Orlando International Airport (MCO) — The Complete Master Guide 2026
MCO is Florida’s busiest airport (about 57 million passengers annually) and the 9th-busiest in the United States — the gateway to Walt Disney World (22 miles southwest via I-4), Universal Orlando (9 miles west), and Kennedy Space Center (50 miles east via SR-528). The airport sits roughly 15 miles south of downtown Orlando. MCO is split between the North Terminal Complex (A and B) and Terminal C to the south — completed in September 2022 at a cost of $2.8 billion and home to most international and select domestic carriers. Brightline high-speed rail opened from Terminal C to Miami in September 2023 — Smart fares from $49, Premium from $92, about 10 trains per day each direction. US dollar (USD) — no EES, no ETIAS, no Schengen. Visa-waiver travellers need ESTA. CBP + Global Entry + Mobile Passport Control at the international FIS.
📍 ~15 mi S of downtown Orlando
🚄 Brightline to Miami
🛂 CBP / ESTA · No EES/ETIAS
⚡ 2026 Quick Reference — Key Facts at a Glance
$49+ Smart / $92+ Premium · ~3 hours · ~10 trains per day each direction · departs from Terminal C
$17.60 one-way adult / $33.60 round-trip (after 3% fuel surcharge); $14.30 / $27.30 child 3-9
$2 one-way · ~45-70 min · cheapest option
$40-70 to Disney resorts, $30-50 to Universal, $25-40 to downtown
$60-75 to Disney, $50 to Universal, $40 to downtown (regulated zone rates)
The Club MCO + Plaza Premium (Priority Pass) · Delta Sky Club · Admirals Club · United Club. NO Centurion, NO Capital One, NO Chase Sapphire lounge
4 new gates Spring 2026 with MARS multi-aircraft ramp positions; $5.9B 2025-2030 CIP underway
USD · CBP + ESTA · No EES, no ETIAS · Mobile Passport Control speeds entry
🏢 1. Terminals A, B & C — the Tram & Airside Layout
MCO is laid out as two largely independent terminal complexes. The original North Terminal Complex houses Terminals A and B, joined by a landside ticketing hall and connected to four airsides (Airsides 1, 2, 3 and 4) by automated people-mover trams — the iconic “are we there yet?” ride down to the gates. Terminal C, completed in September 2022 at a cost of $2.8 billion, sits to the south of the airfield with its own ticketing, FIS for international arrivals, and 15 gates (expanding to 19 in Spring 2026). Terminal C is also the home of Brightline Orlando Station, the high-speed rail terminus to Miami.
🛫 Terminals A + B (North Terminal Complex)
Terminal A is the west side: Delta, United, Spirit, JetBlue plus most international legacy carriers using Airsides 1 and 2. Terminal B is the east side: American, Southwest, Alaska, Frontier, Sun Country, Avelo plus Airsides 3 and 4.
Both terminals share a single landside building — the food court, hotel (Hyatt Regency MCO) and security checkpoints are between them. Trams to all four airsides depart from the post-security level.
📍 Terminal C (South Terminal)
Opened September 2022 — 1.2 million square feet, designed by Fentress Architects (the firm behind Denver International). 15 gates initially; 4 more open in Spring 2026 with Multiple Aircraft Ramp System positions allowing 8 aircraft to dock concurrently.
Home to most international arrivals/departures and select domestic — JetBlue, Aer Lingus, Emirates, British Airways, Lufthansa, Norse Atlantic, Azul and the rotation of seasonal European/Latin American carriers all use Terminal C.
Operating airlines at MCO (May 2026)
- Southwest Airlines — Terminal B / Airside 3 + 4; major MCO base, the busiest domestic carrier at MCO.
- Delta Air Lines + Delta Connection — Terminal A; trunk service to ATL, JFK, LGA, DTW, MSP, BOS, SLC.
- American Airlines + American Eagle — Terminal B; service to CLT, DFW, ORD, LGA, MIA, BOS, PHL.
- United Airlines + United Express — Terminal A; ORD, IAH, EWR, IAD, DEN, SFO.
- JetBlue — Terminal C; trunk service to JFK, BOS, FLL, plus selected international.
- Spirit, Frontier, Avelo, Sun Country, Breeze — Terminals A/B; ultra-low-cost domestic + Caribbean leisure.
- Alaska Airlines — Terminal B; service from Seattle and West Coast.
- International long-haul — Aer Lingus (Dublin), British Airways (London Heathrow + Gatwick), Lufthansa (Frankfurt), KLM (Amsterdam), Virgin Atlantic (Manchester + London Heathrow), Norse Atlantic (London Gatwick), TAP Air Portugal (Lisbon), Edelweiss (Zurich), Emirates (Dubai), Azul + LATAM + Copa (Latin America), Air Canada / WestJet (Canada). All use Terminal C.
🛂 2. CBP, ESTA & MCO’s International Wing
MCO handles a heavy mix of US domestic and international flights. International arrivals are processed by US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) in the Terminal C Federal Inspection Station (a smaller secondary FIS exists in the North Terminal Complex for legacy international flights). Schengen rules do not apply: no EES, no ETIAS, no euro. Currency is the US dollar (USD), €1 ≈ $1.08 (May 2026). Visa-waiver nationals need ESTA. Volume is heavy — peak winter Saturdays can see 200,000+ passengers; clearing CBP without Global Entry or Mobile Passport Control can mean 45-90 minutes at peak.
ESTA — $21, Two-Year Validity
Visa Waiver Program travellers need an ESTA at esta.cbp.dhs.gov — $21, valid 2 years or until passport expiry. Apply at least 72 hours before flight. Beware look-alike scam sites charging $80-100. Canadians and US citizens are exempt.
CBP Kiosks, Global Entry & MPC
Terminal C’s FIS has dedicated Global Entry kiosks (15-30 sec processing for enrolled travellers), the standard CBP officer hall and Mobile Passport Control (MPC) — the free CBP app that handles the customs declaration in advance and is the fastest non-Global-Entry option for visa-waiver travellers.
MCO Is a Real International Gateway
Unlike many secondary US airports, MCO has direct service to London, Manchester, Dublin, Frankfurt, Amsterdam, Lisbon, Zurich, Dubai, São Paulo, Bogotá, Panama City, Toronto, Mexico City and seasonal European and Latin American routes — driven by Florida theme-park demand.
Who needs what to enter the US via MCO
| Passport | Visa needed? | ESTA required (air)? | Entry process |
|---|---|---|---|
| US citizen | No | No | Domestic — no CBP |
| Canadian (visa-exempt) | No | No (Canadians are ESTA-exempt) | CBP kiosk + officer |
| UK / EU / Australia / NZ / Japan / South Korea / Singapore (VWP) | No | Yes — $21, valid 2 years | CBP kiosk + officer; MPC speeds entry |
| Brazilian / Argentinian / Mexican / Indian / Chinese / South African | Yes — B-1/B-2 visitor visa | No (covered by visa) | CBP officer interview |
| Cuban / Iranian / Syrian / North Korean / Belarusian | Restricted; verify current US policy | No | Specialised processing |
MCO is Orlando’s main commercial gateway and is what 99% of leisure travellers mean by “Orlando airport”. Orlando Sanford (SFB), 35 miles northeast, handles low-cost European charters (Allegiant, TUI, Sun Country) and is a useful budget alternative — but ground transport from SFB to Disney/Universal is longer and rideshare prices much higher. Orlando Executive (ORL) is the smaller general aviation airfield, not used by airlines.
🚄 3. Brightline, LYNX, SunRail, Mears Connect & Rideshare
MCO is unusually well-served by ground transport for a US airport — and 2023’s Brightline high-speed rail link to Miami fundamentally changed what’s possible from Terminal C. For Disney and theme-park transfers Disney’s Magical Express ended in January 2022 and was replaced by Mears Connect. LYNX city buses cover the cheap option. Taxis and rideshare are the convenient option.
⭐ Brightline High-Speed Rail to Miami
- Orlando Station inside Terminal C — about a 13-minute walk from Terminal C arrivals; airport courtesy shuttle available.
- Service since 22 September 2023 — MCO to West Palm Beach, Fort Lauderdale, Aventura, Miami.
- Smart fares from $49 one-way, Premium from $92 (Premium includes its own waiting lounge, free snacks/drinks, 21″ seats and 1 checked bag).
- ~10 trains per day each direction, departures roughly every 2 hours between 06:15 and 21:30.
- Journey: Orlando to Miami in about 3 hours — competitive with flying once you factor in airport buffers and arrival commute.
- Kids: 50% off SMART Service for travel between South Florida and Orlando with 10-day advance purchase + adult SMART fare.
🚌 Mears Connect — Disney Resort Shuttle
- Replaces Disney’s Magical Express (ended January 2022) — the official Disney-area airport shuttle, operated by Mears Transportation Group.
- Standard fares (after airport fee): $17.60 one-way adult, $14.30 child 3-9; under-3 free.
- Round-trip: $33.60 adult, $27.30 child.
- Express service: $250 round-trip for up to 4 people (+$55 each additional).
- 2026 fuel surcharge: 3% added on top of listed prices, “until further notice”.
- Covers Walt Disney World resorts, Disney Springs resorts, and many Disney-area hotels. Does not cover Universal-area hotels.
🚍 LYNX City Buses — The $2 Option
- LYNX Route 11: MCO ↔ LYNX Central Station downtown via Orange Avenue — $2 one-way, ~45-55 min, every 15-30 min.
- LYNX Route 42: MCO ↔ International Drive (Universal, SeaWorld, ICON Park area) — $2 one-way, ~60-70 min. Very popular with budget tourists.
- LYNX Route 111: MCO ↔ Kissimmee/Disney resorts area — $2 one-way.
- Buses depart from Ground Transportation Level A side — follow signs from baggage claim.
- Free LYNX transfer included with same-trip SunRail ticket.
🚂 SunRail Commuter Rail
- SunRail does not serve MCO directly — the planned MCO Intermodal Terminal extension is funded but not yet operational.
- Workaround: SunRail to Sand Lake Road station + LYNX 311, 11 or 42 to MCO. SunRail $2, LYNX $2.
- Weekday-only service largely; check sunrail.com for current schedule.
- Useful if you’re connecting to/from suburbs like Winter Park, Maitland, DeBary; not the practical pick for a leisure traveller.
🚕 Taxi & Rideshare
- Mears Taxi (official MCO ground partner): regulated flat rates — roughly $40 to downtown Orlando, $50 to Universal/International Drive, $60-75 to Walt Disney World.
- Uber and Lyft: typically $25-40 to downtown, $30-50 to Universal, $40-70 to Disney resorts. Surge during peak holiday weeks.
- Pickup: Rideshare from Terminals A/B is on Level 1 Ground Transportation, A-side or B-side per app instruction. From Terminal C, rideshare loads at the Level 1 outer curb.
🚗 Rental Cars & the Toll-Road Network
All major brands (Alamo, Avis, Budget, Dollar, Enterprise, Hertz, National, Sixt, Thrifty, Payless) at on-airport facilities — directly accessible from the Ground Transportation level of A and B. From Terminal C, a shuttle connects to the consolidated rental car facility. Central Florida runs on toll roads: SR-417 (Orlando Beltway, MCO ↔ Disney area), SR-528 (Beachline, MCO ↔ Kennedy Space Center and Cocoa Beach), SR-408 (East-West Expressway, downtown). Get the toll transponder add-on with your rental — most highways are cashless. The non-toll alternative I-4 is the original route but heavily congested during theme-park peak hours.
🛋️ 4. Plaza Premium, The Club MCO, Delta, Admirals & United
MCO has a solid spread of lounges — six in total across the three terminals. Both Plaza Premium (Terminal C) and The Club MCO are open to Priority Pass members. Each of the big three US carriers operates its own lounge here. The notable gaps: no Centurion Lounge, no Capital One Lounge, no Chase Sapphire Lounge at MCO. Plan based on this if you’re on an Amex Platinum or Chase Sapphire Reserve.
🛋️ Plaza Premium Lounge — Terminal C
Location: Terminal C, second level of the Palm Court area.
Hours: Daily 07:00-21:00.
Access: Priority Pass, Amex Platinum (via Priority Pass Select or as a Plaza Premium partner), Capital One Venture X (via Priority Pass), Dragonpass, Lounge Pass. Day pass approximately $67.50.
What’s inside: hot and cold buffet, full bar, work zones, showers, runway views.
🛋️ The Club MCO — Priority Pass
Locations: Multiple — North Terminal Airside 4 (near Gate 80) and Airside 1 (near Gate 30).
Access: Priority Pass (limited free hours then $34/hour after, capacity-controlled), LoungeKey, Lounge Club. Day pass starts at $48.
What’s inside: hot and cold dishes, bar, Wi-Fi, work seating, family zones.
🛋️ Delta Sky Club
Location: Airside 4, central atrium, near Gate 71.
Access: Delta Sky Club members, Delta One, elite Delta/SkyTeam status, Amex Platinum/Centurion holders (with same-day Delta flight, $50 fee may apply), Delta SkyMiles Reserve cardholders.
🛋️ American Admirals Club
Location: Terminal B, Airside 3, near Gate 55.
Hours: Daily 04:30-20:45.
Access: Admirals Club members, AAdvantage Platinum Pro / Executive Platinum on international travel, oneworld Emerald/Sapphire, Citi / AAdvantage Executive cardholders.
🛋️ United Club
Location: Airside 4, near United gates.
Access: United Club members, Star Alliance Gold, United Polaris/Premier 1K, United Club Card holders.
⚠️ No Centurion / Capital One / Chase Sapphire
None of the big premium-credit-card-flagship lounges have an MCO location. Amex Platinum holders should use the Plaza Premium Lounge (Plaza is a partner network for Amex). Chase Sapphire Reserve and Capital One Venture X holders use Priority Pass at Plaza Premium or The Club MCO. Capital One Venture X also gives Priority Pass guests +unlimited, useful for families.
Pre-security note: the airside-of-tram architecture at MCO means lounges in Airsides 1, 3 or 4 are post-tram-ride from the main terminal. Once you’re past security you commit to one airside. Check your boarding pass and pick a lounge in the right airside.
🍊 5. Florida Food: Cuban Sandwich, Key Lime, OJ & Theme-Park Eats
Central Florida’s food culture is shaped by three things: Cuban and Caribbean influence from the south, the citrus belt that runs from Orlando down to the Indian River, and the theme parks driving a captive-audience economy that has trained millions of visitors to expect snack culture. MCO’s airside food has steadily improved — Terminal C in particular has more interesting local-leaning concepts than the older North Terminal — but the proper Florida eating is on Sand Lake Road’s “Restaurant Row” or in the various neighbourhoods of downtown Orlando. Tenant lineup varies; check the official airport directory before counting on a specific restaurant.
The Cuban sandwich is Florida’s signature street food — roasted pork, glazed ham, Swiss cheese, pickles, yellow mustard on Cuban bread, pressed flat on a plancha until the crust crackles. Tampa and Miami both claim the original (Tampa’s version adds Genoa salami, Miami’s omits it). Orlando sits between the two and serves both. Black Bean, Black Bean Café and the Orlando branches of Pollo Tropical, plus the airport’s quick-service Cuban concepts, are the airside options. The real version is at Black Bean Deli in Mills 50.
Key lime pie is Florida’s heritage dessert — a custard of egg yolks, sweetened condensed milk and key lime juice on a graham-cracker crust, traditionally topped with meringue (the Florida Keys version) or whipped cream (everywhere else). The yellow colour is right; bright green = food colouring + tourist trap. Available at most MCO airside restaurants by the slice ($8-12). For the proper version on-ground, Joe’s Stone Crab (Orlando location at Disney Springs) or Yellow Dog Eats in Winter Garden.
Florida’s citrus belt runs south from Orlando through the Indian River region to the southwest coast — the source of premium-grade orange juice for the US market. Fresh-squeezed OJ ($5-8 a glass) is standard at hotel breakfasts and the better airport coffee stands. Citrus disease (HLB / greening) has shrunk Florida’s groves dramatically in the last decade — much “Florida” juice now blends Florida with Brazilian fruit. Genuine Florida-grove juice is becoming a specialty product; look for Indian River branding.
Cuban-influenced Caribbean cuisine (“Floribbean”) includes mojo pork (orange-juice-and-garlic-marinated pork shoulder), arroz con pollo, plantains, ropa vieja, picadillo, lechón asado at any cubano restaurant. Mills 50 (Vietnam Town), Sand Lake Road (Restaurant Row) and Audubon Park are the credible Orlando neighbourhoods for the proper version. The airport has airside Cuban-style outposts but you’re getting a chain version of a soul-food cuisine — fine but not the real thing.
The Disney/Universal-driven economy has trained a generation to expect Mickey-shaped pretzels, Dole Whip (pineapple soft-serve, originally a Walt Disney World concession), funnel cake, butterbeer (Universal’s Wizarding World), turkey legs, Dole pineapple float as essential road-trip food. Most of these are available at MCO airside concepts or branded retail. Dole Whip in particular has spread beyond Disney parks — and is now a credible airside dessert at MCO Terminal C.
Duty-Free & Souvenir Reality at MCO
🐭 Disney / Universal Apparel
$25-80 per item. Mickey ears, Disney+Pixar shirts, Star Wars / Marvel branded gear at the airside Disney shop, plus Universal-licensed merchandise (Harry Potter, Jurassic, Minions). The MCO branches are often the place to buy souvenir items missed on the actual park visit.
🍊 Citrus & Florida Candy
$15-40 per gift box. Indian River grapefruit baskets, candied citrus peel, orange marmalade and key-lime cookies in branded Florida packaging. Practical to ship if size is an issue; some airside vendors will pack and ship for you.
🚀 NASA / Kennedy Space Center Gear
$25-60 per item. NASA t-shirts, astronaut ice-cream, SpaceX merchandise, lunar-themed mugs — Kennedy Space Center is 50 miles east of MCO and its retail brand is well represented at airport gift shops. The NASA “meatball” logo apparel is enduringly popular.
🥃 Florida Craft Spirits
$30-60 per 750ml. Florida craft distilleries are a small but rising category — St Augustine Distillery (port-finished bourbon), Orlando Distilling (rye), Drum Circle (rum) are the credible names. The duty-free in Terminal C carries a rotating selection.
💡 6. Insider: Disney, Universal, Kennedy Space Center, Miami Day Trip
Disney’s four parks (Magic Kingdom, EPCOT, Hollywood Studios, Animal Kingdom) plus two water parks plus Disney Springs sit on 25,000 acres in Lake Buena Vista and Bay Lake. From MCO: 30-50 minutes by car via SR-417 toll road or I-4 (the latter heavily congested in theme-park season). Mears Connect shuttle, rideshare, taxi or rental car are the practical options — Disney’s own Magical Express airport shuttle ended in January 2022. Park tickets require advance purchase and date-specific reservations for the Theme Park Reservation System.
Universal Orlando is three parks: Universal Studios Florida, Islands of Adventure, plus the new Epic Universe which opened in 2025 as Universal’s fourth park (and the fifth Universal property worldwide). Plus the Volcano Bay water park and the CityWalk dining/entertainment district. From MCO: 20-30 minutes by car via SR-528 + I-4. Universal-area hotels can be cheaper than Disney resorts; the Harry Potter Wizarding World (split between Universal Studios and Islands of Adventure with a Hogwarts Express train) is the property’s signature draw.
Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex on Cape Canaveral — the launch site for every American crewed spaceflight from Apollo to the Space Shuttle to current SpaceX Crew Dragon and Artemis missions. The Saturn V Center, Atlantis space-shuttle pavilion, astronaut training experience, bus tours of launch pads 39A and 39B. $75 adult admission. From MCO: about 50 minutes east via the Beachline (SR-528) toll road — much faster than I-4 because there’s no theme-park traffic on this corridor. Combine with Cocoa Beach (additional 15 min south) for a full day. Launch schedule is published at the Kennedy Space Center website — if you can time a launch viewing into a layover, it’s the standout Orlando-area experience.
Brightline makes Miami feasible as a day trip from MCO — about 3 hours each direction with departures every ~2 hours. From Terminal C’s Brightline station, you can leave MCO at 06:15, be in Miami by 09:30, spend 6+ hours in South Beach / Brickell / Wynwood / Little Havana, and be back at MCO by early evening. From $49 Smart fare, but plan ahead — Premium fares ($92) include a private boarding lounge and bags. A practical alternative to flying for connecting passengers with an MCO layover of 10+ hours.
Inside the terminal: the Hyatt Regency Orlando International Airport sits directly above the North Terminal’s landside atrium — walk from baggage claim to check-in in under 5 minutes. $250-450 per night, the best US in-airport hotel option for an early flight. Off-airport but close: Hyatt Place MCO, Hilton Garden Inn MCO, Holiday Inn Express MCO — all 5-10 min by free shuttle, $140-280 per night. For a real Orlando experience overnight: Loews resorts at Universal (Cabana Bay, Sapphire Falls, Royal Pacific) or any of the Disney resorts. From Disney back to MCO is about 30-50 minutes by car depending on traffic.
🔧 Practical Notes — Connectivity, Currency, Border
US dollar (USD). €1 ≈ $1.08, £1 ≈ $1.27 (May 2026). Cards work everywhere; ATMs at MCO dispense USD. Florida state sales tax is 6%; Orange County (where MCO sits) adds 0.5% for a total of 6.5%, added at checkout. Tipping convention is 18-22% on restaurant tabs, $2-3 per drink at bars, $1-2 per bag for porters, $3-5 per night for hotel housekeeping.
The US has CBP + ESTA + Global Entry + Mobile Passport Control — not EES or ETIAS. EES and ETIAS apply to Schengen Area airports in Europe; they are not relevant to MCO. Visa Waiver Program nationals (UK, EU, Australia, NZ, Japan, South Korea, Singapore, etc.) need an ESTA at esta.cbp.dhs.gov ($21, 2-year validity). Non-VWP nationals need a B-1/B-2 visitor visa. Canadians and US citizens do not need an ESTA.
US networks (Verizon, AT&T, T-Mobile, plus prepaid Mint Mobile, Cricket, US Mobile, Visible). EU/UK Roam-Like-At-Home does NOT extend to the US — get a Mint Mobile or US Mobile eSIM for $20-40/month before flying, or use Airalo / Holafly / GigSky. 5G covers MCO and the theme-park corridor.
6 hours airside-to-airside: the realistic options are Disney Springs (no park ticket required — shopping/dining/Cirque du Soleil, $50-70 rideshare round-trip, 60-90 min on the ground), Pointe Orlando / I-Drive (LYNX 42, ~70 min each way + 90 min wandering ICON Park, the wheel, Madame Tussauds) or simply the airport hotels in Terminal A/B for a dayuse room. Under 4 hours: stay airside — Terminal C in particular has work zones, hammocks, and the Plaza Premium Lounge for the $67 day pass. 8+ hours and a passport: Brightline to Fort Lauderdale or West Palm Beach is feasible. For a flight under 4 hours, factor Terminal C / North Terminal transfers — they’re 8-10 minutes apart by airport shuttle bus.



