General Abelardo L. Rodríguez International Airport (TIJ) — The Complete Master Guide 2026
Tijuana’s airport is two airports wearing one runway. From the Mexican side it is Volaris’s largest base, a domestic machine flinging budget fares to thirty-five cities across the country. From the U.S. side it is a back door: a 120-metre air-conditioned bridge over the international border that lets a traveller in San Diego walk straight from a U.S. parking garage to a Mexican departure gate without ever touching a land-border queue. The bridge is the Cross Border Xpress, and it is the single reason most non-Mexicans have ever heard of TIJ. Roughly a third of the airport’s passengers arrive or leave through it.
This guide covers both faces — the visa and currency reality for someone landing on a Volaris flight from Cancún, and the CBX mechanics for a San Diegan flying domestic Mexico on the cheap. The airport sits 8 km east of downtown Tijuana, handled around 12.6 million passengers in 2025, and is Mexico’s fifth-busiest. It is run by Grupo Aeroportuario del Pacífico (GAP), which in December 2025 bought CBX outright for US$2.2 billion — so for the first time the airport and its cross-border bridge have a single owner.
⚡ 2026 Quick Reference — Key Facts at a Glance
Detail
TIJ / MMTJ
Aeropuerto Internacional General Abelardo L. Rodríguez
Grupo Aeroportuario del Pacífico (GAP)
~8 km east; 20–25 min by car
~12.6 million (5th-busiest in Mexico)
One main terminal, two concourses (A: 9 gates, B: 8 gates)
Single, 09/27, 2,960 m
Mexican peso (MXN). ~17.4 MXN = US$1; ~20.1 MXN = €1 (May 2026)
Digital FMM (FMMd) issued on arrival; up to 180 days for most nationalities
983 MXN (~US$54) — included in your airfare on air arrivals, not paid at the airport
Pedestrian bridge to San Diego (Otay Mesa). ~US$20–27 one-way, seasonal
One: VIP Lounge (Priority Pass / LoungeKey / Diners Club / US$39 walk-in)
Volaris (hub), Viva (focus city), Aeroméxico, Mexicana, Hainan
Free terminal Wi-Fi
Not drinkable — bottled only
📋 Table of Contents
- 🏢 The Terminal, the Two Concourses, and the CBX Bridge
- 🛂 Entry: FMM, the DNI Tax, Currency, and What You Actually Pay
- 🚆 The Cross Border Xpress — How the Skybridge Works
- 🚆 Ground Transport: Uber, Didi, Taxis, City Buses
- 🛋️ Lounges: One Door, and What’s Missing
- 🍽️ Food & Duty-Free: Baja Tacos, Caesar Salad’s Birthplace, and Airport Markups
- 💡 Day-Trips & City: Valle de Guadalupe, Rosarito, Ensenada, La Revu
- 🔧 Practical Notes — Connectivity, Currency, Safety
- ❓ Frequently Asked Questions
- 📊 2026 Summary Data Table
🏢 The Terminal, the Two Concourses, and the CBX Bridge
TIJ runs one passenger terminal split into two pier concourses. Concourse A holds nine gates and is effectively all-domestic; Concourse B holds eight and mixes domestic with the airport’s thin international roster. Twenty gates total, against an airport pushing 12.6 million passengers a year — which tells you most of the day the place is busier than its hardware. Ground-floor positions use remote stands with bus boarding; the jet bridges live on the upper levels. Plan for a walk and, at peak, a wait.
The airport opened on 1 May 1951. The current runway, 09/27, dates from a 1970 realignment built specifically so departing aircraft would stop straying into U.S. airspace — TIJ sits hard against the border, and the fence is visible from the apron. The runway is 2,960 m of asphalt at an elevation of 149 m; there is only one, so a single closure ripples through the whole schedule. GAP took over the airport in 1999 as part of its Pacific concession.
The defining structure is not on the Mexican side at all. The Cross Border Xpress terminal sits in Otay Mesa, San Diego, on U.S. soil, joined to the airport by a 120-metre enclosed pedestrian bridge that crosses the international line. It opened on 9 December 2015, was designed by the Mexican architect Ricardo Legorreta, and cost around US$120 million to build. A separate Transit Processing Building (the “NEP,” opened 2022) on the airport side handles the customs and immigration flow for CBX arrivals so they don’t clog the domestic terminal. CBX moves roughly a third of TIJ’s total traffic — on the order of 4 million people a year — which is why this guide treats it as a second front door rather than a footnote.
One genuine 2026 change worth knowing: since 19 January 2026, the CBX U.S.-side terminal hosts U.S. Customs and Border Protection trusted-traveller interviews under the Enrollment-on-Arrival program. If you’re eligible and have a Global Entry or SENTRI application pending, you can complete the interview at the crossing on your way back into the States rather than booking a separate appointment.
The carriers, and what they tell you about the airport. Volaris bases its largest operation here — around 35 domestic destinations including Mexico City, Guadalajara, Monterrey, Cancún, and Culiacán, with Mérida and Puerto Escondido added for summer 2026. Viva runs roughly 17 routes as a focus city. Aeroméxico and Mexicana de Aviación fly the Mexico City links (Mexicana to Felipe Ángeles, AIFA). The 2025 traffic numbers make the picture plain: Mexico City was the busiest route at over 982,000 passengers, Guadalajara just under 910,000, Culiacán around 363,000 — all domestic. The only intercontinental service is Hainan Airlines’ twice-weekly Beijing (Capital, PEK) – Tijuana – Mexico City run on a Boeing 787-9, resumed July 2024 after a four-year pause; Tijuana is a stopover on it, not the endpoint. American Eagle’s Phoenix link, launched February 2024, is ending in August 2026. The takeaway: TIJ is a domestic budget machine with one Asia route bolted on, and you should plan connections around Volaris’s schedule, not an international hub’s.
🛂 Entry: FMM, the DNI Tax, Currency, and What You Actually Pay
Mexico’s entry permit is the FMM — Forma Migratoria Múltiple. At TIJ, as at every major Mexican international airport, it is now digital. You no longer fill out a paper card. The immigration officer scans your passport, stamps it, writes in the number of days you’re authorised, and that stamp plus the digital record (the FMMd) is your tourist permit. Photograph the stamp. The authorised stay can run up to 180 days, but it is not automatic — the officer decides, and shorter stays do get written in. If you need close to the full six months, say so and have a return ticket and a rough plan ready. Travellers have walked away with 30 or 60 days when they assumed they’d get 180.
Who needs a visa. Citizens of the United States, Canada, the UK, the EU/Schengen countries, Japan, Australia, and roughly sixty other nations enter visa-free for tourism and get the FMM on arrival. Everyone else needs a Mexican visa or qualifies under a shortcut: anyone holding a valid U.S., Canadian, UK, Japanese, or Schengen visa can enter Mexico without a separate Mexican one. Check your own nationality before you book — this is the fact that strands people at check-in.
The DNI tax is real but you’ve probably already paid it. Mexico charges a federal non-resident fee — the Derecho de No Inmigrante (DNI), sometimes labelled DNR — of 983 MXN (about US$54) in 2026. On air arrivals this is built into your airline ticket. You do not queue to pay it at TIJ. The only people who pay it separately are land-border crossers staying beyond the border zone. So the headline number is large, but for a flyer it’s invisible.
What is not bundled: some Mexican states levy their own tourist taxes (Quintana Roo, Baja California Sur). Baja California — the state Tijuana sits in — does not currently charge a visitor tax, so a TIJ traveller staying in Tijuana, Rosarito, or Ensenada owes nothing extra on that front. Don’t confuse it with Baja California Sur (Los Cabos, La Paz), which does.
Currency. The Mexican peso (MXN), symbol $, which causes endless confusion with the U.S. dollar — menus near the border sometimes price in USD, so check which “$” you’re reading. Notes run 20, 50, 100, 200, 500 and 1,000 pesos; coins 1, 2, 5, 10 and 20. As of May 2026 the rate sits near 17.4 MXN to the U.S. dollar and 20.1 MXN to the euro. There is no parallel or black-market rate in Mexico — the peso floats freely, so the bank rate is the real rate. Use a card or an ATM inside the terminal; the on-airport currency-exchange booths quote some of the worst spreads you’ll see anywhere, often 8–10% off mid-market.
Health. No yellow-fever certificate is required to enter Mexico unless you’re arriving from a country on the WHO transmission list. There’s no altitude issue here — Tijuana sits at sea level, unlike the high-altitude Mexican interior. Tap water is the only real health catch, covered below.
🚆 The Cross Border Xpress — How the Skybridge Works
This is the part worth reading twice if you’re starting in San Diego. CBX lets you fly out of Mexico on cheap domestic fares while parking your car in the U.S., and it sidesteps the San Ysidro land crossing entirely — the one that can swallow two or three hours on a bad afternoon.
The mechanics. You must have a confirmed boarding pass for a flight using TIJ — CBX is not a general border crossing, it exists only for airport passengers. You buy a CBX ticket (separate from your flight), check in at the U.S.-side terminal in Otay Mesa, walk the 120-metre enclosed bridge over the border, clear Mexican immigration on the far side, and you’re in the airport. Coming the other way, you land at TIJ, walk the bridge back, and clear U.S. customs and immigration at the Otay Mesa terminal — so your U.S. entry formalities happen on arrival at the crossing, not at the airport.
The price. As of 2026, CBX prices by season. One-way runs roughly US$19.95 in low season up to about US$26.95 in high season; round-trip lands around US$37.95–US$49.95 depending on dates. Family passes cut the per-person rate for groups travelling together. Buy online in advance — walk-up is possible but you’re exposed to the top of the seasonal range, and the printed ticket has a validity window tied to your flight. Treat these numbers as a guide and confirm at purchase; CBX adjusts them.
The timing window — this is the layover-math part. Departing passengers may use the bridge up to 24 hours before their flight. Arriving passengers have two hours after landing to cross back to the U.S. side. So if you’re connecting a U.S. arrival into the CBX, budget that two-hour tail; if you’re heading into Mexico, the 24-hour window means you can cross early and kill time airside without penalty. Allow 20–45 minutes for the full bridge-plus-immigration walk in each direction, more if a couple of international flights have just landed.
Parking and access. The Otay Mesa terminal has around 900 paid parking spaces, so the drive-park-fly model works for a San Diego resident. Rideshare and taxis serve the U.S. side too.
The economic logic is simple: a Volaris fare from Tijuana to Mexico City or Cancún is routinely a fraction of the equivalent out of San Diego or LAX, and CBX converts that saving into a usable door. The cost is the bridge fee plus the parking, which for most itineraries still nets out cheaper.
A worked example makes the math concrete. Say you live in San Diego and want to reach Mexico City. A domestic Volaris fare out of TIJ might run US$80–150 round-trip in off-peak windows; the same San Diego–Mexico City itinerary on a U.S. carrier frequently lands two to three times higher. Add the CBX round-trip (call it US$38–50) and a few days of Otay Mesa parking (the U.S. terminal’s roughly 900 paid spaces run on a daily rate), and the all-in is still well under the SAN-originating fare for most dates. The catch is that you’re committing to TIJ’s domestic network and Volaris’s reliability, and that the bridge only works for ticketed airport passengers — you can’t use CBX as a casual border shortcut without a boarding pass. The December 2025 GAP acquisition (US$2.2 billion) puts the airport and the bridge under one operator for the first time, which over time should mean tighter integration between the U.S.-side check-in and the Mexican gates; for now, treat them as two coordinated steps, not one seamless terminal.
🚆 Ground Transport: Uber, Didi, Taxis, City Buses
If you’re not using CBX and you actually want to be in Tijuana, the airport sits about 8 km from downtown — 20 to 25 minutes by car in normal traffic, longer near the border at peak.
Uber and Didi both operate at TIJ and are the cleanest way to price your ride honestly. App pricing removes the negotiation, and fares to downtown (Zona Centro) or Zona Río typically land in the 150–250 MXN range (roughly US$9–14) depending on demand and exact destination. Note the one quirk: at the airport you may not be able to summon a curbside taxi through Uber — you order a regular ride and meet your driver at the designated rideshare pickup area, which is signposted outside the terminal. Didi tends to undercut Uber slightly in Tijuana.
Official airport taxis are white with a green airport logo on the side — those are the only authorised ones, and you should ignore anyone freelancing inside the terminal. A metered or zone fare to downtown runs around 160–215 MXN (US$9–12); to the Zona Río business district, similar. Agree the price or confirm the zone before you get in. Private pre-booked transfers to Ensenada or Valle de Guadalupe are a different product entirely and run US$90–140 for the longer haul.
City buses (calafias and urban routes) are the cheap-and-local option. Several municipal routes connect the airport area to downtown, Zona Río, and Otay. Fares as of 2025 sit at 14–16 MXN (under US$1) — Calafia raised its urban fare to 16 pesos in mid-2025, with an 8-peso concession rate for students, seniors, and disabled passengers. These are slow, they don’t run on a tidy schedule, and they’re aimed at residents rather than tourists with luggage. Worth it if you’re travelling light and counting pesos; otherwise the rideshare gap is small enough that most people pay it.
Rental cars are available from the usual desks in the terminal. Useful if your plan is the wine country — Valle de Guadalupe has no Uber and runs on private drivers or your own wheels. Be aware you’ll need the Mexican auto-insurance most U.S. policies don’t cover across the border, and the Tijuana–Ensenada toll road (the scenic 1D) charges several toll plazas of around 40–50 MXN each.
A blunt comparison. For a solo traveller heading downtown: Uber/Didi (~200 MXN, door to door, trackable) beats the official taxi on price transparency and beats the bus on time and luggage. Take the bus only if you’re confident and unloaded. Take the taxi only if the app surge is ugly.
🛋️ Lounges: One Door, and What’s Missing
TIJ has exactly one lounge, and you should set expectations accordingly. The VIP Lounge sits immediately past the security checkpoint, to the right, and is open 24 hours. Maximum stay is three hours.
Access is by Priority Pass, LoungeKey, or Diners Club membership, by online booking, or by paying at the door — the walk-in rate is US$39. It’s an American Express Platinum lounge partner as well. Amenities are solid for a regional airport: hot and cold food, alcoholic and non-alcoholic drinks, Wi-Fi, flight monitors, a children’s play area with video games, and a Fast Track service for carry-on-only passengers during certain hours. There’s a designated smoking area. Phone ahead or book online if you’re cutting it close, because at three hours’ max stay and a single room, it fills.
What’s absent matters more here than the one lounge present. There is no Aeroméxico flagship lounge, no airline business-class lounge of the kind you’d find at a Mexico City or even a Guadalajara — TIJ is a low-cost-carrier airport, and Volaris and Viva don’t run lounges. So if you’re flying business on the rare premium-cabin departure, your “lounge” is the same VIP Lounge everyone else pays US$39 to enter. There is no priority-security express lane culture here beyond the lounge’s own Fast Track perk. Manage expectations: this is a functional airport, not a hub experience.
🍽️ Food & Duty-Free: Baja Tacos, Caesar Salad’s Birthplace, and Airport Markups
Tijuana is a serious food city wearing a rough coat, and the airport is the worst place to experience it. Eat in town if you have the time; eat at the airport only because you must.
The regional canon. Baja is taco country — specifically tacos de pescado and de camarón (battered fish and shrimp tacos), the Ensenada-style street food that genuinely originated on this coast, dressed with shredded cabbage, crema, and a lime. Then there’s Caesar salad, which was invented in Tijuana in 1924 at Caesar’s restaurant on Avenida Revolución by the Italian-Mexican restaurateur Caesar Cardini — the original still operates and still tableside-tosses the thing. Baja’s wine country (more below) means Mexican wine is genuinely worth drinking here, unusually for the country. And Tijuana’s craft-beer and street-food scene is the real draw — birria, tacos al pastor off the trompo, and Baja Med cuisine that fuses Mexican with Mediterranean.
Airport vs town pricing. A plate of fish tacos that costs 40–70 MXN (US$2–4) at a Tijuana street stand or working taquería becomes a sit-down airport meal at 180–280 MXN (US$10–16) behind security — the standard captive-audience markup, three to four times street price. A bottled water that’s 15 MXN at an OXXO in town is 50–60 MXN airside. Coffee, the same multiple. None of this is unique to TIJ, but the gap is wide because the town outside is genuinely cheap.
Named eateries: the airside food court runs the usual mix of fast-casual Mexican counters and chains; I’m not going to invent a specific airport restaurant name I can’t confirm operates this month. In town, the verifiable anchor is Caesar’s on Avenida Revolución (open since 1923–24, the Caesar-salad origin) — worth the trip if you have a long enough layover and the inclination to leave the airport.
Duty-free and take-home. TIJ’s duty-free is modest and aimed at the cross-border and Asia-route traffic. The genuinely worth-buying local products are Baja wine from Valle de Guadalupe (look for L.A. Cetto and Monte Xanic, the region’s established producers), tequila and mezcal, and Mexican vanilla and chocolate. Prices airside are not bargains — buy wine at a valley cellar or a town shop if you actually want value, and keep the airport for what you forgot. One practical note for the CBX crowd: if you’re carrying wine back into the U.S., it travels as checked or as a duty-free purchase made airside after security, and U.S. customs limits apply on arrival at Otay Mesa — declare it. A bottle bought in the valley for 200–400 MXN is the kind of thing worth the paperwork; the airport’s selection is thinner and dearer.
Eating well in Tijuana itself is the whole point, and it’s cheap by U.S. standards. A full street-taco meal with drinks runs 80–150 MXN (US$5–9). A sit-down dinner at a respected Baja Med or seafood spot in Zona Río might be 300–600 MXN a head, still a fraction of a comparable San Diego bill. The airport, again, is the place to avoid eating if you can manage it — the markup is steepest precisely because the food a few kilometres away is so good and so inexpensive.
💡 Day-Trips & City: Valle de Guadalupe, Rosarito, Ensenada, La Revu
TIJ’s real selling point as a base is Baja’s near coast and wine country, all within a short drive south. Here’s what’s actually reachable and how long it takes from the airport.
Valle de Guadalupe — Mexico’s premier wine region and the reason food travellers come to Baja at all. Roughly 90 minutes south of the airport by car. The valley is spread out: wineries, restaurants, and hotels sit about 15 minutes apart from each other, so you need a driver or your own car — there is no Uber in the valley. Established producers include Monte Xanic and L.A. Cetto; the valley also runs a dense scene of small boutique wineries and acclaimed open-air restaurants. This is a stay-the-night destination, not a half-day dash — two nights does it justice. On a layover it does not fit; on a real trip it’s the headline.
Ensenada — the port city that opens the wine route, about 1.25–1.75 hours south of TIJ by car (sources cluster around 90 minutes). Fish tacos at the Mercado Negro, the La Bufadora marine geyser nearby, and a working port. From Ensenada it’s another 40–60 minutes up Highway 3 into the valley.
Rosarito — the beach town between Tijuana and Ensenada, closer than either of the above and the quickest coastal escape: roughly 40–50 minutes down the scenic toll road (the 1D, with toll plazas around 40–50 MXN each). Beaches, the old Rosarito Beach Hotel, lobster at the nearby fishing village of Puerto Nuevo, and a much quieter feel than Tijuana proper. On a generous half-day with a car it’s reachable; on a flight layover it isn’t.
Downtown Tijuana itself — 20–25 minutes from the airport. Avenida Revolución (“La Revu”) is the historic tourist spine, marked by a 200-foot arch, lined with bars, pharmacies, souvenir shops, and Caesar’s. CECUT (Centro Cultural Tijuana) in Zona Río — opened 20 October 1982, drawing over a million visitors a year — holds the Museo de las Californias, an IMAX dome, and a botanical garden, and is the city’s cultural anchor. Playas de Tijuana is where the border wall runs into the Pacific, its panels covered in immigration-themed murals; the four-mile boardwalk there is a sober counterpoint to the beach. Pasaje Rodríguez, a 170-metre passage off La Revu, is the artsy bolt-hole of indie bookshops and murals.
Layover math for the city. A downtown round-trip from the airport is roughly 50 minutes of driving plus whatever you spend in town, plus the security buffer on return. With a 4-hour layover you can realistically do La Revu and a meal at Caesar’s — order the ride both ways, give yourself 90 minutes back at the airport, and don’t push it. With under 3 hours, stay airside. The valley and Ensenada are out of reach on any layover; they need an overnight.
🔧 Practical Notes — Connectivity, Currency, Safety
Wi-Fi and SIM. The terminal has free Wi-Fi. For a local SIM or eSIM, Telcel has the widest Baja coverage; buy at an OXXO or a Telcel shop in town rather than the airport, where the choice is thin. A U.S. plan with Mexico roaming (T-Mobile, AT&T) often covers Tijuana at no extra cost given the border proximity — check before assuming.
Currency, again. Cards are widely accepted in Tijuana and Baja’s tourist zones; the peso is the only legal tender but USD circulates informally near the border, often at a poor informal rate. Pay in pesos where you can. Use bank ATMs (with the bank’s name on them) over standalone machines, and decline the machine’s own currency-conversion offer — choose to be charged in pesos and let your home bank do the conversion.
Safety — the candid version. Tijuana sits under a U.S. State Department Level 4 (“Do Not Travel”) advisory, and that’s not nothing: the city’s homicide rate is among the highest in the hemisphere. But the violence is overwhelmingly cartel-on-cartel and concentrated in peripheral, non-tourist neighbourhoods — Camino Verde and similar — not the airport-to-downtown corridor most visitors use. The practical rules: stay in Zona Río, Avenida Revolución, and Playas; avoid the Zona Norte red-light district, especially after dark; use Uber or Didi rather than flagging street cabs at night; don’t flash valuables or phones; and don’t wander into residential or outlying areas you don’t know. Treat Tijuana as a planned border trip, not a loose nightlife crawl, and the day-trip corridor is manageable for ordinary tourists.
Tipping. 10–15% in restaurants if service isn’t included; round up for taxis; 20–50 pesos for bellhops and the like. Tip in pesos.
Tap water. Don’t drink it. Bottled water only, including for brushing teeth if you’re cautious — standard Mexico advice, and Tijuana is no exception. Bottled water is cheap everywhere in town; stock up before the airport markup.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
📊 2026 Summary Data Table
| Feature | 2026 Data |
|---|---|
| IATA / ICAO | TIJ / MMTJ |
| Full name | Aeropuerto Internacional General Abelardo L. Rodríguez |
| Operator | Grupo Aeroportuario del Pacífico (GAP) |
| Opened | 1 May 1951; current runway from 1970 |
| Distance to downtown | ~8 km; 20–25 min by car |
| 2025 passengers | ~12.6 million (5th-busiest in Mexico) |
| Terminal layout | One terminal, Concourse A (9 gates) + Concourse B (8 gates) |
| Runway | 09/27, 2,960 m, asphalt; elevation 149 m |
| Currency | Mexican peso (MXN); ~17.4 = US$1, ~20.1 = €1 (May 2026) |
| Entry permit | Digital FMM on arrival; up to 180 days, officer-assigned |
| Visa-free | US, Canada, UK, EU, Japan, Australia + ~60 others; or holders of valid US/CA/UK/JP/Schengen visa |
| DNI tourist tax | 983 MXN (~US$54), included in airfare for air arrivals |
| State tourist tax | None in Baja California |
| CBX crossing fee | ~US$19.95–26.95 one-way (seasonal); 24h-before / 2h-after window |
| CBX bridge | 120 m pedestrian bridge to Otay Mesa, San Diego; ~⅓ of airport traffic |
| Rideshare to downtown | Uber / Didi, 150–250 MXN (US$9–14) |
| Official taxi to downtown | 160–215 MXN (US$9–12), white-with-green-logo |
| City bus | 14–16 MXN (under US$1); calafia / urban routes |
| Lounge | VIP Lounge: Priority Pass / LoungeKey / Diners Club / US$39 walk-in; 24h, 3h max |
| Dominant carriers | Volaris (hub), Viva (focus city), Aeroméxico, Mexicana, Hainan |
| International route | Hainan: Beijing (PEK)–Tijuana–Mexico City, Boeing 787-9 |
| Wi-Fi | Free terminal Wi-Fi |
| Tap water | Not drinkable — bottled only |
| Safety | US Level 4 advisory; tourist corridor manageable, avoid Zona Norte + outskirts |
| Nearest day-trips | Rosarito (40–50 min), Ensenada (~90 min), Valle de Guadalupe (~90 min) |



