Cheap Flights to Buenos Aires
Updated 2026-03-13
From
$299
one-way
Current One-Way Deals to Buenos Aires
No deals to Buenos Aires right now.
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Average One-Way Prices to Buenos Aires
| Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $380 | $350 | $320 | $310 | $300 | $290 | $310 | $300 | $280 | $290 | $310 | $400 |
Cheapest month: Sep (avg $280). Prices are average one-way fares based on historical data.
How to Find Cheap Flights to Buenos Aires
Buenos Aires is further from the US than most Latin American destinations, so fares are higher but still very competitive. Ezeiza Airport (EZE) is the international gateway — don't confuse it with Aeroparque (AEP) which handles domestic flights. Aerolineas Argentinas flies nonstop from Miami and JFK. American Airlines nonstop from Miami and Dallas. Copa Airlines via Panama City (PTY) is often the cheapest option — their connections through PTY are efficient and fares drop to $299 one-way during sales. LATAM via Santiago (SCL) or Lima (LIM) is another solid connecting route. United flies via Houston or other hubs. The key to cheap Buenos Aires flights: Copa and Avianca connecting routes undercut nonstops by $50-100 regularly. Check Panama City and Bogota connections. September through November is the cheapest flight window — it's also spring in Buenos Aires, which means pleasant weather. December-January is expensive (summer + holidays). June-August is winter but fares are moderate and the city has a cozy winter vibe. Flash sales on Copa and LATAM hit 3-4 times per year — set alerts on Google Flights and Skyscanner. The Miami route has the most competition and consistently lowest nonstop fares.
Buenos Aires for Digital Nomads
Buenos Aires is one of the best-value major cities in the world right now, thanks to Argentina's currency situation. Budget $800-1,300/month for a very comfortable life — we're talking eating out daily, nice apartment, and going out regularly. The exchange rate makes USD go absurdly far. A furnished apartment in Palermo runs $400-700/month. San Telmo is the bohemian historic neighborhood — cheaper rent, great Sunday market, tango culture. Recoleta is upscale and beautiful. Palermo (especially Palermo Soho and Palermo Hollywood) is the main nomad hub with cafes, coworking, and nightlife everywhere. US passport holders get 90 days visa-free. Argentina doesn't have a digital nomad visa yet, but the 90-day stay is easily extendable by doing a quick trip to Uruguay (Colonia del Sacramento is a short ferry ride). Coworking is plentiful: Urban Station, WeWork, and dozens of indie spaces from $50-100/month. The cafe culture is legendary — many cafes are fine with laptop workers for hours. Internet is generally reliable (20-50 Mbps). Buenos Aires has world-class steak, wine, nightlife, and cultural scenes. A steak dinner with wine costs $8-15. The city comes alive at night — dinner starts at 9pm, going out starts at midnight. The peso situation means everything is cheap but also means prices change frequently — always check current rates.
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