Cheap Flights to Cancun
Mexico
CHEAPEST ROUTE
MiamiCancun
MIA to CUN • ~2h flight
Est. $45
estimated round trip
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Compare Prices from All US Cities

FromAirportEst. PriceFlight Time
BESTMiami
MIA$45~2hView →
Fort Lauderdale
FLL$47~2hView →
Tampa
TPA$47~2hView →
Orlando
MCO$52~2hView →
Houston
IAH$68~3hView →
Atlanta
ATL$74~3hView →
Austin
AUS$78~3hView →
Dallas
DFW$87~3hView →
Charlotte
CLT$88~3hView →
Nashville
BNA$88~3hView →
St. Louis
STL$105~3hView →
Washington D.C.
DCA$115~4hView →
San Juan
SJU$115~4hView →
Baltimore
BWI$117~4hView →
Chicago
ORD$122~4hView →
Philadelphia
PHL$124~4hView →
Detroit
DTW$125~4hView →
Newark
EWR$130~4hView →
New York
JFK$131~4hView →
New York
LGA$132~4hView →
Denver
DEN$141~4hView →
Minneapolis
MSP$142~4hView →
Boston
BOS$146~4hView →
Phoenix
PHX$148~5hView →
Las Vegas
LAS$168~5hView →
Salt Lake City
SLC$169~5hView →
San Diego
SAN$170~5hView →
Los Angeles
LAX$178~5hView →
San Francisco
SFO$202~6hView →
Portland
PDX$222~6hView →
Seattle
SEA$226~6hView →

About Cancun

Cancun is the most visited destination in the Western Hemisphere for Americans, and for good reason — it offers an almost frictionless tropical vacation with no passport hassle beyond the actual card, direct flights from nearly every major US city, and a resort corridor that's been purpose-built to deliver sun, sand, and open bars. The Hotel Zone (Zona Hotelera) is a 14-mile sandspit lined with all-inclusive resorts, beach clubs, and shopping malls, where the white-powder sand meets the turquoise Caribbean. If you've never left the US before, Cancun is the easiest international first trip you can take. If you're a seasoned traveler, skip the Hotel Zone and use CUN airport as a gateway to the Yucatan Peninsula's deeper riches.

Beyond the margarita-soaked strip, Cancun gives you quick access to some of Mexico's best archaeology. Chichen Itza is a 2.5-hour bus ride from the hotel zone. Tulum's clifftop ruins sit above a postcard-perfect cove, 90 minutes south. Cobá lets you climb a pyramid (one of the last in Mexico still open to climbers as of 2026, though access is periodically restricted). The cenotes — thousands of freshwater sinkholes connected by underground rivers throughout the Yucatan — are the real secret weapon of the region. You can snorkel or dive in crystal-clear caves an hour from your hotel that look like something from a nature documentary.

The flight deal math for Cancun is consistently favorable. American airlines compete ferociously on this route, and flash sales to CUN from East Coast cities routinely hit $180-$250 roundtrip. Midwest and Texas departures often go even lower. The Hotel Zone's all-inclusive model means your biggest expense decision is often made before you even board the plane — once you're checked in, food and alcohol are largely covered. This makes budgeting unusually predictable for an international trip, which is part of why Cancun draws 25+ million visitors annually.

The honest downside: the Hotel Zone itself is a sanitized bubble that feels more like a theme park than Mexico. Prices inside it are often higher than equivalent quality in the US. Venture even 20 minutes into Downtown Cancun (El Centro) and you'll find taco stands where $5 feeds you fully, local mezcal bars, and a completely different energy. The January–April window is the sweet spot — dry season, manageable crowds, and the best sea conditions for snorkeling. Hurricane season runs June through November, with September being the month most frequently hammered by tropical storms.

Best Months
february, march, january
Currency
MXN ($)
Mexican Peso
Visa (US Citizens)
US passport holders do not need a visa for Mexico and can stay up to 180 days as tourists. You'll fill out a digital immigration form (now done electronically — the paper FMM tourist card was eliminated for air arrivals in 2023) and present your US passport at immigration. Your passport must be valid for the duration of your stay; no 6-month validity rule applies. There is a departure tax included in almost all airline tickets (check your itinerary). Travel insurance is not required but strongly recommended — the all-inclusive resorts can pressure-sell their own insurance, which is typically overpriced; get a third-party policy before you travel. No vaccinations are required, though the CDC recommends being up to date on hepatitis A and typhoid if you plan to eat street food (you should).

Best Time to Fly to Cancun

Click any month for weather, crowds, and what's on.

BestShoulderPeak / Expensive
Best:February (85°F)Great weather — book early
Avoid:SeptemberPeak prices and crowds

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Airport to City: How to Get There

The easiest option is the ADO bus, which runs directly from the airport's Terminal 2 and Terminal 3 arrivals halls to the Cancun bus terminal in El Centro (downtown) for about 100 MXN ($5 USD) and takes 20-30 minutes — it also stops near the Hotel Zone's major hotel clusters, though you may need a short taxi to your specific resort. Authorized airport taxis (look for the official booths inside arrivals, never follow anyone who approaches you) cost a flat 450-600 MXN ($22-30 USD) to the Hotel Zone and 200-250 MXN ($10-12) to downtown; confirm the price before getting in. Shared colectivo vans from outside arrivals go to the Hotel Zone for about 150 MXN ($7) per person but take longer due to multiple stops. Uber is not allowed to pick up inside the airport but can be called once you exit the grounds and walk about 100 meters.

Neighborhoods & Where to Stay

Zona Hotelera (Hotel Zone)
luxury

A 14-mile barrier island connected to the mainland by two bridges, lined wall-to-wall with all-inclusive resorts, beach clubs, and malls like La Isla Shopping Village and Plaza Las Americas. The beach here — particularly the stretch near Playa Delfines (free, no resort wristband required) — is genuinely world-class white sand. Expect to pay $150-600+ per night for resorts; budget travelers have no reason to stay here as you're paying a massive premium for proximity to a beach you can reach via $1 bus.

El Centro (Downtown Cancun)
budget

The actual city where Mexicans live and work, organized around numbered avenues and supermanzanas (housing blocks). Taco al pastor stands charge 15-20 MXN per taco, local mezcal bars run 60 MXN a pour, and hotels like Hotel El Rey del Caribe go for $40-70/night. Mercado 28 is the authentic souvenir market (as opposed to the tourist traps in the Hotel Zone) and the local food court there serves honest Yucatecan food. The R1 and R2 buses run 24 hours between downtown and the Hotel Zone for 14 MXN ($0.70) — there is zero reason to rent a car here.

Puerto Cancun / Pok-Ta-Pok
mid-range

A newer marina district at the northern tip of the Hotel Zone that's developed into a more local-feeling alternative to the mega-resort strip — boutique hotels, a real marina, upscale-but-not-obscene restaurants like Puerto Madero steakhouse, and significantly less spring-break energy. Good for couples or travelers who want resort infrastructure without the all-inclusive factory feel. Hotel rates run $80-180/night at properties like Casa Turquesa.

Playa Mujeres
luxury

A quieter upscale enclave 20 minutes north of the airport that's become the destination for travelers who want Cancun-caliber resorts without the Hotel Zone circus — properties like the Beloved Playa Mujeres Adults-Only resort anchor a genuinely uncrowded stretch of coast. No nightclub noise, no spring break, lower sargassum impact than the main Hotel Zone beaches. A taxi from CUN costs about $20; factor in the slight inconvenience of being further from day-trip infrastructure.

Daily Budget: What to Expect

Budget
$55/day

$15 hostel dorm at Mango Hostel or Che Cancun, $15 food (3 meals: street tacos, market comida corrida at Mercado 28, elote from a cart), $2 bus/transport via R1 city bus, $8 one paid activity (cenote entry or Chichen Itza entrance split over multi-day visit), $15 drinks and incidentals

Mid-Range
$175/day

$70 mid-range hotel like Ambiance Villas or a downtown boutique, $40 food (sit-down meals, one beach club lunch pass around $20-30), $15 transport including occasional Uber, $30 one solid activity like a cenote tour or snorkel trip, $20 drinks and tips

Luxury
$600/day

$350 all-inclusive resort room at Moon Palace or Hyatt Zilara (includes food and alcohol), $50 spa treatment or premium excursion like private cenote tour, $80 dinner at La Habichuela or Harry's Prime Steakhouse if eating outside the resort, $50 beach club upgrades, transfers, and tips, $70 premium activities or shopping

What to Eat in Cancun

1

Cochinita pibil tacos at any El Centro taqueria — slow-roasted achiote pork wrapped in banana leaf, served on handmade tortillas with habanero salsa and pickled red onion for about 20 MXN each. This is Yucatan's signature dish and the Hotel Zone versions are a pale imitation of what you get downtown.

2

Ceviche and fish tacos at Contramar-style mariscos spots in El Centro like Los Arcos — fresh Caribbean catch (mahi, grouper, shrimp) in lime and chile with tostadas for $8-12 a plate. Order the aguachile negro (shrimp cured in black chile sauce) if you can handle heat.

3

Sopa de lima at a Yucatecan restaurant like La Parrilla on Yaxchilan Avenue — a rich chicken broth brightened with local lima (sour lime), crispy tortilla strips, and shredded chicken. It's $5-8 and the flavor profile is unique to the Yucatan Peninsula.

4

Elote preparado from street carts throughout El Centro and near Parque Las Palapas — grilled corn on the cob slathered with mayo, cotija cheese, chile powder, and lime for 30-40 MXN. The Parque Las Palapas evening cart scene starting around 6pm is a legitimate local ritual worth experiencing.

5

Mezcal flight at a downtown mezcaleria like El Sabor de México — three artisanal pours from Oaxacan producers for about $12, which is half what you'd pay in the Hotel Zone. Ask for the tobala or espadin con gusano if you want the genuinely interesting stuff.

Flying from the US to Cancun

Airlines & Routes

  • American Airlines nonstop from MIA, DFW, JFK, ORD, CLT, LAX, PHX
  • Delta nonstop from ATL, JFK, LAX, MSP, DTW
  • United nonstop from IAH, EWR, ORD, IAD, DEN
  • Southwest nonstop from MDW, DAL, HOU, PHX, DEN, MCO, FLL
  • JetBlue nonstop from JFK, BOS, FLL, MCO
  • Spirit nonstop from FLL, LAX, ORD, DFW, DEN, ATL
  • Frontier nonstop from DEN, ORD, ATL, DFW, MCO
  • Alaska Airlines nonstop from LAX, SEA, SFO
  • Sun Country nonstop from MSP
  • Aeromexico via MEX (Mexico City) from select US cities

Flight Duration

East Coast
3-4 hours nonstop from MIA/JFK/BOS; 5-7 hours with connection through ATL or MIA
Midwest
3-4 hours nonstop from ORD/MDW/MSP; 5-6 hours with one connection
West Coast
5-6 hours nonstop from LAX/SFO/SEA; 7-9 hours with connection through IAH or DFW

Safety Tips

Cancun's Hotel Zone and major tourist areas are genuinely safe for American tourists by any objective metric — the violence associated with Mexican cartels occurs in supply routes and territories far from tourist infrastructure and is almost never directed at foreign visitors. The realistic risks are mundane: petty theft on crowded beaches (never leave valuables unattended), aggressive timeshare touts (say 'no thank you' once and keep walking — they are persistent but harmless), and transportation scams. Only use taxis booked through hotel concierges or the official airport taxi kiosks — never accept rides from people who approach you unsolicited at the airport. Downtown Cancun is safe during daylight hours for wandering; after dark, stick to well-lit main streets like Avenida Tulum and Yaxchilan. The US State Department rate Quintana Roo at Level 2 (exercise increased caution) as of 2026, same as France and the UK — treat it accordingly. The biggest actual danger most visitors face is sunburn on day one before their body adjusts; SPF 50+ is not optional on a Caribbean beach at this latitude.

Insider Tip

The ADO bus network connects Cancun's bus terminal (near El Centro) to Playa del Carmen, Tulum, Merida, Chichen Itza, and even Belize City — all for $5-20 USD. Skip every overpriced hotel-zone tour operator charging $80-120 for day trips to Chichen Itza or Tulum and instead book ADO direct at adogl.com.mx or at the terminal. A roundtrip to Tulum via ADO costs about $22 total; the hotel tour operators charge $90+ for the same destination. You get the same ruins either way — the bus just takes you to the town gate instead of driving you to the entrance, requiring a 10-minute $3 taxi transfer.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the cheapest way to fly to Cancun?

The cheapest route to Cancun from the US is typically from Miami (MIA), with estimated round-trip prices around $45. Prices vary significantly by season and booking timing.

What is the best time to visit Cancun?

The best time to visit Cancun is November, December, January, February, March, April. November-April is dry season (75-85°F). May-October is hurricane season (hot, humid, rain). Best weather is December-March. Avoid March (spring break insanity) and September-October (peak hurricanes).

Do US citizens need a visa to visit Cancun?

Visa-free for US passport holders for up to 180 days (tourism). Easy entry.

How long is the flight from the US to Cancun?

Flight time from the US to Cancun (CUN) is approximately 2 hours from Miami. Flight times vary by departure city — eastern US cities are typically shorter to their destination.

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