American Airlines Flights from Miami (MIA) to Charlotte (CLT)
Orbitz is pleased to offer airline tickets on American Airlines, which operates 6 regularly scheduled daily non-stop flights from Miami (MIA) to Charlotte (CLT), departing between 7:30am and 9:30pm. Usually an Embraer RJ140 is flown for this route. The average travel time from Miami, FL to Charlotte, NC is 2 hours and 4 minutes.
Quick Flight Searches
Weekend Trips - Search
Upcoming weekend flight specials and airline
deals on flights to Charlotte (CLT)
from Miami (MIA)
During your Charlotte vacation, don't miss these great establishments and attractions:
Discovery Place & the Nature Museum
Discovery Place is one of the top hands-on science and technology museums in the region. This uptown center features such permanent exhibits as a tropical rain forest and an aquarium. There's also an OMNIMAX theater. The static-electricity demonstration, which literally makes your hair stand on end, is a perennial favorite. Temporary exhibits on loan from other science centers keep the place forever changing.
Wing Haven Gardens & Bird Sanctuary
Since 1927, one of Charlotte's special attractions, created by Elizabeth and Edwin Clarkson, has been a 3-acre enclosed area in the heart of a residential neighborhood. Mrs. Clarkson was known as the city's "bird lady." Some 142 winged species have been sighted in the walled garden, which was once a bare clay field. Birders and garden lovers will have a field day as they browse through the Upper, Lower, Main, Wild, Herb, and Rose gardens. The gardens are at their most splendid in the spring, when birds are returning from their winter migration. A bulletin board tells you which birds are around at the moment.
Mint Museum of Art
With the recently added Dalton Wing, this stately museum displays a fine survey of European and American art, as well as the internationally recognized Delhom Collection of porcelain and pottery. Also featured are pre-Columbian art, contemporary American prints, African objects, vast collections of costumes and antique maps, and gold coins originally minted at the facility. New galleries exhibit studio glass and pottery from North Carolina studios. An admission ticket also gains you admittance to the Mint Museum of Craft & Design (220 N. Tryon St.).
Hyatt Charlotte
In the luxury market, this would be choice no. 2 in Charlotte, outdistanced only by the Park . One of the most stunning choices in western North Carolina, it's 4 miles south of the heart of the city. A seven-story brown brick building accented by greenish glass, it has a four-story atrium and a lobby with a Mexican fountain and an inviting atmosphere. The guest rooms have a decor of inoffensive pastels, and the well-equipped bathrooms have tub/shower combinations and marble vanity tables. Rooms are also equipped with dataports for laptops and fax machines. The slant in the more formal restaurant, Scalini's, is northern Italian. You can have a before-dinner drink in the bar.
Dunhill
Constructed in 1929, this is one of Charlotte's oldest and most historic hotels. These days, the big names often go elsewhere, but old-timers still prefer the Dunhill's European-style comfort and charm. (The doorman out front often greets returning guests by name.) In the old days, it was called the Mayfair Manor, and some of its most loyal clients still refer to it that way. The artwork in the public areas is by North Carolinian Philip Moose, and a piano player entertains in the stylish lobby. The restored guest rooms have a warm, cozy feeling; they're furnished with handsome reproductions and often with four-poster beds. All units have well-kept bathrooms with tub/shower combinations. Monticello's is the hotel restaurant, offering excellent cuisine throughout the day. Health-club privileges can be arranged.
Hyatt Charlotte
In the luxury market, this would be choice no. 2 in Charlotte, outdistanced only by the Park . One of the most stunning choices in western North Carolina, it's 4 miles south of the heart of the city. A seven-story brown brick building accented by greenish glass, it has a four-story atrium and a lobby with a Mexican fountain and an inviting atmosphere. The guest rooms have a decor of inoffensive pastels, and the well-equipped bathrooms have tub/shower combinations and marble vanity tables. Rooms are also equipped with dataports for laptops and fax machines. The slant in the more formal restaurant, Scalini's, is northern Italian. You can have a before-dinner drink in the bar.