1 popular destinations across Argentina — compare prices from 500+ airlines and OTAs, find the cheapest fares from any UK airport.
No daily UK direct flights — BA runs three a week to Buenos Aires from Heathrow, otherwise fly via Madrid (Iberia), Paris, Frankfurt or Amsterdam.
| Visa (UK passport) | No visa needed for UK passport holders for stays up to 90 days. |
|---|---|
| Currency | Argentine peso (ARS). High inflation makes bringing US dollars and changing locally a common play; major hotels accept cards. |
| Time zone | ART (UTC−3) — three hours behind the UK in winter, four hours behind during BST. |
| Language | Spanish (Rioplatense dialect — distinctive sh sound for ll/y). English in tourist hotels and Buenos Aires hotspots; basic Spanish helps elsewhere. |
| Plug type | Type C and I (some Type B in older buildings). UK adaptor required. |
| Best months | Nov–March (Argentine summer). November and March are the value sweet spots; January/February peak prices in Patagonia and the Andean lakes. |
| Flight times from UK | Buenos Aires (EZE) 13h 45m via Madrid |
Yes, but only with British Airways three days a week from London Heathrow to Buenos Aires Ezeiza. All other UK departures connect via Madrid, Paris, Frankfurt or Amsterdam.
Direct London–Buenos Aires is around 13h 45m. Connecting flights via Madrid add 2–4 hours including layover. Argentina is one of the longer single-leg flights flown out of the UK.
November and March, immediately outside Argentine peak summer. Avoid Christmas–New Year and the second half of January when fares spike for Patagonia and Bariloche traffic.
Helpful but not essential. The unofficial dollar rate ("dólar blue") gets you 30–50% more pesos than card payments. Major hotels and chains accept Visa/Mastercard at official rates.
Buenos Aires is broadly safe in tourist barrios (Palermo, Recoleta, Puerto Madero). Petty theft is the main risk — stay alert on public transport. Outside the capital it is markedly safer.
Argentina rewards UK travellers prepared for the practical quirks — particularly inflation, cash-versus-card economics, and the long flight times.