Arajet onward travel
Arajet places full document responsibility on passengers and lists the lack of an onward or return ticket among reasons a traveler can be refused, across its Caribbean and Latin American network.
How this airline usually checks
Arajet states passengers are fully responsible for holding the documents required by both the connection and destination countries, requires passports valid for at least six months, and references no onward or return ticket among grounds for refused admission. As a regional low-cost carrier, it verifies documents at check-in.[1][2]
- Passport (valid 6+ months) and required visa or entry forms are checked at the counter before boarding.
- Both connection-country and destination-country rules can apply on connecting itineraries.
- An onward or return reservation is requested where the destination requires it.
When to be ready
Have your onward reservation ready at check-in, especially on connecting itineraries where both the connection and destination rules apply.
Routes where checks are more likely
- Most relevant on Caribbean and Latin American destinations that commonly require onward or return proof, including Mexico.
- Connecting routes through Santo Domingo can apply two countries' rules at once.
Sources
- Arajet — Travel requirements
“Passengers fully responsible for connection and destination documents; passport valid 6+ months.”
- Arajet — Conditions of carriage
“No onward or return ticket is referenced among reasons for refused admission.”
Verified flight reservation
Your booking includes a real airline reservation code and downloadable PDF itinerary for airline-side document checks.
If you choose to complete the trip, your order page shows the full ticket price and payment deadline. Unpaid reservations are automatically released.