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Florida airports lead digital security revolution while others lag behind

There was one Florida airport that was the exception

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Miami International Airport has the most secure website among major U.S. airports, a new study has revealed. 

Digital privacy company VeePN tested website security at America's 31 large airport hubs, with each rated for security headers and SSL security. Security headers are a crucial component of any website, helping prevent various cyberattacks. Sites with excellent SSL security ensure your data is more secure and less vulnerable to hackers. The airports were analyzed and given a grade for each metric, with an average overall score out of 100 then calculated. 

Table: America’s large airport hubs with the most secure websites 

Rank 

Airport 

State 

Website 

Security Headers Grade 

SSL Labs Grade 

Total Security Score /100 

Miami International Airport 

FL 

A + 

97.50 

San Diego International Airport 

CA 

95.00 

Fort Lauderdale–Hollywood International Airport 

FL 

A - 

92.50 

=4 

Denver International Airport 

CO 

A + 

90.00 

=4 

Orlando International Airport 

FL 

A + 

90.00 

Logan International Airport 

MA 

87.50 

=7 

Dallas Fort Worth International Airport 

TX 

A - 

85.00 

=7 

Charlotte Douglas International Airport 

NC 

A - 

85.00 

=9 

Detroit Metropolitan Airport 

MI 

A + 

82.50 

=9 

Salt Lake City International Airport 

UT 

A + 

82.50 

=9 

Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport 

VA 

A + 

82.50 

=9 

Dulles International Airport 

VA 

A + 

82.50 

Florida airports performed well in the rankings. Miami, Fort Lauderdale, and Orlando all landed in the top 10 most secure websites, making Florida the standout state for airport digital security nationwide.

Miami International Airport takes the top spot with an impressive score of 97.5 out of 100. Visitors to the Miami Airport website are the safest thanks to a top SSL security grade of (A+).  

Fort Lauderdale–Hollywood International Airport secures third place with a security score of 92.5, rating higher for security headers (A). 

Orlando International Airport scored exactly 90, tying for fourth place. The airport earned a B grade in security headers and an A+ grade in SSL security.

Tampa International Airport was the outlier in Florida, ranking among the airports with the least secure websites. While it scored a respectable B for SSL security, it was pulled down significantly in the ranking due to a poor performance in security headers (D).

Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport ranks as the joint least secure airport website with a score of just 50. The Arizona hub failed completely with an F in security headers, dragging down its overall score. 

The bottom spot was shared with Daniel K. Inouye International Airport

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