Compare Prices from All US Cities
| From | Airport | Est. Price | Flight Time | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
BESTAustin | AUS | $68 | ~3h | View → |
Houston | IAH | $75 | ~3h | View → |
Phoenix | PHX | $82 | ~3h | View → |
Dallas | DFW | $83 | ~3h | View → |
San Diego | SAN | $93 | ~3h | View → |
Los Angeles | LAX | $103 | ~3h | View → |
Las Vegas | LAS | $103 | ~3h | View → |
Denver | DEN | $111 | ~4h | View → |
Salt Lake City | SLC | $122 | ~4h | View → |
Tampa | TPA | $128 | ~4h | View → |
St. Louis | STL | $129 | ~4h | View → |
Nashville | BNA | $130 | ~4h | View → |
Atlanta | ATL | $131 | ~4h | View → |
San Francisco | SFO | $131 | ~4h | View → |
Orlando | MCO | $134 | ~4h | View → |
Miami | MIA | $137 | ~4h | View → |
Fort Lauderdale | FLL | $137 | ~4h | View → |
Chicago | ORD | $150 | ~5h | View → |
Charlotte | CLT | $150 | ~5h | View → |
Minneapolis | MSP | $152 | ~5h | View → |
Detroit | DTW | $165 | ~5h | View → |
Portland | PDX | $167 | ~5h | View → |
Seattle | SEA | $175 | ~5h | View → |
Washington D.C. | DCA | $176 | ~5h | View → |
Baltimore | BWI | $179 | ~5h | View → |
Philadelphia | PHL | $186 | ~5h | View → |
Newark | EWR | $192 | ~6h | View → |
New York | LGA | $194 | ~6h | View → |
New York | JFK | $194 | ~6h | View → |
Boston | BOS | $209 | ~6h | View → |
San Juan | SJU | $215 | ~6h | View → |
About Puerto Vallarta
Puerto Vallarta sits on Banderas Bay — one of the largest natural bays in the Americas — and somehow manages to be both a serious beach resort town and a place with genuine Mexican soul. The old town (Zona Romántica or El Centro) has cobblestone streets, a cathedral with a crown-shaped tower, and a malecón boardwalk lined with sculpture and street food carts. Unlike Cancún, which was essentially built for tourists from scratch, PV grew organically around a real fishing village. You can still feel that underneath the Airbnbs and craft cocktail bars.
For Americans, PV punches above its weight as a value destination. Your dollar goes far: a solid dinner with drinks at a sit-down restaurant in Zona Romántica runs $25–45 for two, a beachside beer is $2–3, and even high-season hotel rates at boutique properties in Colonia Versalles or the Romantic Zone are a fraction of comparable Caribbean resorts. Nonstop flights from dozens of US cities make it among the most accessible Mexican beach destinations — LAX and SFO are under 3 hours, even Chicago and Dallas are under 4.
The beach situation is more nuanced than the marketing suggests. The main hotel strip (Hotel Zone / Zona Hotelera) has long stretches of sand but heavy surf and limited shade. The real gems are south of town: Playa Los Muertos is the lively local scene, and Boca de Tomatlán is the launching point for water taxis to the hidden beaches of Yelapa, Quimixto, and Las Ánimas — none of which have roads. These southern coves, reachable only by boat ($15–20 round trip), are worth the trip alone. To the north, Punta Mita and Sayulita offer calmer waters and a surfer/wellness vibe.
The gay-friendly Zona Romántica is one of the most vibrant LGBTQ+ travel scenes in all of Latin America, centered on the stretch of Calle Lázaro Cárdenas near Los Muertos beach. But beyond that scene, PV has strong culinary credentials — celebrity chefs like Thierry Blouet have operated here for decades, and the taco scene along Basilio Badillo (nicknamed Restaurant Row) and the city's mercados is as legit as anywhere in Mexico. Hurricane season (June–October) brings real weather risk, and September in particular should be avoided unless you're chasing deep discount rates.
Best Time to Fly to Puerto Vallarta
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Track Puerto Vallarta flights →Airport to City: How to Get There
Option 1 — Official airport taxis: Buy a ticket at the fixed-rate booth inside the arrivals hall before exiting. Rates are zone-based — Zona Romántica runs about $25 USD, Hotel Zone about $18 USD, about 15–25 minutes depending on traffic. No haggling, no surge pricing. Option 2 — Uber: Works reliably at PVR and costs $10–15 USD to Zona Romántica, but you must exit the terminal and walk to the pickup zone outside to avoid confrontations with taxi unions. Option 3 — Public bus: Walk out of the airport, cross the highway overpass, and catch the 'Centro' bus for about 12 pesos ($0.60 USD). Takes 30–40 minutes with stops. Only practical if you're traveling light and speaking some Spanish.
Neighborhoods & Where to Stay
The heart of tourist PV and the city's most walkable neighborhood, packed with boutique hotels, the best restaurant density, and the lively Los Muertos beach. Stay here if you want to bar-hop on Calle Olas Altas, walk to dozens of restaurants, and access water taxis to southern beaches. Hotels like Hotel Playa Los Arcos and Casa Cupula sit in this zone and offer real value.
The historic core with the Our Lady of Guadalupe church, the malecón boardwalk sculptures, and the main mercado. More authentically Mexican than the Romantic Zone, with better street food and lower prices. Staying here puts you within walking distance of both the boardwalk and the Romantic Zone, and boutique options like Hotel Rosita offer beachfront access at reasonable rates.
The northern strip of all-inclusive resorts — Marriott, Sheraton, Westin, and the massive Vidanta complex. Convenient if you want the all-inclusive experience, but you're isolated from the real city and need a taxi or bus to reach good restaurants. Prices are high relative to what you get compared to smaller boutique options in the Romantic Zone.
An up-and-coming residential neighborhood just inland from the Hotel Zone that has become PV's most exciting dining and nightlife corridor. Calle Francisco Villa is lined with concept restaurants, mezcal bars, and cocktail spots frequented by locals and in-the-know visitors. No beach access but short taxi rides ($4–5) to multiple beaches.
A hillside enclave of private villas and boutique luxury hotels just south of the Romantic Zone with dramatic Pacific views and rocky cove beaches. The Hotel Garza Blanca and Hacienda San Angel are here. Best for honeymooners or travelers who want seclusion with easy access ($7 taxi) to the Romantic Zone's restaurants.
Technically a separate pueblo mágico but many PV visitors base here for a few nights — bohemian surf village with a tight town square, excellent cheap tacos at Tacos El Señor, and consistent beginner surf breaks. More backpacker than PV proper, with good hostel options under $25/night. The drive up is beautiful but budget 45–60 minutes each way.
Daily Budget: What to Expect
$15–20 hostel dorm or cheap guesthouse in Zona Romántica, $15 food (street tacos $1–2 each at stands on Calle Basilio Badillo, mercado lunches $6–8), $5 local buses and walking, $15 one paid activity or free beach day with cheap beer
$80–100 boutique hotel or Airbnb in Zona Romántica or El Centro, $45 food (breakfast at a café $8, lunch at a mid-range spot $15, dinner with drinks at Restaurant Row $20–25), $15 Ubers and water taxis, $30 one activity (snorkeling tour, water taxi to Yelapa)
$250–300 ocean-view suite at Garza Blanca or Casa Cupula, $80 food (brunch at Café des Artistes terrace $25, tasting menu dinner at Thierry Blouet's $55+), $30 private transfers, $80 spa treatment or private yacht charter share
What to Eat in Puerto Vallarta
Birria tacos at Birriería La Cholita on Calle Miramar — come between 8–11am before they sell out, order the consommé for dipping, and get there early on weekends. The slow-braised goat falling into a corn tortilla with cilantro and white onion is textbook.
Shrimp tacos at Mariscos Cisneros on the malecón — grilled (not fried) shrimp with their homemade salsa verde in handmade corn tortillas for about $3 each. This is what Pacific coast Mexican seafood actually tastes like before tourist-ification.
Chilorio torta at Mercado Lázaro Cárdenas (Mercado Municipal) — the covered market off Calle Agustín Rodríguez has a row of fondas serving home-style Mexican breakfast and lunch. Chilorio is a pork preparation specific to Sinaloa/Nayarit style that you'll rarely find back home.
Tasting menu at Café des Artistes (Calle Guadalupe Sánchez) — Thierry Blouet's flagship has been PV's best fine dining restaurant since 1990 and still earns it. The courtyard setting is spectacular, the duck with hibiscus reduction is a signature dish, and for $70–80 per person including wine it's a remarkable value against comparable NYC or LA restaurants.
Elote preparado from any beachside cart on Playa Los Muertos — grilled corn on the cob slathered with mayo, cotija cheese, chile powder, and lime for $2. Eat it at sunset with your feet in the sand. This sounds basic but it's a PV ritual.
Flying from the US to Puerto Vallarta
Airlines & Routes
- →American Airlines nonstop from DFW, LAX, ORD, PHX, CLT
- →United Airlines nonstop from IAH, ORD, LAX, SFO, DEN, EWR
- →Delta nonstop from LAX, SLC, ATL (seasonal)
- →Alaska Airlines nonstop from LAX, SFO, SEA, PDX
- →Southwest Airlines nonstop from LAX, SFO, SAN, PHX, DEN, DAL
- →Frontier Airlines nonstop from DEN, MDW (seasonal)
- →Aeromexico via MEX from most major US cities
Flight Duration
Safety Tips
Puerto Vallarta is consistently one of Mexico's safer cities for tourists — the federal tourism corridor designation means heavy security presence around the beaches and Centro. That said: stick to Zona Romántica, El Centro, Versalles, and the Hotel Zone at night. Avoid wandering into the hillside colonias above the city (Colonia El Pitillal, areas north of the airport highway) after dark — these neighborhoods are not set up for tourists. Use Uber over street taxis for any late-night travel, and only accept rides from verified plates. At Playa Los Muertos, watch your belongings when swimming — beach theft is the most common crime affecting tourists. Don't flash expensive cameras or jewelry on the malecón at night. Water taxis to southern beaches (Yelapa, Las Ánimas) are completely safe; use the official dock at Boca de Tomatlán and only board marked boats. Drinking tap water will make you sick — drink only purified or bottled water, including when brushing teeth in budget accommodations.
Book your flight to PVR for a Tuesday or Wednesday arrival and leave on a Tuesday — the price difference versus Friday/Saturday arrivals on the same routes is often $80–150 per person round-trip. More importantly, skip the tourist-facing whale-watching tours departing from the main marina and instead book directly with Ocean Friendly Whale Watch (run by IMTA-certified marine biologists) — the price is similar at $55–65 but boats carry max 8–10 passengers versus 40+ on the commercial tours, and they'll actually cut the engine and let you float near whales rather than circling them.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the cheapest way to fly to Puerto Vallarta?
The cheapest route to Puerto Vallarta from the US is typically from Austin (AUS), with estimated round-trip prices around $68. Prices vary significantly by season and booking timing.
What is the best time to visit Puerto Vallarta?
The best time to visit Puerto Vallarta is November, December, January, February, March, April. November-April is dry season (75-85°F). May-October is rainy season (afternoon storms, humid). Best weather is December-March. Avoid September-October (hurricanes).
Do US citizens need a visa to visit Puerto Vallarta?
Visa-free for US passport holders for up to 180 days (tourism). Easy entry.
How long is the flight from the US to Puerto Vallarta?
Flight time from the US to Puerto Vallarta (PVR) is approximately 3 hours from Austin. Flight times vary by departure city — eastern US cities are typically shorter to their destination.
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