Home Travel Guide Getting Around Mexico — Transport Guide
Travel Guide Updated April 2026

Getting Around Mexico — Transport Guide

Mexico has world-class buses, cheap internal flights, and Uber. Rent a car only if you really need it.

InfoMexico.org · Independent guide · Not affiliated with any government

Buses (ADO)

ADO is Mexico's premium long-distance bus company. The buses are clean, on-time, and the seats are bigger than business class on most airlines. Book online or at the bus station.

Always pick the GL or Platino class for overnight journeys — wider seats and toilets work.

Internal flights

Volaris, Viva Aerobús and Aeroméxico run a dense network of cheap internal flights. Booking 2–4 weeks ahead, you can usually find one-way tickets for $40–80.

Ride-share apps

Uber and DiDi work in every major city. They're cheaper and safer than street taxis. Use them in Mexico City, Guadalajara, Monterrey, Mérida and Oaxaca.

Renting a car

Skip rentals for cities. Rent only for: Yucatán cenote loops, Baja road trips, and Pueblos Mágicos away from bus routes. Insurance is mandatory and quoted separately from the headline rate.

Many car-rental headline prices online don't include the mandatory Mexican liability insurance. Expect to pay $20–35 per day extra at the counter.

Trains

Mexico has very few passenger trains. The two scenic exceptions: the Chepe (Copper Canyon) and the Tren Maya (Yucatán) which opened in late 2023.

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