Every mid-year school break, the same scene plays out on Ruta 1: thousands of families pointing their cars toward Guanacaste’s beaches, and a drive that should take a few hours stretching to eight or more. When accidents or protests close the highway, that figure can climb toward twelve. For travelers who would rather not spend a vacation day stuck in line at Cañas, there is a faster option that covers the same ground in well under an hour — a domestic flight from San José.
Three carriers currently serve the route between the capital and the northwestern part of Costa Rica, according to a recent review, which priced fares directly through the airlines’ booking platforms for a sample late-July trip. Sansa and Green Airways both run scheduled service, while Aerocaribe focuses on private, on-demand charters tailored to a passenger’s schedule. Flights from San Jose’s Juan Santamaría International Airport reach Guanacaste destinations in roughly 30 to 50 minutes, compared with the long haul by road.
On price, the scheduled carriers are the more accessible choice. For a hypothetical round trip departing Monday, July 27 and returning that Friday, Sansa quoted about $142 per person to Nosara and roughly $157 to Liberia, with a 30-pound baggage allowance built into the standard fare and additional charges for anything heavier.
Green Airways, which flies to Nosara but not Liberia, listed a standard fare of about $125, with a 20-pound checked allowance plus a 10-pound carry-on. Aerocaribe sits at the top end: because its service is fully private, fares run significantly higher, and the company quotes trips individually based on aircraft size and itinerary.
The figures are useful as a guide rather than a guarantee. Airfares on these routes shift with demand and the booking date, and high-traffic windows such as the July holidays tend to push prices up and fill seats quickly, so early booking is the safer bet. Travelers should also weigh the trade-off plainly: a bus to Liberia can cost as little as $9 to $15, and driving is cheaper still for a full car, so the flight premium buys time and comfort rather than savings.
Pet owners have options on the scheduled carriers, within limits. Sansa permits dogs and cats traveling in a harness, though it does not publish a flat surcharge for the service. Green Airways also allows domestic animals, provided they do not exceed 25 pounds. Anyone flying with a pet should confirm the current rules and any fees directly with the airline before booking, since small-aircraft policies leave little room for exceptions.
Guanacaste is far from the only destination reachable this way. Sansa and Green Airways together serve roughly 11 points around the country, and the broader domestic network reaches La Fortuna, Santa Teresa, Quepos, Puerto Jiménez, Tortuguero and Golfito, among others — a meaningful convenience for visitors trying to stitch together several regions in a short stay, or for residents heading to harder-to-reach corners of the coast. Some carriers also link to other Central American countries.
The timing of the option is fitting. Costa Rica earned a place on Forbes’ 2026 travel list, with Guanacaste singled out as the only Latin American destination on the roundup, and the province continues to anchor the country’s high-end tourism appeal. For the foreign residents, retirees and frequent visitors who treat the northwest as a regular getaway, the math during peak weeks increasingly favors the short flight over the long, unpredictable drive.
A few practical notes round out the picture. The light aircraft used on these routes enforce strict weight limits, so packing discipline matters more than it would on a commercial jet. The July dates fall within the rainy season, when afternoon storms can affect smaller flights, making earlier departures the more reliable choice.
And because schedules and fares change frequently, the prices here should be treated as a snapshot — the best move is to compare the three carriers directly for your exact dates before committing. For those who value their time or are short on it, a higher ticket price in exchange for a vacation that starts at the beach instead of in traffic seems like a worthy tradeoff.





