Orbitz
  • Quick Search
  • Vacations
  • Hotels
  • Flights
  • Cars and Rail
  • Cruises
  • Activities
  • Deals

Welcome to Orbitz.

Sign in | Register now
Site feedback
Search (beach, Atlantis, Broadway, ...)
  • My Trips
  • My Account
OrbitzTLC
  • TLC Home
  • Traveler Update
  • Customer Service


deals
  Home / Flights on British Airways / British Airways Flights from Montego Bay, Jamaica (MBJ) to Miami (MIA)

British Airways Flights from Montego Bay, Jamaica (MBJ) to Miami (MIA)

As part of booking roundtrip flights which depart from US airports, Orbitz is pleased to offer airline tickets on British Airways, which operates 2 regularly scheduled daily non-stop flights from Montego Bay, Jamaica (MBJ) to Miami (MIA), departing between 8:45am and 3:30pm. Usually an Airbus A300-600 is flown for this route. The average travel time from Montego Bay, Jamaica to Miami, FL is 1 hour and 42 minutes.*

* Some flights must connect with international service on this airline.

Quick Flight Searches

Great Travel Deals Anytime - Search  
 

Save money when you book a Miami Vacation Package here

Need a discount hotel room in Miami? Click here

Find airport hotel rooms near Miami -- click here

Reserve your rental car in Miami -- click here

 

Regularly Scheduled Flights to Miami (MIA) from Montego Bay, Jamaica (MBJ)
Daily
Non-Stops
Select
Non-Stop
Earliest
Flight
Last
Flight
 
British Airways
2
-
8:45am
3:30pm
2
-
8:45am
3:30pm
1
1
7:45am
5:15pm
 


During your Miami vacation, don't miss these great establishments and attractions:

Barnacle State Historic Site
The former home of naval architect and early settler Ralph Middleton Munroe is now a museum in the heart of Coconut Grove. It's the oldest house in Miami and it rests on its original foundation, which sits on 5 acres of hardwood and landscaped lawns. The house's quiet surroundings, wide porches, and period furnishings illustrate how Miami's first snowbird lived in the days before condo-mania and luxury hotels. Enthusiastic and knowledgeable state park employees offer a wealth of historical information to those interested in quiet, low-tech attractions like this one. Call for details on the fabulous monthly moonlight concerts during which folk, blues, or classical music is presented and picnicking is encouraged.

Miami Design Preservation League
On Thursday evenings and Saturday mornings, the Design Preservation League sponsors walking tours that offer a fascinating inside look at the city's historic Art Deco District. Tour-goers meet for a 1 1/2-hour walk through some of America's most exuberantly "architectured" buildings. The league led the fight to designate this area a National Historic District and is proud to share the splendid locale with visitors.

United in Elián House
It was only a matter of time. After Elián González was rescued from a raft off the coast of Fort Lauderdale in November 1999, he lived in this modest, now famous, Little Havana house with relatives for 5 months before being reunited with his father and returned to Cuba in a storm of controversy. For Cuban nationals, the house became a shrine and the boy became a symbol for their struggle. There are collages of Elián all over the house; there's also trash in the yard as if someone still actually lives there. Apparently there was no time to clean up before the throngs of curiosity seekers came and the place was turned into a museum. Visitors receive a sticker with "the picture" of when the boy was seized by Federal marshals and returned to his father -- a day of infamy in Cuban-American history. See where Elián lived, played, breathed, and ate. See Elián's toys. See where the international media camped out for 5 months. See where relatives cried for the cameras. You get the picture.


Make your reservations for discount hotel rooms in the Miami area, including:

The Four Seasons
Deciding between the hyper luxe Mandarin Oriental or the equally luxe, albeit somewhat museum-like (the artwork in the lobby, including originals by Fernando Botero render most guests as silent as if they were examining the Mona Lisa) Four Seasons is almost like trying to tell the difference between Ava and Zsa Zsa Gabor. There are some obvious differences and some similarities, but they're all kind of subtle. Flip a coin and decide where you prefer to stay, because they are both spectacular in their own rights. While the architecturally striking Mandarin is located on the semi-private Brickell Key, the equally striking, albeit in an office-building kind of way, 70-story Four Seasons is located on the more bustling Brickell Avenue, the thoroughfare of business transactions. Both have water views that are spectacular. The 221 rooms and 39 suites are luxuriously appointed, and, like the Mandarin, service here is paramount. It's much quieter here at the Four Seasons, the favored stay of camera-shy, agoraphobic celebrities and business moguls. Most rooms overlook Biscayne Bay and while all rooms are cushy, thanks to the hotel's signature "untucked" beds, the bland decor leaves little to be desired, really. The best rooms are the corner suites with views facing both south and east over the water. The hotel's restaurant, Acqua, serves fantastic, surprisingly affordable, Italian fare, with floor to ceiling windows overlooking the pool area, but has yet to surpass the excellence coming out of the kitchen at the Mandarin's deservedly lauded Azul. The 40,000 square foot Splash Spa and Sports Club LA here is inimitable, but if you prefer a spa that's not as sprawling and a bit less harried, the Mandarin's got it beat. What the Four Seasons has over the Mandarin, however, are two more pools -- a total of three gorgeous pools spread out on over 2 acres (this explains why the Mandarin Oriental recently debuted its sprawling beach club, an amenity the Four Seasons does not have). Bahia, the Latin-American influenced pool bar complete with pre-Castro Cuban musical trio, is the scene for young, upscale movers and shakers. A phenomenal kids program makes the Four Seasons more desirable than the Mandarin, where kids are typically bored. It's hard to choose between the two uber-luxurious properties, but one thing that remains consistent at both is that you won't be deprived of the lavish, luxe treatment that you're paying so dearly for.

National Hotel
With its towering ceilings, sultry furnishings, and massive gilded mirrors, the elegant 1940s-style National ought to be the backdrop for a gangster flick. At 11 stories, the main building stands taller than most of its neighbors and offers grand views of the beach and ocean below. The hotel completed a $3 million renovation project in late 2003, revealing a much needed, brilliant, luxurious refurbishment of the tower rooms and hallways. For those who want to go all out, there's also a new three-story penthouse suite. And while all the rooms in the main hotel are comfortable and plush, the best rooms are the 32 poolside cabana rooms that are ultra modern, with flatscreen TVs, European linens, and feather pillows. What the hotel really needs to invest in next is its lackluster lobby, which is somewhat reminiscent of an old age home at nap time.The National's pool, however, is the hotel's crown jewel. It's Miami's longest pool (205 ft.) and can be considered the supermodel of hotel pools, lithe and graceful and almost too sleek (rivaling even the Delano's pool) for splashing. The hotel's Tamara is an elegant and formal dining room offering French fusion fare, and the Deco Bar (or D'Bar) looks like a 1940s movie set. Live entertainment on weekends, a wine connoisseur club, and happy hours during the week add to the ambience.

Raleigh Hotel
Upon entering the lobby of this oceanfront Art Deco hotel, you will feel like you've stepped back into the 1940s. Polished wood, original terrazzo floors, and an intimate martini bar add to the fabulous atmosphere that's favored by fashion photographers and production crews, for whom the hotel's fleur-de-lis pool is the favorite subject. In fact, one look at the pool and you'll expect Esther Williams to splash up in a dramatic, aquatic plié. Should you glance quickly inside the dimly lit lobby restaurant, helmed by Eric Ripert of NYC's Le Bernardin fame whose title is "directeur de cuisine" and whose on-site chef, Keith Harry of NYC's Butter, will be providing hearty, fattening fare like chicken stuffed with chorizo and truffle fries, you could swear Dorothy Parker and her fellow round-tablers took a detour from New York's Algonquin Hotel and landed here. Rooms are tidy and efficient (those overlooking the resplendent pool and ocean are the most peaceful), nothing too elaborate, but that's not why people stay here. It's the Raleigh's romantic Deco lure that has people skipping over from the chilly, antiseptic Delano a few blocks up for much needed warmth. And soon, you can expect the Raleigh to be even hotter -- at press time, hip hotelier Andre Balazs (of Los Angeles's Chateau Marmont and Standard hotels fame), the high profile, new owner of the Raleigh, started implementing extensive renovations that will undoubtedly push the hotel back in the limelight as one of the places to be on South Beach yet again. At press time, a Sunday afternoon pool party known as Soiree Sunday, from noon until 10pm, has seen the likes of Balazs' girlfriend Uma Thurman, tennis tart Anna Kournikova, actor Mickey Rourke, and just about every hipster who has ever entered the 33139 zip code.


  Quick Search

Note: An infant who turns 2 before or during travel requires a child's fare.

Expand search options (Multi-city, non-stops, preferred airlines, etc.)

One-way | Flexible dates

Total guests in all rooms
Need 5+ rooms?
(US and Canada)

I have a promotion code.

What's this?

Enter your promotion code, then look for hotels marked with the icon Coupon.

Expand search options (Hotel Chain, specific hotel name, amenities, star rating, promotion code, etc.)

Please note: pick-up and drop-off are
at the same location.

Expand search options (Automatic/manual transmission, discounts, air conditioning, etc.)

Select a location
Travel date range

1

Note: An infant who turns 2 before or during travel requires a child's fare.

I have a promotion code.

What's this?

Enter your promotion code, then look for hotels marked with the icon Coupon.

Need help booking your trip?

Book online or call

1-800-504-3248 (toll free)

Note: An infant who turns 2 before or during travel requires a child's fare.

Need help booking your trip?

Book online or call

1-800-504-3248 (toll free)

1

I have a promotion code.

What's this?

Enter your promotion code, then look for hotels marked with the icon Coupon.

Need help booking your trip?

Book online or call

1-800-504-3248 (toll free)

1

Note: An infant who turns 2 before or during travel requires a child's fare.

I have a promotion code.

What's this?

Enter your promotion code, then look for hotels marked with the icon Coupon.

Need help booking your trip?

Book online or call

1-800-504-3248 (toll free)

 
 

Other direct flights to Miami (MIA) on British Airways

Flights from Belize City, Belize (BZE)
Flights from Guatemala City, Guatemala (GUA)
Flights from Houston (IAH)
Flights from Kingston, Jamaica (KIN)
Flights from Lima, Peru (LIM)
Flights from London, Great Britain (LHR)
Flights from Orlando (MCO)
Flights from Panama City, Panama (PTY)
Flights from San Jose, Costa Rica (SJO)
Flights from San Juan, Puerto Rico (SJU)

 

 
 
 

Top hotel destinations

Top vacations

Orbitz guards your privacy and security. We're certified by TRUSTe and Verisign.
© 2001 - 2007, Orbitz, LLC. All rights reserved.
CST 2063530-50; Hawaii TAR-5627; Iowa 644; Nevada 2003-0387; Washington 602-102-724