We believe everyone should be able to make financial decisions with
confidence. While we don't cover every company or financial product on
the market, we work hard to share a wide range of offers and objective
editorial perspectives.
So how do we make money? Our partners compensate us for advertisements that
appear on our site. This compensation helps us provide tools and services -
like free credit score access and monitoring. With the exception of
mortgage, home equity and other home-lending products or services, partner
compensation is one of several factors that may affect which products we
highlight and where they appear on our site. Other factors include your
credit profile, product availability and proprietary website methodologies.
However, these factors do not influence our editors' opinions or ratings, which are based on independent research and analysis. Our partners cannot
pay us to guarantee favorable reviews. Here is a list of our partners.
United’s App Update Might Make Your Next Connection Easier
If you’re flying through a United Airlines hub this summer, make sure you have the airline’s app downloaded.
Benjamin Din is a lead travel writer at NerdWallet. He previously was a technology reporter at Politico, where he authored a daily newsletter covering tech and telecom policy.
Benjamin loves to travel — both for work and for fun. He’s reported from three continents and visited more than 45 countries. He has written for The Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg News, The Washington Post, The San Francisco Chronicle and The (Johannesburg) Star, as well as covered two Olympics with NBC Sports.
His goal is to visit a new country and a new state each year.
Claire Tsosie is a managing editor for the Travel Rewards team at NerdWallet. She started her career on the credit cards team as a writer, then worked as an editor on New Markets. Her work has been featured by Forbes, USA Today and The Associated Press.
Published in
Published
How is this page expert verified?
NerdWallet's content is fact-checked for accuracy, timeliness and
relevance. It undergoes a thorough review process involving
writers and editors to ensure the information is as clear and
complete as possible.
This page includes information about these cards, currently unavailable on
NerdWallet. The information has been collected by NerdWallet and has not
been provided or reviewed by the card issuer.
United Airlines just rolled out new app features to help flyers make connections at its hub airports.
On June 25, 2025, the airline announced a new dedicated section in its app that shows details about your connection. Now available to all United app users, that section includes real-time flight status updates, gate-to-gate directions with estimated walking times and a countdown to your next flight. You’ll also find tips for longer layovers, as well as a notification if United is holding your next flight for you during a tight connection.
“These features are part of our larger customer experience strategy that's based on being radically transparent with our customers and sharing information with them in easy-to-understand ways,” United Chief Customer Officer David Kinzelman said in a media call previewing the updates.
If you've flown on United recently, these features may look familiar. More than 350,000 travelers used them in the spring during a beta test before the rollout for the busy summer travel season. With 20 million-plus United passengers booked this summer on connecting flights, according to the airline, this feature could benefit many flyers.
These new updates — available in both English and Spanish — make traveling with a connection simpler. That’s a big deal, especially when connections are often where itineraries are most likely to go wrong.
(Photo courtesy of United Airlines)
They also help give passengers more insight into what’s going on with their itinerary. For example, United now classifies connections in three ways and displays different information for each type:
Comfortable connections: For passengers who have enough time to reach their next gate before boarding begins, the app shows connection information, an airport map with navigation tips and other location information like where the nearest United Club is.
Tight connections: For those who need to hustle to their next gate, the app prioritizes the most pertinent information, such as the time until your next flight, how far away it is and an airport map to show you how to get there. If your next flight is being held for passengers via United's ConnectionSaver technology, you’ll also see that on the screen. (Launched in 2019, ConnectionSaver helps determine if a flight can be held for a few minutes to accommodate connecting passengers without disrupting the travel plans of those onboard.)
Missed connections: For those who will miss their flights, the app shows rebooking options to get a confirmed seat on another flight or to stand by for an earlier flight that might be sold out.
While other airline apps have helpful information like airport maps, they’re often hard to find in the app or complicated to use. It might be possible to manually look up information like estimated walking times by navigating to the airport maps section in the app, but passengers might not even know such a feature exists. Having it all in one centrally located place can help make travel a lot less stressful.
Plus, United says it will soon roll out the ability to enable location services, which will allow you to see where you are on the map as you travel through the airport.
Innovations like these can help simplify the airport experience, and United isn’t the only airline investing in these improvements. For example, American Airlines announced in May 2025 that it would be testing out its own version of connection-saving technology at its hub airports this summer. It also redesigned its app earlier this year, which the airline says will help set the foundation for future app upgrades.
What I’m looking forward to as a United frequent flyer
I fly through United hubs all the time, but some more often than others. That means when I land at a hub I’m less familiar with — say, Denver International Airport — I can count on the app to direct me to the nearest Denver United Club, instead of fumbling with my phone for a few minutes to figure out where to go.
“One of the things that customers tell us they really like is just simply knowing when they get off the airplane, do they go left or right?” Kinzelman says.
NerdWallet writers are subject matter authorities who use primary,
trustworthy sources to inform their work, including peer-reviewed
studies, government websites, academic research and interviews with
industry experts. All content is fact-checked for accuracy, timeliness
and relevance. You can learn more about NerdWallet's high
standards for journalism by reading our
editorial guidelines.