Fly from
Budget
$210 - $488
Route
Depart
Return
Price
NewarkManagua Augusto C Sandino
EWR - MGA
EWRMGA
Newark
Tue 6/11
1 stop13h 02m
Managua Augusto C Sandino
Mon 9/9
1 stop16h 17m
NewarkManagua Augusto C Sandino
EWR - MGA
EWRMGA
Newark
Wed 6/5
1 stop13h 02m
Managua Augusto C Sandino
Mon 6/10
1 stop20h 51m
NewarkManagua Augusto C Sandino
EWR - MGA
EWRMGA
Newark
Wed 6/5
1 stop9h 49m
Managua Augusto C Sandino
Mon 6/10
2 stops18h 18m
NewarkManagua Augusto C Sandino
EWR - MGA
EWRMGA
Newark
Tue 6/18
1 stop13h 02m
Managua Augusto C Sandino
Tue 6/25
1 stop21h 49m
NewarkManagua Augusto C Sandino
EWR - MGA
EWRMGA
Newark
Sat 5/25
1 stop30h 21m
Managua Augusto C Sandino
Tue 5/28
1 stop26h 50m
New York John F Kennedy IntlManagua Augusto C Sandino
JFK - MGA
JFKMGA
New York John F Kennedy Intl
Mon 6/10
2 stops21h 05m
Managua Augusto C Sandino
Sat 6/15
2 stops18h 40m
New York John F Kennedy IntlManagua Augusto C Sandino
JFK - MGA
JFKMGA
New York John F Kennedy Intl
Tue 6/11
1 stop6h 41m
Managua Augusto C Sandino
Tue 9/10
1 stop7h 36m
Currently, September is the cheapest month in which you can book a flight to Nicaragua (average of $280). Flying to Nicaragua in July will prove the most costly (average of $498). There are multiple factors that influence the price of a flight so comparing airlines, departure airports and times can help keep costs down.
January
$323
February
$358
March
$420
April
$381
May
$388
June
$486
July
$498
August
$330
September
$280
October
$307
November
$394
December
$412
The rainy season lasts the whole summer – and then some – so book in April and you should get the best combination of warm temperatures and minimal rainfall.
Overview
After enduring a protracted and violent civil war – in which the US had a large hand – Nicaragua has rebounded and become so stable that the tourism industry has grown 300 percent since 2004. Whether it’s the allure of pristine beaches on the Caribbean and Pacific coasts, the booming business of ecotourism or the good times to be had in the major cities of Granada and Leon and the Nicaraguan capital of Managua, tourists are finding their way here in droves. Oh, and it doesn’t hurt that everything in Nicaragua is cheap, and every dollar spent goes a long way.
Nicaragua is a country rich in culture; like most nations in Central and South America, Nicaragua’s history and society is defined by the intersection of Spanish and English colonialism with native cultures. Book a cheap flight to Nicaragua and find out for yourself all that this vibrant nation has to offer, from diverse geography, music, religion, folklore, and food.
Crew
Boarding
Overall
Comfort
Entertainment
Food
Reviews
Paid a lot for our exit row seats and they weren’t that roomy.
Crew
Boarding
Overall
Comfort
Entertainment
Food
Reviews
Paid a lot for our exit row seats and they weren’t that roomy.
Crew
Boarding
Overall
Comfort
Entertainment
Food
Reviews
Paid a lot for our exit row seats and they weren’t that roomy.
Crew
Boarding
Overall
Comfort
Entertainment
Food
Reviews
Paid a lot for our exit row seats and they weren’t that roomy.
Crew
Boarding
Overall
Comfort
Entertainment
Food
Reviews
Paid a lot for our exit row seats and they weren’t that roomy.
Crew
Boarding
Overall
Comfort
Entertainment
Food
Reviews
Paid a lot for our exit row seats and they weren’t that roomy.
The climate is tropical, with a rainy season from May to October.
Bus travel is the best way to get around Nicaragua. Repurposed, old-fashioned, yellow (though often repainted) American school buses transport the country’s people from town to town and city to city. The buses are jam packed – your luggage will be strapped to the roof – and an amazing way to become instantly immersed in Nicaraguan culture. Just as in most developing nations, there are also refitted vans, or ‘microbuses,’ that cram as many as 15 people into a vehicle originally meant to carry eight and transport them cheaply from point to point in big cities. Taxis are also available in cities and the prices should be negotiated.
Nicaragua lives with the unfortunate reality that it sits on a major fault line. A 1972 earthquake destroyed much of the capital of Managua but unfortunately wasn’t an anomaly. Seismologists have estimated that the capital will see major earthquake activity every 50 years or so (it also suffered a brutal quake in 1931).