Leaving in 24 hours: the countdown
You just booked and the flight leaves tomorrow. Everything below fits comfortably in the time you have — if you do it in this order. Your ticks are saved on this device, so keep the page open as you go.
Sequence beats speed
Nobody misses a trip because they packed slowly. Trips die from tasks done in the wrong order: discovering a passport problem after the airport run, finding the entry form needed a day's processing while standing at the gate, realizing at midnight abroad that your card was never told to work there. The rule for the next 24 hours is simple — do the irreversible things first, while there's still time to react, and leave the reversible things (socks, chargers, bin bags) for last. Panic optional; sequence mandatory.
T-24 to T-20: lock the irreversible
Do this block the moment the booking confirmation lands, because it's the only block that can still change your plans.
Documents and bookings
T-20 to T-16: phone and money
Everything here needs a working connection and a calm hour — which is why it happens tonight, not in the security line.
The pocket infrastructure
Evening: pack, then stop
Packing is the most overrated task of the 24 hours. Count nights, add one spare outfit, keep it to a carry-on — the full list with its own saved checklists is the 2-hour packing checklist, and two hours is genuinely all it takes. Then stop. A full night's sleep is worth more tomorrow than any additional preparation tonight; travel days punish the exhausted far more than the underpacked.
T-4: the home lockdown
Twenty minutes, right before you leave, so nothing gnaws at you from the departure lounge. The reasoning behind each item is in the 20-minute home lockdown.
Leave the house like you mean it
T-3 to boarding: get out the door
Check in online the moment it opens — on a late booking, unassigned seats and full flights make early check-in your best free move. How early to leave for the airport depends on bag drop, security and your airport's morning shape; the honest math is in getting through the airport fast. Before the door closes behind you, run the only checklist that matters twice: passport, phone, wallet. Everything else on this page can be bought at the destination; those three cannot.
When 24 hours isn't enough
Two honest exceptions. If the destination requires a visa or authorization that takes longer than a day to process, no checklist fixes that — it's a before-you-book check, and it's the reason the documents block sits at T-24 rather than T-4. And if you're taking children, run the document step once per child and double the packing window; the adjustments live in the family last-minute playbook. Driving instead of flying relaxes the airport blocks but not the documents, money or home blocks — reorder, don't skip.
Rule of thumb: do the document block before anything else. Every other mistake on this page can be fixed with money at the destination; a document mistake ends the trip at the check-in desk.
Related guides
- The full carry-on list with saved progress: the 2-hour packing checklist.
- What "valid passport" actually means where you're going: the 10-minute documents check.
- Data, cards and maps before takeoff: phone setup in 15 minutes.
- Leave the house without the nagging feeling: the 20-minute home lockdown.
- Every short-notice tactic in one place: travel tips.