You can now spend a week in Buenos Aires for (almost) under £1,000 – here's how

Cheap direct flights are bringing this magical city closer, but a stay can be quite affordable too, says Chris Moss - ©KarinaVera
Cheap direct flights are bringing this magical city closer, but a stay can be quite affordable too, says Chris Moss - ©KarinaVera

Argentina is hardly a model of economic success. Formerly one of the world’s richest nations, decades of mismanagement and corruption have made it an example of how not to manage oil, farmland, the middle classes, government, just about anything.

This wouldn’t really matter to tourists, except that prices rise and fall from year to year and right now, Buenos Aires (or BA as it is known) is in one of its pricey phases. Hotel room rates are high, food is not cheap – and downright expensive in smart places. Taxis are a luxury. 

As of today, the low-cost airline Norwegian claims it can fly us from Gatwick to BA and back for £589, including taxes (the service operates four days a week). Since last June, Level, owned by IAG – the firm which runs British Airways and Iberia – has been flying Barcelona-Buenos Aires from a not quite as tempting €555 (£490) one-way. Scoring the best rates will involve the usual deft handling of mouse and calendar and a bit of luck.

At a glance | The cheapest flights to Buenos Aires

I’ve been zipping back and forth between the UK and the Argentine capital since 2001. Here is my suggestion for a week in Buenos Aires for less than the cost of even the least frilly flight.

Airport transfers

Between the airport and the glitzy Puerto Madero district, the Manuel Tienda Leon bus (tiendaleon.com) costs 480 pesos (AR$) or £17.30 return; allow £5 more for local taxi to/from hotel. Cost: £22.30.

Puerto Madero - Credit: GETTY
Puerto Madero Credit: GETTY

Accommodation

Six nights in a double room with en suite bathroom at the centrally located Recoleta Hostel (hirecoleta.com.ar), accredited by Hostelling International, costs AR$6,300. Cost: £227.

A memorial at the famous Recoleta cemetary - Credit: GETTY
A memorial at the famous Recoleta cemetary Credit: GETTY

Public transport for a week

A Sube card, comparable with the Oyster in London, costs AR$25 (90p) and is available at underground (subte) stations, at tourist information centres and at many kioskos (holes in the wall and shops selling confectionery and tobacco) throughout the city. Cards can be charged with credit at all subte stations, national lottery outlets, and at kioskos with automated terminals. Load the card with AR$200 (£7.20) and you’ll get more than 20 journeys on bus, subte or local train. Cost: £8.10

Birdwatching and fresh air 

Walk off your jet lag at the 860-acre Reserva Ecologica Costanera Sur, just east of Puerto Madero. Free. 

Six cities that are unexpected havens for birdwatching

Bike hire for a day 

Che Bikes (chebikes.com) charges AR$350 to ride from Palermo to La Boca, the old port district. Cost: £12.61.

Guided tour 

A guided tour of posh Recoleta, including the Colón opera house and the famous cemetery, is free, but tips should be in the region of AR$280. See buenosairesfreewalks.com and bafreetour.com for more information. Cost: £10.

Colón opera house - Credit: STOCK.ADOBE.COM/ALEXANDER VOROBEV
Colón opera house Credit: STOCK.ADOBE.COM/ALEXANDER VOROBEV

Day trip 1

The train to Tigre departs from Retiro station on the “Mitre” line every 15 minutes. Journey time: 1 hour. Your Sube card covers the trip. There’s a good naval museum (AR$20 or 72p) here and a quirky museum devoted to yerba mate (AR$60 or £2.16), the bitter green tea Argentines sip whenever the chance arises. To see the Tigre delta, skip the touristy services and get a return on one of the inter-island colectivo services (lacolectivadeldelta.com.ar) to Rio Sarmiento for AR$150 or £5.40. Cost: £8.28.

Map 

These are available at any of the city’s nine Tourist Information kiosks – their addresses can be found at turismo.buenosaires.gob.ar. Free. 

Cheap eats for a week

Avoid the smart listed cafés and head for any old corner for breakfast: you can get a café con leche and three medialunas (sweet croissants) for less than £2; almost all caffs have free Wi-Fi. The “asado” (barbecue) and “parrilla” (grill restaurant) are the twin temples of the Argentine religion of cow consumption. A slap-up steak lunch or dinner could easily cost two people £70. But at less trendy areas such as the corner of Alvarez Thomas and Avenida de los Incas, you can find neighbourhood parrillas where you can eat for a fraction of the price. You can also get cheap meals and robust red wine by the litre at neighbourhood social clubs such as Club Eros, Estrella de Maldonado and Villa Malcolm. Pizzas, takeaway empanadas, milanesa (schnitzel) sandwiches and streetside BBQs are also good options. See the website of Antigourmet for ideas and a map: antigourmet.com.ar/mapa-de-bodegones-y-afines. Cost: £210.

Save money by sticking to street food - Credit: STOCK.ADOBE.COM/ALEXANDER VOROBEV
Save money by sticking to street food Credit: STOCK.ADOBE.COM/ALEXANDER VOROBEV

Day trip 2 

Catch the No.55 bus from your hostel to the Feria de Mataderos (country-style fête) on a Sunday to see a bric-a-brac market, live folk music and dancing, and gaucho horsemanship. Have a choripan (sausage sandwich) and a craft beer for lunch, costing about £7. Follow this with some free sightseeing: visit the huge Chacarita cemetery (where legendary tango crooner Carlos Gardel is buried), Palermo park, Plaza San Martín and Villa Crespo with its street art, mapped by Google at streetart.withgoogle.com/en). Of the public art galleries, don’t miss the Museo de Arte Moderno (buenosaires.gob.ar/museoartemoderno; entry AR$30) and neighbouring Museo de Arte Contemporaneo (macba.com.ar; AR$70), together costing around £3.60. Cost: £10.60 (Sunday only).

10 surprising cities where you can spot street art

Day out in the city 

First, go for a swim and sunbathe. Parque Norte (parquenorte.com) is a large pool club open to visitors. In the sweltering summer months, it’s an ideal family hideaway, with three big pools and a shallow one for smaller children. Loungers and sun-brollies cost extra (adult AR$195/£7; two parents and two children AR$560/£20.20). Food such as burgers, hot dogs and salads, as well as beers and soft drinks, are cheap; budget for around £8. Catch bus no 75 then 45 to get there. Cost: £15.

The colourful Boca district - Credit: GETTY
The colourful Boca district Credit: GETTY

Join a running group

See turismo.buenosaires.gob.ar/en/article/running. Free. 

Culture 

All activities in the CCK or Centro Cultural Kirchner (cck.gob.ar), including art shows and live music, are free. To collect tickets (two per person), go to the main hall on Sarmiento 151 at noon, between Thurs and Sun. The cultural centre is in the grand old Post Office and it’s worth doing the free one-and-a-half hour guided tour if your Spanish is up to it. Free.

Sport 

Why not watch a no-frills football match? Avoid the likes of Boca Juniors and River Plate and go to the more local Club Atletico Platense to see the “Squids” play other teams in the B-division. Entry from AR$200. Cost: £7.20.

Boca Juniors fans - Credit: GETTY
Boca Juniors fans Credit: GETTY

Total cost

£531.09 (Or less than a night in a deluxe suite at the Alvear Palace hotel).