
Book Affordable Flights to Latin America with
Dialtotravel
Latin America has a way of sticking with you long after you're back home. You think about the food, a particular street, a view you stumbled across without planning to. The ruins are real, the coastlines are as good as anyone says, and every country on the continent runs on its own terms — which is half the appeal. Most people come back with a shorter list of answers and a longer list of places they still want to see. Wherever you're headed — Brazil, Peru, Argentina, or somewhere in between, book your flights to Latin America with Dialtotravel and get there for less.
Popular Destinations in Latin
America
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Loud, stylish, and chaotic in a way that somehow works. Each
neighbourhood has its own character — Palermo, San Telmo, La Boca feel like
separate towns that happen to share a city. The food and wine are serious, the
tango is genuine, and the place runs late. It takes a day to adjust, and then
you stop wanting to leave.
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
The setting does most of the talking — mountains falling into the
sea, beaches cutting through the city, a skyline that shouldn't work but does.
Copacabana and Ipanema are exactly as advertised, but what people actually
remember is the street food, the hillside neighbourhoods, and how quickly the
city makes you feel at ease.
Cusco & Machu Picchu, Peru
Cusco sits high enough that the first day slows you down, whether
you plan for it or not. Once you've adjusted, the city earns your full
attention — Inca stonework running beneath Spanish colonial buildings, markets
that sell everything, streets worth getting lost in. Most people give it one
night. It deserves more.
Mexico City, Mexico
Huge, loud, and completely absorbing. The historic centre keeps
you occupied for days — the Zócalo, the murals in the National Palace, the
markets around La Merced. It's the kind of city that rewards slowing down
rather than rushing through, and punishes anyone who tries to see it all at
once.
Patagonia, Chile & Argentina
At the bottom of the continent, Patagonia operates on a scale that
takes some getting used to. Torres del Paine, the Perito Moreno glacier, and landscapes
that stretch well beyond what the eye can make sense of. It's not the easiest
place to get to. Most people who go say it's the best trip they've ever done.
Best Time to Visit Latin America
For Brazil,
Colombia, and the Caribbean coast, December through March brings drier weather
and is the most comfortable window for travel. Peru and Bolivia are best
visited between May and October — the dry season — when the mountain routes are
clear, and the skies over Machu Picchu tend to cooperate. Argentina and Chile
run on reversed seasons. Patagonia is best from November through March, which
is the southern hemisphere summer. Buenos Aires is manageable year-round,
though the autumn months of March and April offer the most pleasant
temperatures without the summer crowds.
How to Get There
Most long-haul
traffic into Latin America from Europe routes through a handful of major hubs.
Buenos Aires' Ministro Pistarini International Airport (EZE) and São Paulo's
Guarulhos International Airport (GRU) handle the bulk of transatlantic arrivals
into South America. Lima's Jorge Chávez International Airport (LIM) has become
an increasingly well-connected hub for the Andean region. Bogotá's El Dorado
International Airport (BOG) serves Colombia and connects well to Central
America. Mexico City's Benito Juárez International Airport (MEX) is the primary
gateway for North and Central America. Paulo.
Frequently Asked Questions
April, May, and
October tend to offer the softest fares — sitting outside the main holiday
windows when demand eases off. Midweek departures consistently come in below
weekend prices, and the flexibility of even a few days either side of your
preferred dates can make a real difference on long-haul routes.
Book two to three
months ahead for the best balance of price and seat availability. Connecting
flights through Madrid, Lisbon, or Miami often bring fares down considerably —
worth comparing against direct options when you search. Fare alerts help if
your schedule has room to move.
It varies by
destination. Bogotá runs around twelve hours direct from London. Lima is closer
to thirteen. Buenos Aires and São Paulo sit at fourteen to fifteen hours.
Connecting flights add time but regularly reduce the overall cost on these
longer routes.
Most countries in
the region allow UK passport holders in without a visa for short tourist stays
— including Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Peru, and Mexico. Requirements and
permitted lengths of stay vary, so it's worth checking the current rules for
your specific destination before you travel.
Without question.
Medical costs without coverage can be steep, and in more remote parts of the
continent — Patagonia, the Amazon, high-altitude trekking routes — emergency
assistance adds up quickly. A solid policy covers health, cancellations,
delays, and lost belongings.