Frontier launching Miami-Vegas daily flights
Frontier Airlines has announced new daily flights between Miami and Las Vegas McCarron International airport beginning on October 25.
Using 138-seat Airbus A319 aircraft, flights depart Miami at 9:00 am, and leave Las Vegas for the return to South Florida at 11:20 pm.
Vegas will be the carrier’s seventh destination from Miami, and Frontier will be in direct competition with American Airlines on the route.
"There’s clearly room for domestic low-cost carriers to thrive at MIA, and Frontier has wisely chosen to fill that market space," said Miami-Dade aviation department director Emilio T. Gonzlez.
"We appreciate their growing commitment to the Miami market."
Frontier also flies from MIA to Atlanta, Chicago, Denver, New York, Philadelphia and Washington, DC.
TravelMole Editorial Team
Editor for TravelMole North America and Asia pacific regions. Ray is a highly experienced (15+ years) skilled journalist and editor predominantly in travel, hospitality and lifestyle working with a huge number of major market-leading brands. He has also cover in-depth news, interviews and features in general business, finance, tech and geopolitical issues for a select few major news outlets and publishers.
Have your say Cancel reply
Subscribe/Login to Travel Mole Newsletter
Travel Mole Newsletter is a subscriber only travel trade news publication. If you are receiving this message, simply enter your email address to sign in or register if you are not. In order to display the B2B travel content that meets your business needs, we need to know who are and what are your business needs. ITR is free to our subscribers.

































Phocuswright reveals the world's largest travel markets in volume in 2025
Cyclone in Sri Lanka had limited effect on tourism in contrary to media reports
Higher departure tax and visa cost, e-arrival card: Japan unleashes the fiscal weapon against tourists
In Italy, the Meloni government congratulates itself for its tourism achievements
Singapore to forbid entry to undesirable travelers with new no-boarding directive