Boise · the midpoint
Boise is the capital and most populous city in the U.S. state of Idaho. It is the county seat of Ada County. The population of the city was 235,685 at the 2020 census. Read more →
The fair place to meet is Boise, ID — the city closest to the midpoint of Anchorage and Miami. From the farther side that’s about 49 hr 31 min of driving.
Recommended midpoint
Boise, ID
From Anchorage
38 hr 27 min
1,834 mi to Boise
From Miami
49 hr 31 min
2,362 mi to Boise
Anchorage has the shorter trip; the split is off by about 11 hr 4 min. The alternatives below can even it out. Anchorage and Miami are about 4,001 miles apart.
Anchorage and Miami are about 4,001 miles apart by road. Split the difference and you arrive near Boise, the city closest to the halfway point between them. That puts roughly 38 hr 27 min of driving on the Anchorage side and 49 hr 31 min on the Miami side — the fairest single meeting point among the cities near the middle.
Over this distance most people will fly rather than drive the whole way. Boise still makes a fair, central place for Anchorage and Miami to converge, splitting the travel instead of asking one side to cross the country.
If Boise doesn't have what you're after, Salt Lake City and Portland are also close to the midpoint and worth a look — each keeps the drive reasonably balanced between Anchorage and Miami.
Boise is the capital and most populous city in the U.S. state of Idaho. It is the county seat of Ada County. The population of the city was 235,685 at the 2020 census. Read more →
Anchorage, officially the Municipality of Anchorage, is the most populous city in the U.S. state of Alaska. With a population of 291,247 at the 2020 census, it contains nearly 40 percent of the state's population. Read more →
Miami is a coastal city in the U.S. state of Florida. It is the second-most populous city proper in Florida, with a population of 442,241 at the 2020 census. Read more →
City descriptions adapted from Wikipedia (CC BY-SA); photos via Wikimedia Commons, credited above.
Estimates use straight-line distance and typical road speeds; real drive times vary with route and traffic.