You Can Finally Fly Direct Between Guadeloupe and Jamaica — Here’s When
One is the beating heart of French Caribbean life, all zouk rhythms and Creole cooking and that unmistakable island soul (and rhum, of course). The other is the global capital of reggae, jerk, and easy Jamaican cool. And yet, until now, getting from one to the other has meant connections, layovers, and the kind of […] The post You Can Finally Fly Direct Between Guadeloupe and Jamaica — Here’s When appeared first on Caribbean Journal.
One is the beating heart of French Caribbean life, all zouk rhythms and Creole cooking and that unmistakable island soul (and rhum, of course). The other is the global capital of reggae, jerk, and easy Jamaican cool. And yet, until now, getting from one to the other has meant connections, layovers, and the kind of multi-stop routing that can turn a short hop into an all-day ordeal.
That’s about to change.
Liat Air is launching its first-ever direct service between Pointe-à-Pitre, Guadeloupe, and Montego Bay, Jamaica, with flights beginning July 14, Caribbean Journal has learned.
It’s a genuinely new link in the regional map — one that erases a longstanding gap between the French Caribbean and Jamaica and gives travelers a simple, single-flight option between two of the region’s most distinctive destinations.
The timing is no accident. The route launches just ahead of Reggae Sumfest, the annual Montego Bay music festival that draws fans from across the Caribbean and around the world every July. For Guadeloupeans — and for the wider French Caribbean audience that has always had to work hard to reach Jamaica — the new service lands at exactly the right moment to make a Sumfest pilgrimage realistic for the first time.
Here’s how it works. Flights from Pointe-à-Pitre to Montego Bay will operate twice weekly, on Tuesdays and Saturdays, departing at 3:35 p.m. The return legs from Montego Bay to Pointe-à-Pitre run on Wednesdays and Sundays, with a 9:00 a.m. departure. Fares start at US$307 one way, a competitive price point for a route that previously required piecing together separate tickets across multiple carriers.
The new Jamaica link is part of a much broader push by Liat Air, the Antigua-based regional carrier that has spent the past two years steadily rebuilding intra-Caribbean connectivity. Liat Air relaunched in 2024 as the successor to the long-running LIAT, and after a rebrand in July 2025 it has been aggressively adding routes, aircraft, and destinations — backed in large part by Nigeria’s Air Peace, which holds a majority stake in the airline.
The Montego Bay service is one piece of that expansion out of Guadeloupe specifically. Liat Air recently added nonstop flights between Antigua and Pointe-à-Pitre, closing another awkward regional gap, and the carrier has been opening onward connections through its Antigua hub toward the United States and the United Kingdom. The Jamaica route extends that strategy westward, plugging the French Caribbean into one of the most recognizable destinations in the entire region.
For travelers, the appeal is straightforward. A long weekend that pairs Guadeloupe’s beaches, rum, and Creole markets with Jamaica’s music, mountains, and north-coast resorts is now a single flight away in each direction. Visitors based in Montego Bay can just as easily flip the itinerary, swapping jerk and reggae for the butterfly-shaped island’s waterfalls, hiking, and that famously good French Caribbean food.
It also speaks to a larger moment for Caribbean aviation. Intra-regional travel has long been one of the trickiest things to pull off in the Caribbean — short distances that somehow translate into long, expensive, multi-stop journeys. The collapse of various regional carriers over the years has only made the problem worse. New direct routes like this one chip away at that frustration, knitting the islands closer together and making it easier for Caribbean travelers to explore their own backyard.
Direct flights between Guadeloupe and Montego Bay begin July 14, 2026, with two weekly rotations in each direction and fares starting at US$307 one way. Whether you’re chasing reggae rhythms in Jamaica or zouk and Creole flavor in Guadeloupe, the trip between the two has never been simpler.
The post You Can Finally Fly Direct Between Guadeloupe and Jamaica — Here’s When appeared first on Caribbean Journal.