Compare Prices from All US Cities
| From | Airport | Est. Price | Flight Time |
|---|
About Galapagos
The Galapagos Islands are one of the few places on Earth that genuinely deliver on their hype. Located 600 miles off the coast of Ecuador, this volcanic archipelago is where Charles Darwin formulated his theory of natural selection — and the wildlife still hasn't learned to fear humans. You can sit inches from blue-footed boobies doing their mating dance, snorkel with sea lions that treat you like a playmate, and watch giant tortoises lumber through highland mist like something out of the Jurassic. No other place on Earth gives you this level of access to wild animals that simply don't care that you're there.
For Americans, the Galapagos requires serious planning and budget. You'll fly into either Baltra (GPS) or San Cristóbal (SCY), both of which require a connection through Quito (UIO) or Guayaquil (GYE) on LATAM or Avianca. Once you arrive, you'll pay a $200 National Park entrance fee at the airport — in cash or card — and a $10 transit card. The islands are organized around two main inhabited towns: Puerto Ayora on Santa Cruz (the hub) and Puerto Baquerizo Moreno on San Cristóbal. From either base, day trips and multi-day tours fan out across the archipelago's 13 major islands.
The critical decision most visitors face is land-based vs. cruise. A live-aboard cruise ($2,500–$8,000+ for 5–8 nights) gets you to remote islands like Fernandina, Española, and Genovesa that are unreachable on day trips, and you wake up at a new site every morning. Land-based trips ($150–$300/day with tours) are cheaper and let you enjoy Puerto Ayora's actual town life, restaurants, and flexibility — but you'll miss the outer islands. The honest answer: if budget allows, do a cruise for at least part of the trip. If not, a land-based trip from Santa Cruz still delivers extraordinary wildlife encounters at Tortuga Bay, Charles Darwin Research Station, and highland tortoise reserves.
The Galapagos is a bucket-list destination that rewards people who do their homework. Book licensed naturalist guide tours, avoid peak season crowds in July and December, and budget more than you think you need. Flights from the US mainland run $600–$1,200 for the Quito or Guayaquil connection legs, with the inter-island flights to the Galapagos adding another $200–$400 round-trip. Prices have risen sharply since 2023, and budget travel here has a floor significantly higher than anywhere else in Ecuador.
Best Time to Fly to Galapagos
Click any month for weather, crowds, and what's on.
Get alerts when Galapagos flights drop to your target price.
Track Galapagos flights →Airport to City: How to Get There
Baltra Airport (GPS) on North Seymour Island requires a ferry-bus-taxi combo to reach Puerto Ayora on Santa Cruz. Step 1: Take the free INGALA shuttle bus (~5 min) to the Itabaca Channel ferry. Step 2: Take the $1 public ferry across the channel (5 min). Step 3: From the other side, take a shared bus ($3, 45 min) or taxi ($25, 30 min) to Puerto Ayora. Total trip is 1–1.5 hours and costs $4–$28 depending on your choices. If your cruise ship picks you up at Baltra, they handle transfers. San Cristóbal Airport (SCY) is more convenient — it's a 10-minute taxi ride ($5–$8) directly to Puerto Baquerizo Moreno's waterfront.
Neighborhoods & Where to Stay
The main hub of Galapagos life, centered on Charles Darwin Avenue along the waterfront. This is where you'll find the fish market (pelicans and sea lions steal scraps daily), the best restaurants like La Garrapata and Hernan Café, tour operators, and the ferry to the highlands. Book hotels like Hotel Fernandina or Silberstein for solid mid-range quality.
The official capital of the Galapagos province and a more laid-back alternative to Santa Cruz. Cheaper accommodation and restaurants, with excellent snorkeling right off the beach at La Lobería where sea lions lounge on the sand. Great for independent travelers who want fewer crowds — try Casa de Laura for budget rooms around $40/night.
The misty volcanic highlands above Puerto Ayora are where giant tortoises roam freely on private farms — Rancho Primicias and El Chato are the best stops, charging around $5 entry. Stay at Semilla Verde Boutique Hotel for a genuine eco-lodge experience surrounded by tortoise habitat, with rates around $150–$200/night including breakfast.
The most remote inhabited town in the Galapagos, reached by a $35 speedboat from Santa Cruz (~2 hours). Far fewer tourists than Santa Cruz, with stunning flamingo lagoons a 10-minute walk from town and the Tintoreras islet full of resting white-tip reef sharks. Stay at the Albemarle Hotel or La Laguna Hostel for $80–$130/night.
Daily Budget: What to Expect
$25 hostel dorm at The Rock Hostel or Hostal Buen Viaje, $25 meals (set lunch menú del día $8, breakfast $5, dinner $12), $20 water taxi and local transport, $50 one activity or park entry (snorkel gear rental $15, day tour $35–$60)
$100 mid-range hotel like Hotel Fernandina or Casa de Judy, $50 food (restaurant meals, coffee, snacks), $30 transport including inter-island water taxis, $100 guided day tour with naturalist guide to Tortuga Bay or Las Tintoreras
$250–$400 boutique hotel like Royal Palm Galapagos or Finch Bay Eco Hotel, $100 fine dining and drinks, $200+ private naturalist guide tour or premium cruise day excursion, $50 spa and extras
What to Eat in Galapagos
Seco de pescado at any comedores near the Puerto Ayora fish market — a slow-braised fish stew served with rice, lentils, and patacones for under $8, made with whatever was caught that morning by local boats
Ceviche de pepino de mar (sea cucumber ceviche) at waterfront restaurants in Puerto Ayora — a Galapagos specialty you won't find on the mainland, made with marinated sea cucumber, lime, onion, and cilantro for $10–$14
Langosta entera (whole lobster) grilled or in garlic butter at El Chocolate or La Garrapata in Puerto Ayora — Galapagos lobster season runs June through December and a whole lobster runs $25–$45, absurdly good value for the quality
Menú del día at any inland comedor in Puerto Ayora or Puerto Baquerizo Moreno — a complete set lunch of soup, main with rice and salad, and fresh juice for $5–$8, how locals eat and the best food value on the islands
Chocolate and coffee from Hernan Café on Charles Darwin Avenue — the Galapagos grows its own cacao and coffee on Santa Cruz and San Cristóbal, and Hernan's single-origin hot chocolate and espresso are made with locally farmed beans you can buy to take home for $12–$18/bag
Flying from the US to Galapagos
Airlines & Routes
- →LATAM via Quito (UIO) or Guayaquil (GYE) — most common routing for US travelers, connects from Miami, JFK, LAX, and Houston
- →Avianca via Quito (UIO) — good option from major US hubs, connects to LATAM or Avianca's Galapagos flights
- →American Airlines via Miami to Quito or Guayaquil, then LATAM to Galapagos
- →United via Houston (IAH) to Quito or Guayaquil — one of the shortest US-to-Ecuador connections
- →Copa Airlines via Panama City (PTY) — solid option from East Coast cities with competitive fares
Flight Duration
Safety Tips
The Galapagos is one of the safest destinations in South America for tourists — violent crime is virtually nonexistent. The biggest dangers are environmental: respect the 6-foot rule (never closer to wildlife), don't touch marine iguanas or sea lions (their mothers will abandon them), and wear reef shoes in tide pools to protect both yourself and the coral. Sun exposure at the equator is brutal — SPF 50+ minimum, and use reef-safe sunscreen only (chemical sunscreens are banned in the marine reserve). On boats, take Dramamine before departure — Galapagos boat crossings between islands can be rough, especially July through September. Bring cash to Puerto Villamil and Floreana; ATMs on outer islands are unreliable. Always carry your park entry receipt and transit card — rangers check them on ferries and at visitor sites.
Book your inter-island speedboat tickets in advance at the INGALA cooperative office on Charles Darwin Avenue in Puerto Ayora rather than through your hotel or a tour agency — you'll pay $30–$35 vs. $50–$80 that middlemen charge for the exact same boat. The boats to Isabela leave at 7am and 3pm daily; to San Cristóbal at 6am and 2pm. Also: the free snorkeling at Tortuga Bay (45-minute walk from Puerto Ayora) rivals paid tour sites — arrive before 9am to have the beach to yourself and marine iguanas, sea turtles, and white-tip sharks in the lagoon.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the cheapest way to fly to Galapagos?
Fares to Galapagos vary by US departure city, season, and how far in advance you book. Set a Wildly price alert to be notified when fares hit your target on any route.
Do US citizens need a visa to visit Galapagos?
Visa requirements for Ecuador vary. US citizens should check the latest entry requirements with the US State Department before booking.
How long is the flight from the US to Galapagos?
Flight duration to Galapagos depends on your US departure city. Set a price alert and check your preferred route for exact times.
Related Reading
Track flights to Galapagos
Set a price alert for your preferred route and we'll notify you when fares drop.
Get Price Alerts