# Puerto Vallarta Airport Transfer Guide (PVR) Practical guide to getting from Puerto Vallarta Airport to your hotel or resort. Taxi, bus, transfer options, real pricing, and honest advice. **Airport:** PVR **City:** Puerto Vallarta **Country:** Mexico **URL:** https://www.airporttransferportal.com/airport-guides/pvr --- ## Main Guide ### Quick answer Gustavo Diaz Ordaz International Airport (PVR) sits between Puerto Vallarta and Riviera Nayarit, right on the coast. The Hotel Zone and downtown Puerto Vallarta are 5-15 minutes away. Nuevo Vallarta and the Riviera Nayarit resorts are 20-40 minutes north. A taxi to downtown costs MXN 250-400 (USD 14-22). Pre-booked transfers run USD 15-35 for a sedan. There is also a cheap public bus option if you are travelling light. 👉 AirportTransferPortal offers fixed-price transfers on this route, which removes uncertainty on arrival. --- ### What actually happens after landing PVR has one terminal building with separate sections for international and domestic arrivals. International flights go through immigration first. Mexico has simplified its entry process — you no longer need to fill out a paper immigration form. The electronic system is faster, but queues still build when multiple flights from the US and Canada land at the same time. Peak arrival windows (midday, early afternoon) can mean 20-40 minute waits. Baggage claim is downstairs. Trolleys are available. After collecting your bags, you walk through a customs checkpoint. Mexico uses a traffic light system — you press a button, and if the light turns green, you walk through. Red means your bags get inspected (brief and routine). After customs, you exit into the arrivals area, which is outdoors and covered. The heat and humidity hit immediately. Welcome to the Pacific coast. --- ### Transport options explained honestly **Pre-booked private transfer** is the most straightforward option. A driver meets you in the arrivals area, helps with bags, and drives you to your hotel. Sedan transfers to downtown Puerto Vallarta or the Hotel Zone cost USD 15-25. To Nuevo Vallarta or Bucerias, USD 25-40. To Sayulita or Punta de Mita, USD 45-70. Air-conditioned vehicles, fixed prices. **Airport taxi (authorized)** — Puerto Vallarta operates a zone-based taxi system from the airport. You buy a ticket at the transportation booth in the arrivals area before getting into the taxi. Prices are posted by zone. To downtown: MXN 250-350. To Nuevo Vallarta: MXN 400-550. To Sayulita: MXN 900-1,200. These are per vehicle, not per person. **Uber/Didi** technically operate in Puerto Vallarta, but pickups from the airport are complicated. Local taxi unions have resisted rideshare services at the airport, and you may face difficulty getting a rideshare car to pick you up. It is not a reliable option for airport departures. **Public bus** — if you walk out of the airport and across the highway overpass, you can catch local buses heading to downtown PV for about MXN 10-15. This is the budget option. Buses are basic, do not have luggage space, and the walk with bags is unpleasant. Only practical for backpackers travelling light. **Rental cars** are available from agencies at the airport. Driving in Puerto Vallarta is manageable, but resort-based holidays rarely require a car. **Resort shuttle** — some all-inclusive resorts in Nuevo Vallarta and Riviera Nayarit offer complimentary airport transfers. Check with your hotel. --- ### Realistic pricing expectations Getting from PVR to common destinations: - Downtown Puerto Vallarta: USD 15-22 (transfer), MXN 250-350 (taxi) - Hotel Zone (south of airport): USD 12-18 (transfer), MXN 200-300 (taxi) - Marina Vallarta: USD 10-15 (transfer), MXN 150-250 (taxi) - Nuevo Vallarta: USD 25-35 (transfer), MXN 400-550 (taxi) - Bucerias: USD 30-40 (transfer), MXN 500-700 (taxi) - Sayulita: USD 50-70 (transfer), MXN 900-1,200 (taxi) - Punta de Mita: USD 55-75 (transfer), MXN 1,000-1,400 (taxi) Public bus to downtown: MXN 10-15 per person. --- ### Late night arrivals PVR receives flights until late evening, with some US connections landing around 10-11 PM. The airport transportation booths stay open as long as flights are arriving. Taxis are available into the night. Pre-booked transfers operate at any hour. Public buses stop running around 10-11 PM. The roads are quiet at night and the drive to most hotels is faster than during the day. There are no significant safety concerns on the main routes to the hotel areas after dark. --- ### Families and luggage Most visitors to Puerto Vallarta are on vacation with full-sized suitcases. Authorized airport taxis and transfers handle luggage without issue. If you are a family of four with large bags plus a stroller, request a minivan transfer or a Suburban taxi at the transportation booth. Child car seats are not standard in Mexican taxis. Transfer services can provide them if requested in advance. The walk from arrivals to the vehicle pickup is short and mostly covered, though the outdoor heat can be intense. --- ### Where you meet the driver After exiting customs, you enter an outdoor covered area. Pre-booked transfer drivers stand here with name signs. The transportation booth where you buy authorized taxi tickets is also in this area. It is compact and clearly laid out. Look for your name sign or go directly to the booth. Do not accept offers from unlicensed drivers approaching you. The official system is well-organized and clearly marked. --- ### Decision helper **Choose a pre-booked transfer if** you want a fixed price, direct ride, and someone waiting for you. Best for families and trips to Nuevo Vallarta or farther north. **Choose an authorized airport taxi if** you did not pre-book and want to get moving immediately. Buy the ticket at the booth, not from a person approaching you. **Choose the public bus if** you are a solo backpacker heading to downtown PV with a single bag and a sense of adventure. **Choose a rental car if** you plan to explore the coast, visit towns like Sayulita and San Pancho, and want independence during your stay. 👉 This is the lowest-friction option after a long flight. --- ### Summary Puerto Vallarta Airport is compact and navigable. The authorized taxi system works well, and pre-booked transfers offer a small price advantage with added convenience. The key choice is whether your destination is nearby (downtown, Hotel Zone) or farther north (Nuevo Vallarta, Sayulita), which significantly affects both the price and the value of pre-booking. --- ## Frequently Asked Questions **Q: Can I use Uber from Puerto Vallarta Airport?** Technically Uber operates in Puerto Vallarta, but airport pickups are unreliable due to conflicts with local taxi unions. You may wait a long time or not get a match. Use the authorized taxi system or a pre-booked transfer instead. **Q: How far is the airport from downtown Puerto Vallarta?** About 7-10 km, depending on your exact destination in the city. The drive takes 10-20 minutes in normal traffic. **Q: Is it safe to take a taxi from PVR Airport?** Yes, if you use the authorized taxi system. Buy your ticket at the official transportation booth in the arrivals area. Prices are fixed by zone. Do not accept rides from anyone approaching you outside this system. **Q: How much is a taxi from PVR to Nuevo Vallarta?** MXN 400-550 (approximately USD 22-30) through the authorized airport taxi system. The ride takes about 20-30 minutes depending on traffic. **Q: Do I need Mexican pesos at the airport?** US dollars are accepted by most taxi and transfer services, but you may get a less favorable exchange rate. ATMs in the terminal dispense pesos. Having some pesos for tips and small purchases is practical. **Q: How do I get from PVR Airport to Sayulita?** Sayulita is about 40 km north of the airport. A pre-booked transfer costs USD 50-70. An authorized airport taxi runs MXN 900-1,200. There is no direct public transport. The drive takes 45-60 minutes. **Q: What is the cheapest way from PVR to downtown?** The local public bus costs about MXN 10-15, but you need to walk out of the airport and cross to the highway bus stop. It is only practical with light luggage. The next cheapest is an authorized taxi at MXN 250-350. **Q: Should I tip my transfer driver?** Tipping is customary in Mexico. MXN 50-100 (USD 3-5) is standard for a transfer driver. For help with heavy luggage or particularly good service, MXN 100-200 is generous. **Q: Are there child car seats in taxis?** No. Mexican taxis do not carry child car seats. If you need them, book a private transfer and request seats in advance. Bringing your own portable car seat is another option. **Q: What if my flight is delayed?** Pre-booked transfer companies typically track your flight and adjust the pickup time. Authorized airport taxis are available whenever flights are landing, so delays are not an issue for that option. --- ## Additional Guides ### Arriving late at night at Puerto Vallarta Airport **URL:** https://www.airporttransferportal.com/airport-guides/pvr/late-night Puerto Vallarta Airport receives flights throughout the evening, with some US connections landing around 10-11 PM. Occasional charter flights arrive even later. The airport handles late arrivals routinely, though your transport options narrow after dark. ## What the airport looks like late at night The terminal stays operational as long as flights are arriving. Immigration and customs function normally for evening flights. The arrivals area is quieter after 9 PM, with fewer transfer representatives and a thinner taxi line. Most terminal shops and restaurants close by 9-10 PM. By midnight, the airport is largely empty. ## Transport options after dark **Authorized airport taxis** are available as long as flights are landing. The transportation booth stays open. Prices are the same as during the day (zone-based fixed rates). The taxi line may be shorter at night, meaning you get on the road faster. Vehicles are the same large SUVs used during the day. **Pre-booked transfers** are the most dependable option for late arrivals. Your driver tracks your flight and is there when you walk out, regardless of delays. No worrying about booth hours or taxi availability. The fixed price does not change for nighttime arrivals. **Public buses** stop running by 10-11 PM. Do not count on this option for evening arrivals. **Uber/Didi** are unreliable for airport pickups at any hour and especially so late at night. ## The drive at night Roads from PVR to both downtown and Nuevo Vallarta are well-maintained. Traffic is minimal after 9 PM, and the rides are noticeably faster. Downtown PV is 10 minutes. Nuevo Vallarta is 15-20 minutes. Even Sayulita, which takes nearly an hour during the day, is about 40 minutes at night. The main highway north is well-lit in sections near the tourist areas. The stretch to Sayulita is darker and winds through some rural areas, but the road quality is fine. Drivers make this trip regularly. ## Safety The tourist corridor between PVR and the resort areas is well-travelled and safe. Puerto Vallarta has a strong tourism-based economy and the transport routes are heavily used. Standard precautions apply: use authorized transport, do not accept rides from strangers, and have your hotel address ready. ## Practical tips If your flight lands after 9 PM, book a transfer in advance rather than relying on the taxi booth being fully staffed. Have your hotel confirmation accessible on your phone. Confirm with your hotel that late check-in is possible — most resort and tourist hotels have 24-hour reception, but smaller boutique hotels may lock up. The temperature at night is warm but more comfortable than daytime, so the walk to your vehicle will not be as intense. Late arrivals at PVR are straightforward. The airport is small, the roads are quiet, and you will be at your hotel quickly. --- ### Taxi vs private transfer from Puerto Vallarta Airport **URL:** https://www.airporttransferportal.com/airport-guides/pvr/taxi-vs-transfer Puerto Vallarta Airport has an organized authorized taxi system, which makes it better than many Mexican airports for walk-up transport. But pre-booked transfers are also widely available. Here is how they compare. ## Price comparison For short trips (downtown PV, Hotel Zone), authorized taxis and pre-booked transfers are priced similarly. A taxi to downtown is MXN 250-350 (USD 14-20). A transfer runs USD 15-22. The difference is minimal. For longer trips north, transfers become more competitive. A taxi to Nuevo Vallarta costs MXN 400-550 (USD 22-30). A transfer to the same area runs USD 25-35. To Sayulita, a taxi is MXN 900-1,200 (USD 50-65), while a transfer is USD 50-70. The longer the trip, the more transfers tend to match or beat taxi prices. ## What happens with a taxi You exit customs into the outdoor arrivals area and find the official transportation booth. You tell the attendant your destination, they give you a ticket with a fixed price, and you walk to the taxi line. A vehicle is assigned and you depart. The process takes 5-10 minutes. Vehicles are mostly Suburbans, Tahoes, or sedans. Air conditioning works. Drivers know the routes. Payment is handled at the booth (cash or sometimes card). The system is well-regulated, and overcharging through the official booth is rare. The main annoyance is the pitch for timeshare presentations that some drivers make during the ride. A firm "no thanks" handles it. ## What happens with a pre-booked transfer Your driver waits in the arrivals area with a sign. They take your luggage, walk you to the vehicle, and drive you directly to your hotel. No booth, no queue, no ticket. The price was settled when you booked. Most companies track your flight, so delays are accounted for. Vehicles are pre-assigned and maintained. No timeshare pitches. ## Reliability Both options are reliable during normal hours. Authorized taxis are consistently available when flights are landing. Transfers are booked and confirmed. The difference shows at the edges — very late arrivals or during peak landing times when the taxi queue grows long. A transfer driver is there for you specifically. ## Comfort Vehicles are comparable. Authorized airport taxis are typically large SUVs (Suburban, Tahoe) that handle luggage and passengers well. Transfer vehicles range from sedans to SUVs to minivans, specified at booking. Both are air-conditioned. Transfer vehicles are sometimes newer, but the difference is not dramatic. ## For families Neither option provides child car seats by default. Transfer companies can arrange them on request. Taxis cannot. If your children need car seats, this decides the question. ## For groups A single Suburban taxi fits up to 5-6 passengers with luggage. For larger groups, you would need two taxis. A minivan transfer handles up to 7 passengers in one vehicle. For groups of 6+, transfers are logistically simpler. ## When a taxi makes more sense For short trips to downtown PV, Marina Vallarta, or the Hotel Zone, the taxi is quick and easy. The booth system removes ambiguity. If you arrive without a booking, it is the obvious choice. ## When a transfer makes more sense For trips to Nuevo Vallarta and beyond, where prices are higher and the ride is longer. For families needing car seats. For late-night arrivals. For anyone who wants to skip the booth queue and walk straight to a waiting driver. ## The bottom line PVR's authorized taxi system works well for short trips south. For anything north of the airport, a pre-booked transfer matches or beats the taxi price while offering more convenience. The timeshare sales pitches from some taxi drivers are a minor but real annoyance that transfers avoid. --- ### Getting from Puerto Vallarta Airport with kids and family **URL:** https://www.airporttransferportal.com/airport-guides/pvr/family-and-kids Puerto Vallarta is a popular family destination, and the airport handles a steady flow of families with children year-round. The airport is small and manageable. The main challenges are the heat and getting everyone into a vehicle with the right setup. ## The arrival experience with children Immigration at PVR can involve queues of 20-40 minutes when flights stack up around midday. With children, this means standing in a warm, crowded hall. The electronic immigration system has sped things up, but peak times are still slow. Baggage claim is one floor down and reasonably efficient. After customs (the traffic light system — press a button, green means go, red means a quick bag check), you exit into an outdoor covered area. This is where the heat hits. Puerto Vallarta is tropical year-round, with temperatures typically above 28C (82F). After hours in air-conditioned planes and terminals, the humidity is a shock for everyone, especially kids. Getting into an air-conditioned vehicle quickly is a priority. ## Child car seats Mexican law requires child restraints for children under 5, but enforcement is inconsistent and taxis do not carry car seats. Your options: - **Pre-booked transfer:** Request child seats when booking. This is the most reliable way to have them waiting. - **Bring your own:** A portable, lightweight car seat that you check or gate-check works with any vehicle. - **Authorized taxi without a seat:** This is what most families end up doing, especially for the short ride to nearby hotels. It is not ideal from a safety perspective, but it is the reality for short hotel transfers in Mexico. For longer rides to Sayulita or Punta de Mita (45-60 minutes on highways), having proper child seats matters more and pre-booking a transfer with seats is strongly recommended. ## Luggage and strollers The authorized airport taxis are typically large SUVs (Suburbans, Tahoes) with substantial cargo space. A family of four with three large suitcases and a stroller fits comfortably. For larger families or more luggage, request a bigger vehicle at the transportation booth or book a minivan transfer. The walk from arrivals to the vehicle pickup area is short — under 5 minutes. ## Best transport option for families For nearby hotels (Hotel Zone, downtown PV, Marina Vallarta), an authorized airport taxi in a Suburban works well. The ride is short (10-15 minutes), and the large vehicle handles family luggage. For hotels in Nuevo Vallarta, Sayulita, or Punta de Mita, a pre-booked minivan transfer with child seats is the better choice — the ride is longer, the price is comparable, and you have proper safety equipment. ## The ride to the hotel Roads south to downtown PV follow the coast and are well-maintained. Roads north to Nuevo Vallarta use a highway. Both are straightforward. Traffic can be heavy around the airport area during peak hours. Most family hotels in the area are 15-40 minutes from PVR. ## Facilities at the airport PVR has restrooms in the terminal (no dedicated family changing rooms). A few restaurants and shops operate past customs. The arrivals area has limited seating. Free Wi-Fi is available but patchy. If your children need food or drinks, the terminal shops have basics, though prices are marked up. ## Planning tips Hydrate before landing — the heat catches people off guard. Have sunscreen accessible for the walk to the vehicle. Pre-book transport for destinations north of the airport. Confirm child seat availability in writing. Take a screenshot of your transfer confirmation in case airport Wi-Fi is slow. --- ### How much it costs to get from Puerto Vallarta Airport to your hotel **URL:** https://www.airporttransferportal.com/airport-guides/pvr/cost-to-city PVR Airport sits along the coast between Puerto Vallarta to the south and Nuevo Vallarta to the north. How much you pay depends heavily on which direction you are heading and how far. ## Pre-booked transfer prices Private sedan transfers from PVR: | Destination | Sedan | Minivan (4-7 pax) | |------------|-------|-------------------| | Marina Vallarta | USD 10-15 | USD 15-22 | | Hotel Zone | USD 12-18 | USD 18-25 | | Downtown PV | USD 15-22 | USD 22-30 | | Nuevo Vallarta | USD 25-35 | USD 35-50 | | Bucerias | USD 30-40 | USD 40-55 | | La Cruz de Huanacaxtle | USD 35-45 | USD 45-60 | | Sayulita | USD 50-70 | USD 65-90 | | Punta de Mita | USD 55-75 | USD 70-95 | Prices are per vehicle, not per person. They include meet-and-greet, luggage handling, and a fixed rate with no surprises. ## Authorized airport taxi prices PVR uses a zone-based taxi system. You buy a ticket at the transportation booth before getting in the taxi. Posted rates as of 2026: - Marina Vallarta: MXN 150-250 - Hotel Zone: MXN 200-300 - Downtown Puerto Vallarta: MXN 250-350 - Nuevo Vallarta: MXN 400-550 - Bucerias: MXN 500-700 - Sayulita: MXN 900-1,200 - Punta de Mita: MXN 1,000-1,400 These are fixed rates per vehicle. The booth accepts cash (pesos or dollars) and sometimes credit cards. ## Public bus: MXN 10-15 Local buses run along the highway past the airport and head into downtown Puerto Vallarta. The fare is about MXN 10-15 per person. The catch: you need to walk out of the airport, cross an overpass, and wait at the highway bus stop. Buses are basic, have no luggage storage, and stop frequently. Only realistic for backpackers with a small bag. ## What affects the price **Direction matters more than distance.** Heading south to downtown PV is cheap and close. Heading north to Sayulita or Punta de Mita crosses into Nayarit state and prices jump significantly. **Vehicle type** scales the price. A Suburban (large SUV) taxi costs more than a standard sedan. Minivan transfers cost 30-40% more than sedan transfers. **Group size** changes the per-person math. A taxi to Nuevo Vallarta at MXN 500 split among 4 people is MXN 125 each (about USD 7) — excellent value. **Time of day** does not significantly affect authorized taxi prices. Transfer prices are fixed. Late-night bus service is unavailable. ## Common money traps - **Unlicensed taxi drivers** approach you in the arrivals area offering rides. Their prices are often higher than the official booth rates, and the vehicles are unregulated. Always use the booth. - **Dollar vs peso confusion:** Some drivers quote in dollars, some in pesos. MXN 300 is about USD 17. Confirm the currency. - **Included resort transfers:** Many all-inclusive packages at Nuevo Vallarta and Riviera Nayarit resorts include airport transfers. Double-check before paying for one separately. - **Return trip pricing:** Getting back to the airport from your hotel is usually cheaper than the airport taxi rate. Street taxis and Uber (which works in town, just not for airport pickups) offer lower prices for the return journey. ## The honest recommendation For downtown PV or the Hotel Zone, an authorized airport taxi is fine — prices are reasonable and the ride is short. For Nuevo Vallarta and beyond, a pre-booked transfer often saves money compared to the taxi booth rate and gives you a confirmed vehicle waiting. For Sayulita or Punta de Mita, definitely pre-book — the taxi rates for those distances are steep. --- ## Related Pages - [Puerto Vallarta Airport Transfer Guide](https://www.airporttransferportal.com/airport-transfers/pvr-puerto-vallarta-airport) - [Puerto Vallarta Airport to City - Transfer Costs](https://www.airporttransferportal.com/airport-transfers/pvr-puerto-vallarta-airport/cost-to-city) - [Puerto Vallarta Airport Taxi vs Transfer](https://www.airporttransferportal.com/airport-transfers/pvr-puerto-vallarta-airport/taxi-vs-transfer) - [Puerto Vallarta Airport with Family and Kids](https://www.airporttransferportal.com/airport-transfers/pvr-puerto-vallarta-airport/family-and-kids) - [Puerto Vallarta Airport Late Night Arrivals](https://www.airporttransferportal.com/airport-transfers/pvr-puerto-vallarta-airport/late-night) --- ## Check before you land 👉 This route is actively served by AirportTransferPortal with fixed-price booking available before arrival. Check real vehicles and prices before your flight. Booking takes a few minutes and ensures someone is waiting when you arrive. --- ## Operational Note This guide reflects real operational conditions, pricing ranges, and traveler experience at Puerto Vallarta (PVR). Transfer availability is supported by AirportTransferPortal's verified supplier network. --- ## Attribution Published by AirportTransferPortal (airporttransferportal.com), a global airport transfer marketplace operated by Funny Tourism Ltd.