International travelers flying through Mexico City will now be able to spend up to a week in the capital before continuing to a second Mexican destination — all under a single fare — thanks to a new program announced by Aeroméxico at last week’s Tianguis Turístico in Acapulco.
The stopover program lets passengers on international itineraries add an extended stay in Mexico City before moving on to a connecting flight elsewhere in Mexico, subject to certain fare conditions. The airline billed it as a way for visitors to experience two destinations without paying for two separate trips.

The announcement was part of a broader presentation at Mexico’s biggest annual tourism trade fair, where Aeroméxico outlined expansion across routes, fleet, and technology. The program could deliver a meaningful lift for Mexico City hotels, restaurants, and cultural attractions — exactly the kind of economic multiplier that tourism officials have long sought from the country’s main international hub.
For travelers already planning a trip to destinations like Oaxaca, Mérida, or Los Cabos, the program removes a common friction point: the feeling that a long Mexico City layover is dead time. Now it can be a selling point.
More Routes
Aeroméxico has been expanding aggressively on both domestic and international routes. In 2025, it launched new services from Mexico City to Cartagena, Phoenix, Philadelphia, Cali, Panama City, and Punta Cana. So far in 2026, it has added routes to Tegucigalpa, Quito, and Barcelona, along with Monterrey–Paris. Monterrey–New York and Guadalajara–Seattle are in the pipeline.
The airline also said it would operate 21 charter flights during the FIFA World Cup 2026, moving more than 1,600 fans and teams. Fleet size is projected to reach 171 aircraft by end of year, up 37% from pre-pandemic 2019 levels.
On punctuality, Aeroméxico held the top spot among global carriers for the second straight year in the 2025 On-Time Performance Review by aviation analytics firm Cirium, finishing first worldwide in January and February 2026 and second in March.
First-quarter 2026 financials were broadly positive: total revenue hit US$1.3 billion, up 13.2% from a year earlier. Net income came in at US$10.7 million, down from US$21.9 million in the prior-year quarter, with the drop attributed to higher administrative and sales costs from the network expansion.
The carrier’s mobile app has surpassed 4.5 million downloads and now supports two-step check-in, document scanning, and itinerary management. Its Aeroméxico Rewards loyalty program has grown to 14.4 million members, with 38% of passengers enrolled — up 10 percentage points year over year.
For Mexico’s broader tourism industry, which posted record numbers in recent years but has faced questions about the quality and distribution of that growth, a program that encourages visitors to linger longer in more places is a straightforward win.
Fare conditions and eligible routes are available at aeromexico.com.
Fast Facts
- Aeroméxico’s stopover program lets international passengers stay up to 7 days in Mexico City at no extra airfare before continuing to a second destination
- The program was announced at the Tianguis Turístico 2026 in Acapulco, Mexico’s annual tourism trade fair
- New 2026 routes include Mexico City–Barcelona and Monterrey–Paris, with Monterrey–New York and Guadalajara–Seattle planned
- Aeroméxico will operate 21 charter flights for the 2026 FIFA World Cup, transporting more than 1,600 passengers
- Fleet projected to reach 171 aircraft by end of 2026, up 37% from pre-pandemic levels
- Ranked world’s most punctual global airline for the second consecutive year by Cirium
- Q1 2026 revenue: US$1.3 billion, up 13.2% year over year
Sources: Mexico Business News, El Financiero, Excélsior
