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Flying Within Mexico 2026: Best Domestic Airlines & Booking Tips for Expats

A 2026 guide to domestic airlines in Mexico for expats: comparing Aeromexico, Volaris, and VivaAerobus, understanding baggage fees, booking tricks, and how to fly cheaply between cities.

2026-07-11

Mexico Is Big — Flying Changes Everything

Mexico is roughly three times the size of Texas, and the distances between the places expats love — the Yucatán, the Pacific coast, the central highlands, Baja — are enormous. A drive from Mérida to Puerto Vallarta is a multi-day expedition; a flight is a couple of hours. Once you settle here, cheap domestic flights become one of the great quality-of-life perks: weekend trips, visa runs, and visits to friends across the country are all within easy reach.

The domestic market in 2026 is dominated by three airlines with very different personalities. Understanding them — and how their pricing tricks work — is the difference between a MX$600 fare and a MX$2,500 one for the same seat.

The Big Three

Airline Style Best for Watch out for
Aeromexico Full-service legacy Comfort, connections, loyalty perks, international links Higher base fares
Volaris Ultra low-cost Cheapest fares, biggest route map Aggressive add-on fees
VivaAerobus Ultra low-cost Rock-bottom promos, growing network Strict baggage rules, fees

Aeromexico

The full-service national carrier. Fares are higher, but you get a more comfortable experience, a real loyalty program (Club Premier), better on-time reliability, seamless connections to international flights, and a checked bag included on most fares. If you fly a lot, value predictability, or connect to/from the US and beyond, Aeromexico is the grown-up choice. It flies to the widest range of destinations including smaller cities.

Volaris

The ultra-low-cost giant with the largest domestic network and frequently the lowest headline prices. Volaris is how most budget-minded expats get around. The trade-off is the classic low-cost model: the base fare buys you a seat and a small personal item, and everything else costs extra — carry-on, checked bags, seat selection, priority. Its v.club membership can pay for itself if you fly often. Book carefully and it’s unbeatable value.

VivaAerobus

The other ultra-low-cost player, often with the most eye-catching promo fares. Similar model to Volaris — cheap seat, paid extras — with a reputation for very strict baggage enforcement at the gate. If you travel light and read the rules, the deals are excellent. Its network is a bit smaller but growing fast.

The Baggage Trap (Read This Twice)

The number-one way expats overpay is baggage. On the low-cost carriers, that MX$650 “amazing deal” can double once you add a carry-on and a checked bag.

Golden rules:

  1. Add bags when you book, never at the airport. Airport and gate bag fees are dramatically higher than the price you’d pay online in advance.
  2. Know the difference between a personal item and a carry-on. The cheapest fares often include only a small under-the-seat personal item; a rolling carry-on costs extra.
  3. Weigh and measure before you leave home. Gate agents on VivaAerobus and Volaris do enforce size and weight, and the penalties are steep.
  4. On Aeromexico, a checked bag is often already included — factor that into the true price comparison. A “more expensive” Aeromexico fare can be cheaper once you add bags on a low-cost carrier.

The right way to compare fares is all-in: base fare + the bags you actually need + seat selection if you care.

Booking Tips That Actually Save Money

  • Book direct on the airline’s website. For the low-cost carriers especially, third-party sites can complicate baggage add-ons and cause problems with changes. Direct is cleaner.
  • Fly midweek. Tuesday and Wednesday departures are typically cheapest; Friday and Sunday are the most expensive.
  • Book a few weeks out. Domestic fares tend to rise close to departure; last-minute is rarely a deal here.
  • Watch for promos. The low-cost carriers run frequent flash sales — worth following them if you have flexible travel dates.
  • Consider membership (Volaris v.club / VivaAerobus’s discount club) if you’ll fly more than a handful of times a year; the per-flight discounts add up.
  • Use a Mexican-friendly payment method. Some fares and promos price better in pesos; foreign cards usually work fine but keep an eye on currency conversion.
  • Small local carriers (like regional operators serving smaller destinations) fill gaps the big three don’t cover — useful for out-of-the-way places, though pricier per mile.

Airports and the On-the-Ground Reality

  • Mexico City has two airports now — the older AICM (MEX) and the newer AIFA (NLU), which is farther from the city center. Check which airport your flight uses; AIFA can mean a long, expensive transfer.
  • Arrive early. Low-cost carriers can have long check-in and bag-drop lines, and they’re unforgiving about cutoffs.
  • Domestic security is generally quicker than international, but don’t cut it close.
  • Print or download boarding passes; some carriers charge to print at the airport.
  • Major hubs like Cancún, Guadalajara, Monterrey, and Mexico City have frequent flights; smaller cities may have only a couple of departures a day, so plan connections with buffer time.

Sample Real-World Fares (2026, Approximate)

Route Low-cost promo fare Typical fare Aeromexico (bag included)
Mérida ↔ Mexico City ~MX$700 MX$1,200–1,800 MX$1,800–2,600
Cancún ↔ Guadalajara ~MX$900 MX$1,500–2,200 MX$2,200–3,000
Mexico City ↔ Puerto Vallarta ~MX$800 MX$1,300–2,000 MX$2,000–2,800
Tijuana ↔ Mexico City ~MX$1,000 MX$1,600–2,400 MX$2,400–3,200

Prices swing hugely with timing and sales — these are ballparks. Remember to add bags to the low-cost figures for a true comparison.

Which Should You Choose?

  • Budget and travel light? Volaris or VivaAerobus, booked in advance with bags added online.
  • Value comfort, reliability, and connections? Aeromexico — and its all-in price is often closer than you’d think.
  • Fly frequently? Pick one low-cost carrier, join its discount club, and learn its baggage rules cold.

Once you have the system down, flying within Mexico turns the whole country into your backyard — and that’s one of the underrated joys of living here.

Flying vs. Taking the Bus

It’s worth remembering that Mexico has a genuinely world-class long-distance bus network (ADO, ETN, Primera Plus and others), with comfortable executive-class coaches, reclining seats, and reliable schedules. For shorter hops — say, within the Yucatán Peninsula or between nearby cities — the bus can be cheaper, drops you downtown instead of at a distant airport, and skips the whole check-in-and-baggage circus. For long cross-country distances, though, flying almost always wins on time. A rough rule of thumb: under about four or five hours of driving, consider the bus; beyond that, price out a flight.

A Few Habits of Seasoned Domestic Flyers

  • Screenshot your reservation and boarding pass in case airport Wi-Fi is flaky.
  • Keep your immigration document handy. On domestic flights you usually just need ID, but having your residency card or passport avoids any hiccup.
  • Build in buffer for connections. If you’re linking a domestic flight to an international one, don’t book a tight layover — bag re-checks and terminal changes eat time.
  • Follow the airlines on social media for flash sales; the low-cost carriers announce their best promos there first.
  • Set fare alerts for routes you fly often, and pounce when a sale hits your dates.

Master these small habits and you’ll spend less, stress less, and treat a weekend in a city across the country as casually as locals do.

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