pair.
- Airport swap is a new route. It’s handled as a standard change with a full reprice.
If you use these day-of-travel tools, keep Southwest’s page on same-day change and same-day standby handy so you can check timing and eligibility before you head to the airport. :contentReference[oaicite:8]{index=8}
Table: Checklist Before You Confirm The Airport Swap
This checklist keeps the change clean, so you don’t end up fixing a travel funds puzzle later.
| Check | Why It Matters | What To Do |
|---|---|---|
| Airport code matches your plan | Metro areas have multiple airports with similar names | Read the code and the city label twice before checkout |
| Total trip time still works | New route may add stops or long layovers | Compare duration, not just departure time |
| Ground ride is realistic | Some airports have limited late-night transport | Check pickup options for your arrival time |
| Fare difference fits your budget | New fare bucket can spike close to travel day | Price nearby days and times if you have flexibility |
| Travel funds details saved | Credits are easy to lose in email threads | Screenshot the confirmation and store fund numbers |
| Add-ons still show correctly | Extras can need cleanup after a reprice | Review your updated receipt right after the change |
What To Do If The Website Won’t Let You Change Airports
When the site blocks the change, it’s usually one of three things: the fare rules need agent handling, the tax math needs a manual review, or the ticket came from a booking channel Southwest can’t fully edit online.
Try a one-way change
If you booked round trip, switch the outbound first, then the return. This keeps each leg simpler and can reduce confusing reprice screens.
Check if a schedule change opened flexibility
When Southwest changes your itinerary, they sometimes offer extra options to rebook within a window around your original travel date. If you received a change notice, the official “options if Southwest changes my flight” page is where Southwest describes what’s offered for that situation. :contentReference[oaicite:9]{index=9}
Use chat or call with a clear ask
When you contact an agent, lead with your exact desired airport codes and your preferred flights. Mention whether you want to keep the same travel date. That cuts down back-and-forth and speeds up the reprice.
Common Mistakes That Raise The Cost Or Create Extra Work
Airport swaps stay clean when you treat them like a new purchase with a credit applied. These are the slip-ups that create extra work.
Chasing the cheapest airport without checking flight frequency
A low fare at a smaller airport can be paired with a single daily flight. If you miss it, your backup choices shrink fast. Paying a bit more for an airport with more departures can buy real flexibility.
Waiting until travel day to change the route
On travel day, same-day tools won’t switch airports, so you’re back to a standard change with whatever inventory is left. If you even suspect your plans may shift, checking prices earlier can save money.
Checking bags before you settle on your plan
If you check bags and then list for standby on another flight, bags may still travel on the original flight. Southwest notes this risk for standby scenarios. :contentReference[oaicite:10]{index=10}
Answer Recap You Can Use Right Away
Most Southwest reservations let you change to a different origin or destination airport through Manage Trips. Expect a full reprice of the new route, with you paying any increase and receiving travel funds when the new fare is lower, based on your fare rules. Same-day confirmed change and standby keep the same origin and destination airports, so they won’t handle an airport swap on travel day. :contentReference[oaicite:11]{index=11}
References & Sources
- Southwest Airlines.“Changing or Canceling Flights.”Explains how to modify or cancel a reservation and notes the timing window for making changes close to departure.
- Southwest Airlines.“Same-Day Change and Same-Day Standby.”States that same-day options apply only when origin and destination airports stay the same and lists timing rules for requesting same-day changes.
