Cybersecurity experts are aligned that travelers should avoid public Wi-Fi at airports. Keep reading to learn why itâs such a big risk and how to safely access the Internet while traveling.
While cruising an airportâs public internet network may feel like a convenience, criminals can easily exploit those networks to steal sensitive data from unsuspecting travelers, experts warn.
âItâs definitely among the worst things you can do at an airport,â Matthew Hicks, a cybersecurity expert and associate professor of computer science at Virginia Tech, told Travel + Leisure.
Public Wi-Fi is a shared internet connection, often over an unsecured network. Users are therefore vulnerable to hackers, who can intercept data like credit card details or account passwords, and install malware onto consumersâ devices, according to experts.
About 40 percent of Americans have had their data compromised while using a public Wi-Fi network, according to a recent Forbes Advisor survey of 2,000 workers who regularly use public internet. Yet, 23 percent of users said they think public Wi-Fi is completely safe, and another 43 percent said itâs somewhat safe, the Forbes survey found.
John Breyault
Anything you do on airport Wi-Fi should be something youâd be comfortable with the rest of the world knowing about.
â John Breyault
Because travelers often have ample downtime before flightsâand may be in an area without cellular connectionâairports are a common access point for public Wi-Fi, Hicks said.
Consumers reported losing more than $16 billion to internet crime overall in 2024, a record high and a 33 percent increase from 2023, according to data from the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
Personal data breaches were among the top three most common complaints received by the FBI, it said. âAs nearly all aspects of our lives have become digitally connected, the attack surface for cyber actors has grown exponentially,â B. Chad Yarbrough, operations director for the FBIâs criminal and cyber unit, wrote in the Bureauâs annual internet crime report. âScammers are increasingly using the Internet to steal Americansâ hard-earned savings.â
Be careful of fake Wi-Fi networks.
Scammers also often try to trick travelers into logging onto fake Wi-Fi networks, John Breyault, vice president of public policy, telecommunications and fraud at the National Consumers League, a consumer advocacy group, told T+L.
Someone trying to connect to the OâHare Guest Wi-Fi network may unknowingly access anotherâperhaps âOâHare Guest 2â or âChicago Airport Wi-Fiââcontrolled by a criminal. âMake sure [the network] is the one run by the airport, and not someone setting up a honeypot,â Breyault said.
In 2024, the Australian Federal Police charged a man for allegedly establishing one of these so-called âevil twinâ networks to steal peopleâs personal data. He did this at airports in Perth, Melbourne and Adelaide, among other places, AFP reported.
Accessing the correct network will âeliminate most of the real attackers,â Hicks said, adding that travelers can ask airport personnel if theyâre unsure.
How to safely use Wi-Fi at the airport
Using your cell phone to establish a personal internet hotspot is among the safest ways to access the web in an airport. This simple step will reduce the number of attackers to ânear zero,â according to Hicks. Thatâs because itâs a private cellular connection instead of an open Wi-Fi network. âYouâre not sharing that connection with everyone else in the airport,â Breyault said. âYour data will be much safer in transit.â
If thatâs not available, experts recommend using a device with a âvirtual private networkâ or VPN, which is an encrypted connection that offers an additional layer of security. Hicksâ best advice is to buy one from a reputable, U.S.-based company.
Travelers should ultimately avoid logging into financial, email, social media, or other sensitive accounts over airport Wi-Fi, Breyault noted. âIf youâre just checking the weather, thatâs one thing,â Breyault said. âIf youâre checking your bank account balance, thatâs something different.â
âAnything you do on airport Wi-Fi should be something youâd be comfortable with the rest of the world knowing about,â he said.