Lima airport transfers can feel like a maze. QuickLlama’s shared door-to-door shuttle is interesting because it tries to remove the guessing game with GPS tracking and a planned drop-off in Miraflores, usually in about an hour. I like the practical perks: free WiFi onboard and air-conditioned vans with professional drivers. The only real drawback I’d watch for is that pickup can get tricky if you’re dealing with unclear signage or last-minute airport changes—so you’ll want your flight details ready and your phone charged.
Here’s the deal in plain terms: you’re not booking a private taxi. You’re riding with up to 7 people, and your van may route through a central drop before it reaches your specific hotel door. On the upside, the price is fixed (no bargaining), and you’ll be covered by a private insurance policy during the transfer.
In This Review
- Key things to know before you go
- Door-to-door to Miraflores: what this transfer really does
- Meeting the van at J Chavez Intl: timing, flight numbers, and real-world pickup
- The ride: modern comfort, WiFi, air-conditioning, and the safety layer
- Drop-off in Miraflores: hotels, addresses, and Kennedy Park as your backup
- Price and value: $5.95 shared transport that’s hard to beat
- When this shuttle shines (and when you should plan extra)
- Quick checklist: make your Lima arrival smoother
- Should you book QuickLlama for your airport-to-Miraflores transfer?
- FAQ
- FAQ
- How long does the transfer from Lima Airport to Miraflores take?
- Is there WiFi on the shuttle?
- Is the service door-to-door?
- What information do I need to provide when booking?
- How many people are on the shuttle at once?
- Is there free cancellation?
Key things to know before you go

- Door-to-door in Central Miraflores: drop at your hotel or house door when it’s in Central Miraflores.
- Central backup drop at Kennedy Park: if your destination is outside Miraflores, you’ll continue from the Kennedy Park area.
- Flight-aware scheduling: you’re asked for your arrival flight number so they can monitor delays.
- Onboard basics that reduce stress: air conditioning and free WiFi on the van.
- Safety and accountability features: security cameras and GPS tracking are part of the setup.
- Shared ride means “about an hour”: traffic and a multi-stop route can stretch timing, especially after long-haul flights.
Door-to-door to Miraflores: what this transfer really does

This is a shared airport transfer built for day-one ease. Your goal is simple: get from Lima airport to your lodging in Miraflores without negotiating with drivers or trying to decode Lima’s pickup zones when you’re tired.
If your hotel is in Central Miraflores, the service is door-to-door—they’ll take you to the door of your hotel or residential address. That matters more than it sounds. When you’re arriving in Peru for the first time, a “close by” drop can turn into a long walk while you’re dragging luggage, haggling for a short taxi, or figuring out how safe it feels on an empty street.
If your lodging ends up in a district different than Miraflores, you won’t necessarily be left at the curb. Instead, you’ll be taken to the service’s central parking location in Miraflores at Kennedy Park, and from there you can continue your journey to your final destination. It’s a smart compromise: one organized meeting point for the whole shuttle network, instead of chaos at dozens of scattered drop-offs.
Also note the size: this shuttle caps at a maximum of 7 travelers. That’s small enough that you usually don’t feel like you’re stuck on a bus ride, but it’s still “shared,” so you’re not choosing your exact seat or drop order.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Lima
Meeting the van at J Chavez Intl: timing, flight numbers, and real-world pickup

The biggest practical factor with any airport shuttle is meeting the vehicle without stress. QuickLlama asks for two key inputs to keep that smooth: your arrival flight number and your hotel/address.
Why the flight number matters: flights can run late, and immigration lines can change your timing. The service uses your flight number to monitor delays, and they may place you into a different shuttle if the timing shifts. In real life, that’s what prevents missed pickups: you’re not just hoping they saw your arrival time—you’re giving them a tracking hook.
They also ask for your drop-off address (or hotel name). That’s not just paperwork. It helps prevent the most common transfer problem: drivers showing up, then making it a scavenger hunt to figure out where you’re staying.
Now, a heads-up from the issues people reported: some travelers had trouble finding vans due to instructions that didn’t match the airport setup during periods of change. The practical takeaway for you is simple:
- Keep your confirmation info accessible.
- Have your phone ready for fast contact (WhatsApp communication is something you can use, based on past experiences people shared).
- Arrive on the earlier side of your pickup window if you can, but don’t sprint at the first sign of a van without checking the details.
If you’re landing after a long overnight flight, add a buffer. Even when everything is right, airport pickup involves waiting, queues, and regrouping with other passengers.
The ride: modern comfort, WiFi, air-conditioning, and the safety layer
Once you’re in the van, the experience is designed to feel like “transport,” not “adventure.” Expect air conditioning and a modern, spacious shared van setup. The idea is to make the ride comfortable even when Lima traffic turns into stop-and-go.
One thing that genuinely helps on arrival is free WiFi onboard. Even a short ride can be the moment you need to:
- message someone about your exact arrival time,
- check maps for the final walk from a drop,
- or handle quick admin tasks before you head out into the city.
Safety features are part of the pitch, too: the vehicles use security cameras and GPS tracking. For you, this means more accountability than the typical “good luck” taxi situation. GPS tracking also ties into why flight delays and rescheduling can work better: the trip has a system behind it.
There’s also a private insurance policy that covers all passengers during the transfer. That’s important because airport transfers are short, and people sometimes treat them as disposable. Having coverage for the ride itself is a small comfort that can matter if something goes wrong.
One balanced note: some people reported that the vehicle could feel dated or that seat belts didn’t fit comfortably on certain vans. You can’t assume every van is identical. When you get in, do a quick seatbelt check before you depart—takes ten seconds and saves you stress later.
Drop-off in Miraflores: hotels, addresses, and Kennedy Park as your backup

This shuttle is built around a Miraflores arrival, which is convenient because it’s a popular first-stay area. If you’re staying in Central Miraflores, you should get the benefit of a true hotel door drop. That’s the cleanest version of this transfer: you step out, grab your things, and you’re done.
If your lodging is outside Central Miraflores, plan for a staged finish. Your drop may be at the service’s central parking spot in Miraflores near Kennedy Park. That isn’t a failure—it’s a predictable hub. It lets the shuttle keep moving efficiently while still giving you a practical jumping-off point.
So what should you do with that info?
- Confirm your exact district and expect that your final leg might require a short follow-up taxi or local transit.
- If you’re arriving late at night, Kennedy Park as a hub can be easier than trying to coordinate with a driver at a far-flung address.
Either way, you’re aiming for the same end result: a smooth landing in Miraflores without turning the transfer into a city navigation test.
Price and value: $5.95 shared transport that’s hard to beat

The price is listed at $5.95 per person for about an hour. On the surface, that seems almost too cheap for airport-to-city service. But the value makes sense because it’s shared and structured.
What you’re really paying for:
- a fixed-price alternative to Lima taxi bargaining,
- a setup that includes tracking and a planned meet/drop pattern,
- onboard comfort basics (air conditioning, WiFi),
- and coverage during the ride.
The main tradeoff with low-cost shared shuttles is timing flexibility. An “about one hour” transfer depends on traffic and whether you have extra stops. If you’re the kind of traveler who hates uncertainty—say, you’re catching a tight second reservation soon after arrival—build in extra buffer time.
Still, if your goal is simple airport-to-hotel with minimal friction, this can be a smart move. The fixed cost reduces one big stress: you’re not standing at the curb wondering what you’ll be quoted.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Lima
When this shuttle shines (and when you should plan extra)

QuickLlama works best when you:
- want a low-stress arrival in Miraflores,
- can provide your flight number and lodging address correctly,
- and communicate quickly if your flight timing shifts.
It can also be a good fit if you like structure. The service emphasizes GPS and monitoring, and that tends to help when planes are delayed or when luggage timing is off.
If you want a little “real-world” signal from the past experiences people shared, here are the patterns that came through clearly:
- People praised drivers for being courteous and professional.
- Communication helped when arrivals or pickup times changed.
- WiFi onboard saved the day when phone plans weren’t working right after arrival.
- On-time pickups were a recurring highlight.
On the other hand, the weak spots were usually not the ride itself—it was the pickup clarity. Some people struggled to locate vans because meeting instructions didn’t match the airport’s setup during changes. Others had delays of around 20–30 minutes or more. A few also mentioned unmarked vehicles or confusion about reservation info.
So my practical advice is: don’t treat pickup like a casual guess. Treat it like a checklist.
- Keep your confirmation details accessible.
- Make sure your flight number and hotel/address match your booking.
- Get ready to identify the right van when you arrive at the pickup zone.
- If your flight is delayed, respond quickly to any updates.
That approach turns a low-cost shared shuttle into a smooth first step in Lima, not a stressful one.
Quick checklist: make your Lima arrival smoother

If you do just a few things right, the transfer experience is usually painless:
- Add your arrival flight number when booking so scheduling can adjust.
- Have your hotel name/address ready exactly as you expect it to be read back.
- Charge your phone and plan for fast messaging (WhatsApp is used for real-time communication, based on reported experiences).
- Arrive with a small buffer so you’re not sprinting through the last steps of customs while also hunting a van.
- On boarding, do a quick seat belt check before you settle in.
This is the kind of service where preparation beats luck.
Should you book QuickLlama for your airport-to-Miraflores transfer?

If you’re staying in Miraflores and you want an affordable, low-friction way to get from Lima airport to your hotel, I’d seriously consider booking. The combination of air-conditioning, free onboard WiFi, GPS tracking, and insurance coverage makes it feel more “serious” than the cheapest airport shuttles.
I’d think twice (or at least plan extra time) if:
- your arrival is extremely time-sensitive right after landing,
- you’re easily stressed by pickup logistics,
- or you need total certainty on the exact van/appearance at the airport.
For most visitors, though, this is a sensible value pick: fixed price, door drop in Central Miraflores, and a transfer that’s built to keep you moving toward the fun part of the trip.
FAQ
FAQ
How long does the transfer from Lima Airport to Miraflores take?
The transfer takes about 1 hour on average.
Is there WiFi on the shuttle?
Yes. Free WiFi is available onboard.
Is the service door-to-door?
It is door-to-door for hotels or residences in Central Miraflores. If your destination is in a different district, you may be dropped at a central location near Kennedy Park.
What information do I need to provide when booking?
You should provide your arrival flight number and your hotel name or address so the pickup can be organized correctly.
How many people are on the shuttle at once?
The shuttle has a maximum of 7 travelers.
Is there free cancellation?
Yes, free cancellation is available. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.


























