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Licenciado Benito Juarez International Airport

Mexico City, Mexico

IATA · MEX ICAO · MMMX ↗ 243 direct routes ↘ 242 inbound
CityMexico City
CountryMexico
IATA / ICAOMEX / MMMX
Coordinates19.436, -99.072
Elevation7316 ft
Time zoneAmerica/Mexico_City

About Licenciado Benito Juarez International Airport

Mexico City International Airport, officially Benito Juárez International Airport, is an international airport serving Mexico City, the capital of Mexico. It is the busiest airport in Mexico, and as of 2025 ranks as the third-busiest in Latin America, the 15th-busiest in North America, and the 50th-busiest in the world by passenger traffic. The airport is served by more than 25 airlines with routes to over 100 destinations across Mexico, the Americas, Europe, the Middle East, and Asia. Source: "Mexico City International Airport" by Wikipedia contributors (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mexico_City_International_Airport), licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/). Edit history on the linked Wikipedia page.

Overview

Licenciado Benito Juarez International Airport is the main commercial airport for Mexico City, Mexico. Its IATA code is MEX and its ICAO code is MMMX. The clocks here run on America/Mexico_City, the runway sits a high-elevation field at roughly 7300 ft, and the airport is a large international gateway, with around 243 scheduled departure pairs in the public OpenFlights schedule plus onward connections through partner airlines.

Terminals and concourses

Most travellers will pass through one of a handful of terminal areas at Licenciado Benito Juarez International Airport. Bigger fields tend to split domestic and international traffic into separate halls, each with its own arrivals area, immigration counters, customs and a landside check-in concourse. Signage is bilingual wherever the local language and English share the airport, and walking between terminals at Mexico City's main gateway is usually possible on foot. Where the aprons stretch more than a kilometre, a shuttle bus or an automated people mover takes over.

Lounges and amenities

Lounge options at Licenciado Benito Juarez International Airport match what you would expect from a large international gateway. There is normally at least one airline-run lounge for premium-cabin passengers and elite-status flyers, plus an independent or contract lounge that sells day passes and accepts programmes like Priority Pass, DragonPass, Plaza Premium and LoungeKey. Inside, you can usually count on hot food, espresso, charging at every seat, decent Wi-Fi, and showers at the busier terminals. Quiet zones, prayer rooms and family areas tend to sit landside near check-in.

Getting to and from the airport

Getting between Licenciado Benito Juarez International Airport and central Mexico City is straightforward. Licensed taxis queue at marked curbs outside arrivals, with metered or zoned fares posted at the rank. Ride-hail apps have a designated pickup point, often one level up at departures or in a nearby lot. Public transport varies by city. A primary gateway like this one almost always offers an express train, a metro line or a dedicated airport bus running from before the first wave of departures until after the last arrival. Long-stay parking, rental car desks and hotel shuttle stops are clustered together on the landside.

Tips for travellers

A few things worth knowing for Licenciado Benito Juarez International Airport. Aim to arrive at least two hours before a domestic flight and three hours before an international one, especially during peak banks. Local time is America/Mexico_City, so plan your transfers around the time difference if you are coming in from another zone. Save a screenshot of your boarding pass before you leave the house, since terminal Wi-Fi is hit and miss when it gets busy. If you are connecting on a partner airline, check whether your bag is tagged through to the final destination, because Licenciado Benito Juarez International Airport handles a mix of in-terminal and inter-terminal connections. With 243 direct destinations on the public schedule, this is a useful node for both point-to-point trips and onward connections across Mexico and the wider region.


More guides for MEX

Four extra pages dig deeper into lounges, layovers, getting to and from the airport, and the terminal layout itself. Open whichever one matches the problem in front of you.

Direct destinations from MEX

These are the cities you can fly to nonstop from Licenciado Benito Juarez International Airport, based on the published schedule. Tap any one to open its own terminal, lounge and route guide.