Chicago→Miami
Chicago Executive Airport (KPWK) — Opa-locka Executive Airport (KOPF)
10 Empty Legs Available Now
The Chicago to Miami empty leg corridor is the Midwest's answer to the classic snowbird route. As temperatures plunge across the Great Lakes region, Chicago's affluent residents flee southward to South Florida's beaches, golf courses, and waterfront properties. This one-way winter exodus creates a massive repositioning challenge for operators based in the Chicago area, resulting in frequent empty leg opportunities heading back north.
The route spans approximately 1,100 nautical miles with a flight time of around two hours and forty-five minutes. Midsize jets like the Citation Latitude and Challenger 350 are the most common aircraft types, offering comfortable flat-floor cabins suitable for the medium-haul journey. Savings of 50-65% make this route one of the best-value winter empty legs in the country.
Chicago's position as a major charter hub amplifies availability. Multiple operators maintain fleets at Chicago Executive Airport (Palwaukee), DuPage, and Midway, all generating repositioning needs when their aircraft deliver passengers to Florida. The pattern peaks from Thanksgiving through Easter, with particularly heavy activity during Christmas and New Year weeks. Art Basel Miami Beach in early December adds an additional demand spike. For Chicagoans needing to return home after Florida vacations, or Floridians heading to the Windy City, this empty leg route delivers outstanding value on a well-served corridor.
Midwesterners escaping winter fly one-way to South Florida, creating heavy northbound repositioning back to Chicago.
Sunday evenings and Monday mornings from November through April, with heaviest volume around winter holidays.