Where Can You Fly With the GoWild Pass? (2026)

People shopping the GoWild Pass almost always ask the same thing first: where can I actually go with this? It is the right question, and the honest answer has two layers. The map is genuinely big, more than 100 destinations across the US, Mexico, the Caribbean, and Central America. But the GoWild map is not the Frontier map, and that distinction is the thing most guides skip. We fly Frontier on GoWild constantly, so here is the real picture: what is covered, what is not, and how to see what is bookable from your airport today.

The short answer

The GoWild Pass works on a limited selection of Frontier's own flights, and Frontier serves 100+ destinations across:

  • The continental US plus Puerto Rico (San Juan), the bulk of where most pass holders fly.
  • Mexico, including leisure favorites like Cancun and Guadalajara.
  • The Caribbean, with cities like Nassau in the Bahamas and Turks and Caicos.
  • Central America, including Guatemala and Honduras.

If Frontier flies a route, a GoWild fare can open on it. That is the upside. Now the catch that decides whether you can really go somewhere.

The catch: the route map is not the GoWild map

Here is the part that trips people up. The GoWild Pass does not cover every Frontier route, and on the routes it does cover, seats are capacity-controlled. Two filters sit between Frontier's route map and the trip you actually book:

  1. Eligibility. The pass works on a limited selection of flights, not the entire network. Some routes and dates simply are not offered on GoWild.
  2. Availability. Even on eligible routes, Frontier only releases GoWild seats on flights it does not expect to fill at standard fares. A route can be right there on the map and still show no GoWild seat for your dates.

That is also why a fixed destination on fixed dates is the hard case, and flexibility is the whole game. More on that in how hard it is to get GoWild seats.

Domestic: where the pass shines

The vast majority of GoWild trips are domestic, and that is where the pass is easiest to use. Domestic GoWild flights open for booking the day before departure, and the seats that open depend heavily on how often Frontier flies the route. A city Frontier serves three times a day releases far more GoWild inventory than one it serves once a day.

That means your home airport matters as much as the destination. High-frequency hubs like Orlando and Atlanta give you more shots at a seat than Frontier's biggest-by-route-count base in Denver. We break the hub strategy down fully in the best airports for the GoWild Pass.

International: Mexico, the Caribbean, and Central America

The international side of the pass is real and underused. Frontier serves destinations across Mexico, the Caribbean, and Central America, and GoWild fares open on them too. A few things to know before you chase one:

  • The window is longer. International GoWild flights open 10 days before departure, not the day before, so you can plan a bit further out.
  • The fees are higher. The base fare is still one cent, but international taxes and fees run higher, often $60 to $110 versus around $15 on a domestic hop. See what a GoWild flight really costs.
  • Puerto Rico is the exception. San Juan (SJU) counts as domestic for timing since Puerto Rico is a US territory, so it opens on the day-before window, not the 10-day one.
  • Most international routes are seasonal. This is the big one. Frontier lists a long roster of international cities, but a lot of that service is seasonal or runs only a few days a week, so a destination can be right there on the map and not be flying at all for the dates you want. The route map shows where Frontier can fly across the year, not what is actually operating right now.

Because so much international service is seasonal or runs only a few days a week, the route map alone will mislead you. The reliable move is to let the search do the work: an everywhere search surfaces which international destinations actually have a GoWild seat open right now, instead of you guessing city by city, and a calendar search shows which specific days a seat is open on a given route. Together they tell you what Frontier is really operating and where availability exists, rather than what a static map promises. For seasonal beach destinations especially, that is the difference between a trip you can book and a dot on a map that is not flying this month.

Where you can't go

Knowing the edges of the map saves you from chasing flights that do not exist. The GoWild Pass cannot take you anywhere Frontier itself does not fly, which rules out some big ones:

  • No Hawaii. Frontier does not serve Hawaii on any fare.
  • No Europe, Asia, or Africa. Frontier is a North America and Caribbean carrier; there are no transatlantic or transpacific GoWild flights.
  • No other airlines. GoWild is Frontier-only. It is not a partner network, so you cannot use it on another carrier even where Frontier does not fly.

If a place is not on Frontier's route map, no version of the pass reaches it. The pass is about flying often within Frontier's footprint, not about going everywhere.

How to see what's actually bookable from your airport

Because the GoWild map shifts with the schedule and with live availability, the only reliable way to know where you can go is to look at real seats, not a static map. Frontier's own site makes you check one route and one date at a time, which is exactly the wrong tool for a capacity-controlled, flexible-by-design pass.

That is the problem FlyGoWild solves: search every Frontier route from your home airport at once, see real GoWild seat counts, and set alerts so you are notified the moment a seat opens on a route you want.

The bottom line

The GoWild Pass reaches 100+ destinations across the US, Mexico, the Caribbean, and Central America, but the pass covers a limited selection of routes and the seats are capacity-controlled, so the Frontier map is the ceiling, not the guarantee. Domestic is where it shines, the 10-day international window is the hidden gem, and there is no Hawaii or Europe to be found. The smartest move is to stop reading maps and start watching live seats from your airport.

New to the pass? Start with our honest Frontier GoWild Pass guide, see when GoWild seats get released, or browse cheap Frontier flights by airport.

Frequently asked questions

Where can you fly with the Frontier GoWild Pass?

The GoWild Pass works on a limited selection of Frontier's own routes, which spans 100+ destinations across the United States, Mexico, the Caribbean, and Central America. Anywhere Frontier flies, a GoWild fare can in theory open up, from major US hubs to leisure spots like Cancun, San Juan, and Nassau. The catch is that it covers only some flights, not every route, and seats are capacity-controlled, so 'where you can fly' really means 'where a GoWild seat is open for your dates.'

Can you fly internationally with the GoWild Pass?

Yes. The GoWild Pass covers Frontier's international routes to Mexico, the Caribbean, and Central America, including cities like Cancun, Guadalajara, Guatemala City, and Nassau. International GoWild flights open for booking 10 days before departure, versus the day before for domestic, so you get a little more planning room. Expect higher taxes and fees on international segments, often $60 to $110 versus around $15 domestic, since the one-cent base fare does not cover government and airport charges.

Does the GoWild Pass cover every Frontier route?

No. The pass works on a limited selection of Frontier flights, not the entire route map, and availability is capacity-controlled on top of that. Frontier only releases GoWild seats on flights it does not expect to fill at standard fares, so a route can be on the map yet show no GoWild seat for the dates you want. The Frontier route map and the GoWild map are not the same thing.

Can you use the GoWild Pass to Mexico and the Caribbean?

Yes. Mexico, the Caribbean, and Central America are all part of Frontier's network and eligible for GoWild fares, with destinations like Cancun, San Juan, Nassau, and Turks and Caicos. San Juan counts as domestic for booking timing since Puerto Rico is a US territory, so it opens the day before like any domestic route. The rest open 10 days out on the international window. Just budget for the higher international taxes and fees.

Can you fly to Hawaii or Europe with the GoWild Pass?

No. Frontier does not fly to Hawaii, Europe, Asia, or Africa at all, so no pass can take you there. The GoWild Pass is limited to where Frontier itself flies: the continental US, Puerto Rico, Mexico, the Caribbean, and Central America. If a destination is not on Frontier's route map, it is not bookable on GoWild.