For the first time ever, you can fly from Alaska to New England without stopping. On 13 June 2026, an Alaska Airlines Boeing 737 lifted off from Ted Stevens Anchorage International and pointed its nose almost due east, bound for Boston — roughly eight hours and 3,300 nautical miles away.
No airline had ever flown the city pair nonstop before. It links Alaska’s biggest city directly to the Northeast for the first time, collapsing a journey that until now always meant a connection in Seattle.
QUICK FACTS
Route: Anchorage (ANC) – Boston Logan (BOS), nonstop
First flight: 13 June 2026 (seasonal, through 15 August)
Frequency: Once a week, Saturdays
Aircraft: Boeing 737 MAX 8
Block time: About 7 hours 53 minutes eastbound — one of the longest 737 routes Alaska flies
Milestone: First-ever nonstop between Alaska and the U.S. Northeast
A single-aisle jet doing a widebody’s job
What makes this route interesting is the aircraft. This isn’t a big twin-aisle jet built for marathon hops; it’s a narrowbody 737 MAX 8, the same kind of aeroplane that hops between West Coast cities every day. At nearly eight hours eastbound, the run ranks among the longest domestic flights Alaska operates on the type.
That is the quiet revolution in air travel right now: efficient single-aisle jets stretching ever further, opening thin long-haul routes that could never have justified a 200-seat widebody. A weekly summer flight to Boston is exactly the kind of market that only works when the aircraft is cheap enough to fill.

Why Boston, and why now
The numbers explain the gamble. In the twelve months to February 2026, roughly 43,000 round-trip passengers travelled between Anchorage and Boston — more than 100 a day in each direction, almost all of them connecting somewhere along the way. Alaska is betting that a chunk of those travellers would rather skip the layover entirely.
The Boston flight is one of seven new routes Alaska rolled out from Anchorage and Portland for 2026, alongside additions like Jackson Hole and a clutch of Washington State cities. For a carrier built on the West Coast, it is a deliberate push east.
Catch it while you can
For now the link is seasonal and once a week, timed for the peak summer travel window and running only through mid-August. Whether it becomes a permanent fixture depends on how many people fill those Saturday flights. But for one summer at least, the Last Frontier and Boston Harbor are a single hop apart — and that has never been true before.
Sources: Alaska Airlines newsroom; AirlineGeeks; Aerotime; TravelPulse.
Related Questions
Is there a nonstop flight from Anchorage to Boston?
Yes. Alaska Airlines launched the first-ever nonstop service between Anchorage (ANC) and Boston Logan (BOS) on 13 June 2026. It is the first nonstop flight ever between Alaska and the U.S. Northeast, running seasonally on Saturdays through 15 August 2026.
How long is the flight from Anchorage to Boston?
The eastbound flight takes about 7 hours 53 minutes — nearly eight hours — one of the longest routes Alaska Airlines flies with the Boeing 737. It operates once a week, on Saturdays, during the summer.
What aircraft flies the Anchorage to Boston route?
Alaska Airlines uses the Boeing 737 MAX 8, a single-aisle narrowbody rather than a widebody. Using a narrowbody for a nearly eight-hour flight shows how efficient single-aisle jets now open long, thin routes that once needed bigger aircraft.
How often does Alaska fly Anchorage to Boston?
Once a week, on Saturdays, and only seasonally — timed for the peak summer travel window and running through mid-August. Whether it becomes permanent depends on how well the Saturday flights fill.
Why did Alaska Airlines launch the Anchorage–Boston route?
In the year to February 2026, around 43,000 round-trip passengers flew between Anchorage and Boston — over 100 a day each way — almost all connecting somewhere. Alaska is betting a share of them would rather skip the layover and fly nonstop.
Can a Boeing 737 fly long-haul routes?
Increasingly, yes. The longer-range 737 MAX 8 can fly routes like the nearly eight-hour Anchorage–Boston run that once required widebodies. Efficient narrowbodies are opening up long, thin routes that wouldn't justify a 200-seat twin-aisle jet.




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