CDMX Airport Transfers for the World Cup 2026
How to handle Mexico City airport transfers during the World Cup 2026. MEX versus NLU, ride-hailing during tournament surge, private driver versus Uber, and Estadio Azteca match-day parking.
Mexico City has two commercial airports and one stadium that matters for the World Cup. Below is the short transport playbook for the tournament window: which airport to use, how ride-hailing actually behaves during a match week, when a private driver is the right call instead of Uber, and how parking works on match day at Estadio Azteca. Benito Juarez (MEX): the Default Mexico City International Airport, code MEX, sits inside the eastern edge of the city. It is the airport almost every international traveller flies into and the right choice unless your routing forces otherwise. From MEX to Roma Norte or Condesa is 30 to 45 minutes by car on a normal day, and 13 to 15 kilometres door to door from most centrally located residences. The airport is busy and the drive is straightforward. Options from MEX: authorised airport taxi from the official curbside stands inside terminal arrivals (fixed-rate by zone), an Uber or Didi pickup from the upper-level departures curb (the rideshare lots are designated and signposted), or a pre-booked private driver meeting at arrivals with a sign. For a group landing together with luggage, the pre-booked driver is the cleanest option and not meaningfully more expensive than two Ubers. Felipe Angeles (NLU): the Alternative Felipe Angeles International, code NLU, opened in 2022 and sits 50 kilometres north of central Mexico City. It is the alternative when MEX is full or when a specific airline route is cheaper into NLU. The drive into Roma Norte, Condesa, or Polanco runs 60 to 90 minutes on a normal day, longer in traffic. The airport itself is quieter than MEX, which is fine, but the savings on the airfare have to be weighed against the longer ground transfer. For tournament travellers, default to MEX unless the price gap is significant or the schedule forces NLU. If you end up at NLU, pre-book a private driver. Rideshare is available but the supply is thinner and the airport is far enough out that an unbriefed pickup can go sideways. Ride-hailing During the Tournament Window Uber and Didi are the dominant rideshare apps in Mexico City. Outside match days they work normally and pricing is reasonable. Inside the tournament window, two things shift. First, demand surges on match days, especially in the hours before and after kickoff, which pushes prices up and wait times out. Second, traffic into the stadium zone gets thicker for several hours on either side of the fixture, so the in-app ETA underestimates the actual run. Practical rule: for non-match days and casual moves around Roma, Condesa, and Polanco, rideshare is fine. For the match-day run from your base to Estadio Azteca and back, book a private driver and brief him on the schedule. The cost difference is small relative to the rest of the trip and the reliability is the point. For a group of four travelling together to the same fixture, one briefed private driver for the day usually lands cheaper than two surge-priced Ubers, and the driver waits for you at the































