Omaha · the midpoint
Omaha is the most populous city in the U.S. state of Nebraska. It is located in the Midwestern United States along the Missouri River, about 10 mi (15 km) north of the mouth of the Platte River. Read more →
The fair place to meet is Omaha, NE — the city closest to the midpoint of Boston and San Jose. From the farther side that’s about 29 hr 32 min of driving.
Recommended midpoint
Omaha, NE
From Boston
26 hr 49 min
1,279 mi to Omaha
From San Jose
29 hr 32 min
1,408 mi to Omaha
Boston has the shorter trip; the split is off by about 2 hr 43 min. The alternatives below can even it out. Boston and San Jose are about 2,678 miles apart.
Boston and San Jose are about 2,678 miles apart by road. Split the difference and you arrive near Omaha, the city closest to the halfway point between them. That puts roughly 26 hr 49 min of driving on the Boston side and 29 hr 32 min on the San Jose 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. Omaha still makes a fair, central place for Boston and San Jose to converge, splitting the travel instead of asking one side to cross the country.
If Omaha doesn't have what you're after, Kansas City and Oklahoma City are also close to the midpoint and worth a look — each keeps the drive reasonably balanced between Boston and San Jose.
Omaha is the most populous city in the U.S. state of Nebraska. It is located in the Midwestern United States along the Missouri River, about 10 mi (15 km) north of the mouth of the Platte River. Read more →
Boston is the capital and most populous city of the U.S. state of Massachusetts. It serves as a cultural and financial center of New England, a region of the Northeastern United States. Read more →
San Jose, officially the City of San José, is the most populous city in the San Francisco Bay Area and Northern California, and the 13th-most populous in the United States, with an estimated 989,814 residents as of 2025. 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.