Fayetteville, Arkansas to Long Island: Road Trip Guide & Distance

1180.5 miles 1899.9 km · straight line
1372.6 miles actual route 2209 km · driving distance
26h 6min estimated drive time
$132 - $163 estimated fuel cost
~2h 52min flight time
68° ENE bearing direction

How far is Fayetteville, Arkansas from Long Island?

The distance from Fayetteville, Arkansas to Long Island is 1180.5 miles (1899.9 km) as the crow flies. Long Island is located ENE of Fayetteville, Arkansas. By car, the driving distance is approximately 1372.6 miles, taking about 26h 6min. A direct flight would take roughly 2h 52min. Both are located in United States — Fayetteville, Arkansas in Arkansas and Long Island in New York.

This is a serious multi-day road trip! We strongly recommend breaking this journey up with an overnight stay to ensure you arrive safely and refreshed. Heading East means you'll be driving into the sunrise if you start early. Keep your windshield clean for the best visibility. For a trip of this distance, flying is significantly faster. However, driving offers the flexibility to explore stops along the way.

Coordinates come from public place data for Fayetteville, Arkansas and Long Island. The driving distance uses an OSRM road-route result when route data is available. Fuel, flight, bus, and train values are planning estimates and can change by date, provider, road closures, and border rules.

How to Get from Fayetteville, Arkansas to Long Island

Method Time Est. Cost Best For
Drive 26h 6min $132 - $163 Flexible stops
Fly ~2h 52min $80–200* Speed
Bus ~31h 19min $110–$206* Budget
Train ~33h 56min $165–$480* Comfort

Suggested Stops Between Fayetteville, Arkansas & Long Island

Quick Facts

Fayetteville, Arkansas
36.06°N, 94.16°W
America/Chicago
427m elevation
Long Island
40.79°N, 73.14°W
America/New_York
20m elevation
Explore more routes from Long Island

Did You Know?

  • At walking speed (3 mph), it would take about 394 hours of non-stop walking
  • By bicycle at 12 mph, the journey would take roughly 98 hours
  • You could travel this distance about 21.1 times to circle the Earth's equator
Data Sources & Estimate Notes GeoNames · OpenStreetMap · OSRM