Flights to Argentina

Flights to Buenos Aires (EZE)

Pack your dancing shoes for flights to Buenos Aires. History buffs, tango aficionados, art connoisseurs and architecture lovers won’t be disappointed.

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You can book up to nine passengers per booking, including adults, children and infants.

Each adult passenger can bring one infant.

Children travelling alone, or in a different cabin class to their parents, are considered Unaccompanied Minors and pay the full adult fare. Please get in touch with us to book this service.

You can book up to nine passengers per booking, including adults, teenagers, children and infants.

Each adult passenger can bring one infant.

Children travelling alone, or in a different cabin class to their parents, are considered Unaccompanied Minors and pay the full adult fare. Please get in touch with us to book this service.

  • You can book up to nine passengers per booking, including adults, Overseas Filippino Workers (OFW), children and infants.
  • Each adult & OFW passenger can bring one infant.
  • All OFWs must submit the required documents to avail the tax exemption.
  • Children travelling alone, or in a different cabin class to their parents, are considered Unaccompanied Minors and pay the full adult fare. Please get in touch with us to book this service.
  • You can book up to nine passengers per booking, including adults, Overseas Filippino Workers (OFWs), teenagers, children and infants.
  • Each adult & OFW passenger can bring one infant.
  • All OFWs must submit the required documents to avail the tax exemption.
  • Children travelling alone, or in a different cabin class to their parents, are considered Unaccompanied Minors and pay the full adult fare. Please get in touch with us to book this service.
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Flights to Buenos Aires

The curious case of Buenos Aires; one of South America’s – and indeed the world’s – most vibrant and exciting cities. It throbs with activity across an enormous 78 square miles, all the while moving at something of a relaxed pace which you’ll quickly adopt when your flight to Buenos Aires touches down.

The city’s seductive combination of neoclassical architecture, cafe culture, nightlife and world-class restaurants has enough to do to keep you busy for months. If you haven’t got that kind of time, focus on the city’s incredible cultural resources during the day, taking in the Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes, the Japanese Gardens, and the stunning 19th century cafes.

At night, do as the porteños (locals) do and hit the town. Dine on grass-fed beef at a parilla (barbecue) restaurant, sample the incredible grape beverages of Argentina at a lively lounge, and dance until the sun comes up at one of the city’s nightlife venues.

In addition to its steakhouses and barbecue joints, Buenos Aires has a flourishing culinary scene that offers plenty of other choices. Cheap eats in cafeterias, delectable pastries and strong espressos in coffee shops, or delicate fusion dishes based mostly on fruit and veggies – take your pick. The profusion of cafes and lounges makes this a fantastic city to sightsee in, as you can break up your day with lots of delicious stops that will leave you feeling refreshed and satiated.

Working off all that food is easy – try taking a tango class, or just joining in at a local tango club. If you're feeling more adventurous, take a polo lesson, and test your mettle at a sport that Argentineans love almost as much as football. More sedentary activities, from theatre to live music to dance performances, are available everywhere – Buenos Aires is a cosmopolitan city and its inhabitants demand sophisticated cultural fare.

But whatever you do, take time to simply wander the city’s diverse neighbourhoods, exploring the traditional, the new, and everything in between. Among them, Palermo, the trendy neighbourhood du jour, is like a city within a city, large enough to have distinct subdivisions like Palermo Viejo, Palermo Hollywood, and Palermo Soho.

Argentina’s popularity with visitors, especially since inflation has driven down costs, is escalating on an almost daily basis. Happily, this means that the range of accommodation on offer is ever increasing, and that you’re virtually guaranteed to find something in your price range. (Do book ahead of time in popular seasons, though.)

The best hotels in Buenos Aires are the small, boutique numbers with a healthy dose of character and a good amount of luxury, although the options for low-budget rooms are also plentiful, and the highest-end choices are the equivalent of anything you’d find in New York or London.

COVID-19 related information

Visit our COVID-19 hub to find out everything you need to know about our current routes, services and safety measures, and the travel requirements for your destination.

What to do in Buenos Aires

Watch a tango Show

Buenos Aires is the tango capital of the world, and watching dancers strut their stuff at one of the city’s tango clubs is a can’t-miss experience. Head to Cafe de los Angelitos for dinner and a superb show of professional dancers performing the most dramatic and romantic dance there is.

Cafe de los Angelitos
2100 Avenida Rivadavia
Balvanera
1033
+54 11 4952 2320

Visit the Cementerio de la Recoleta

Visiting a graveyard might not seem like a top tourist attraction, but this cemetery is one of the best sights in Buenos Aires. The who’s who of Argentinean history are all buried here (make sure to stop by Evita’s grave) and the statues and tombstones are ornate and beautiful. English tours are available.

1760 Junín
Recoleta
1113
+54 11 4803 1594

See the Casa Rosada

One entire side of the Plaza de Mayo is the iconic Casa Rosada, the presidential palace whose balcony has seen everyone from Juan and Eva Perón to dictator General Leopoldo Galtieri (and even Madonna) declaim. It’s open to the public on weekends and the changing of the guard takes place every hour.

50 Balcarce
Monserrat
1064
+54 11 4344 3600

Where to eat in Buenos Aires

Piegari (Upscale Italian)

With so much of Argentina’s population being of Italian descent, Italian food options are everywhere. Piegari does a fantastic range of dishes from northern Italy, in a formal dining room with impeccable service. The risottos in particular have a stellar reputation.

1042 Posadas
Capital Federal
1011
+54 11 4326 9430

Tegui (Modern fusion)

Germán Martitegui is a celebrity chef in Argentina, and Tegui (with its exterior covered in artistic graffiti) is rated one of the best restaurants on the continent. The menu – original dishes like almond soup, and unusual pairings of ingredients – changes every week, and it’s worth splurging on the tasting menu.

5852 Costa Rica,
Palermo
1414
+54 11 47709500

Parrilla Don Julio (Barbecue)

Barbecue (parilla) is an Argentinean specialty, so don’t leave Buenos Aires without trying it at least once. Don Julio is a classic barbecue restaurant offering good value meals of everything from skirt steak to sweetbreads, along with an excellent sample of Argentina’s grape offering. You’ll find it in the trendy Palermo Soho neighbourhood.

4699 Guatemala Street
Palermo
1425
+54 11 4831 9564
+54 11 4832 6058 (two numbers given on website)

Places to stay in Buenos Aires

Legado Mítico Buenos Aires

Located in trendy Palermo Soho, the rooms at this boutique hotel are spacious and each is themed around a well-known Argentine. The ‘Evita’ room has an open fireplace and a two-sink bathroom, while the ‘Gaucho’ has a masculine theme featuring lots of wood and wool.

Palermo Soho Hostel
Nicaragua
Palermo Soho
1414
+54 11 4833 1300

Portal del Sur

A conveniently located downtown hostel, Portal del Sur is most notable for all the things that come included in the price: walking tours, Spanish lessons and karaoke. There are shared dorms and private rooms, a rooftop lounge, and a reading room if you want some chill-out time.

855 Hipólito Yrigoyen Street
Downtown
1086

+54 11 4342 8788

POP Hotel

POP styles itself a ‘budget boutique hotel’, and it’s a great alternative to a hostel. Located in the up-and-coming Villa Crespo neighbourhood, POP has clean and modern rooms, along with three lounges (business, movies and library). Rooms have Wi-Fi, LCD TVs and safes.

793 Juan Ramírez de Velasco
Villa Crespo
1414
+54 11 4776 6900

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Articles from Open Skies

Palermo, Buenos Aires

When Argentine writer Jorge Luis Borges lived in quiet, suburban Palermo at the beginning of the 20th century, he could scarcely have imagined what it would turn into. Now, everyone wants in on Palermo, a once run-down neighbourhood where independent fashion designers, daring chefs and bearded barbers clamour for commercial space in graffiti-covered buildings and crumbling mansions. The gentrification of Palermo, the biggest barrio in Buenos Aires, began in the late 1990s, when artists and designers moved north Read more Palermo, Buenos Aires

Marta Minujín, Our woman in Buenos Aires

Marta Minujín made her name with her avant-garde works of the 1960s, during which time she lived in New York and befriended John Lennon and Andy Warhol. She returned to her native Buenos Aires in the 1970s, and has since become one of Argentina’s most famous conceptual artists. She says: “I was always married to art. I decided to be an artist when I was 10 years old. I went to an arts school in Buenos Aires” Read more Marta Minujín, Our woman in Buenos Aires