But there is another Air France aircraft that appears in Miami, catching many aviation enthusiasts by surprise. It is not a long-haul jet arriving from Paris, but rather an Airbus A320 arriving from Guadeloupe. The flight forms part of one of the world’s most unusual airline services: an island-hopping route that links the United States with three different French overseas departments, and onwards to Brazil. For aviation enthusiasts looking for a unique journey, Air France’s Caribbean network deserves a place on any bucket list.
The Guadeloupe Connection
The story begins in Guadeloupe, a Caribbean archipelago that is an overseas department and region of France. Residents are French citizens, use the euro, vote in French elections, and are represented in the French Parliament. In legal terms, Guadeloupe is as much a part of France as Normandy or Brittany.
As a result, Air France operates extensive services between France and Guadeloupe. The airline serves Pointe-à-Pitre Le Raizet (PTP) with daily 777-300ER flights from CDG, while also maintaining this separate and rather unusual regional network within the Caribbean. This includes the Miami–Pointe-à-Pitre service, which operates up to five times weekly in peak season. It used to fly via Port-au-Prince in Haiti, but now operates direct after Air France suspended the Haiti segment amid that country’s ongoing security crisis and the FAA ban on flights to the country.
Today, Miami serves as the starting point for Air France’s Caribbean island-hopping adventure. After arriving in Pointe-à-Pitre, passengers can continue onward to Martinique, and from there, on to French Guiana, all on the same regional network.
|
Air France A320 Routes From PTP |
||
|---|---|---|
|
Destination |
Airport |
Peak Frequency |
|
Fort-de-France |
FDF |
10x weekly |
|
Miami |
MIA |
5x weekly |
Air France maintains a dedicated fleet of two Airbus A320s (registration codes F-HEPB and F-HEPC) for these regional Caribbean operations. The aircraft are equipped with 2 rows of business-class seats in a European configuration — they are traditional economy-class seats, but with the middle seat blocked. These seats provide lounge access at all airports along the way, as well as complimentary checked luggage, priority boarding, and meal service on select legs. Behind business class are 168 economy class seats in the traditional 3-3 configuration.
On To Martinique
The next stop on the journey is Martinique, another overseas department of France, just 120 miles (193 km) away. Like Guadeloupe, the island’s residents are French citizens, and Air France serves Martinique’s Fort-de-France Aimé Césaire International Airport (FDF) with daily 777-300ER flights from CDG, ensuring strong links with metropolitan France.
The regional network is equally important. Air France currently operates up to ten weekly flights between Pointe-à-Pitre and Fort-de-France using the Caribbean-based Airbus A320 fleet. Although the flight takes barely 30 minutes, it effectively connects two separate regions of France located thousands of miles from Europe. The airline has also recently added seasonal service between Fort-de-France and Punta Cana International Airport (PUJ) in the Dominican Republic, although this route does not form part of the island-hopping itinerary.
|
Air France A320 Routes From PTP |
||
|---|---|---|
|
Destination |
Airport |
Peak Frequency |
|
Cayenne |
CAY |
10x weekly |
|
Pointe-à-Pitre |
PTP |
10x weekly |
|
Punta Cana |
PUJ |
2x weekly |
For travelers continuing the journey, Fort-de-France serves as the gateway to the final French department on the route: French Guiana. From Martinique, Air France operates onward flights to Cayenne’s Félix Éboué Airport (CAY), located on the northern coast of South America.
French Guiana is arguably the most strategically important of France’s overseas departments. While its population is relatively small, the territory is home to the Guiana Space Centre at Kourou, which is Europe’s primary spaceport. The facility has hosted Ariane rocket launches for decades, and remains one of the most important pieces of French infrastructure outside Europe. The territory also provides France with a permanent presence on the South American continent.

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From Cayenne: The Final Stops
Passengers who travel the entire route from Miami to Cayenne will enjoy a journey of more than eight hours in transit, including the intermediate stops in Guadeloupe and Martinique. It is hardly the fastest way to travel between Florida and South America, but speed is not really the point. Instead, the route provides a fascinating glimpse into how Air France links three geographically separate pieces of France spread across the Caribbean and South America.
But you don’t have to stop there, as Cayenne serves as more than just the final stop on the island hopper. Air France also uses its Caribbean-based Airbus A320 fleet to connect French Guiana with Brazil, although with less frequency, so you will need to plan well if you want to do the entire end-to-end trip.
|
Air France A320 Routes From PTP |
||
|---|---|---|
|
Destination |
Airport |
Peak Frequency |
|
Fort-de-France |
FDF |
10x weekly |
|
Belém |
BEL |
1x weekly |
|
Fortaleza |
FOR |
1x weekly |
The airline currently operates weekly flights from Cayenne to both Belém’s Júlio César Ribeiro International Airport (BEL), which operates on Fridays, and Fortaleza International Airport (FOR), which operates on Mondays. Both cities are located in northern Brazil and are relatively close to French Guiana compared with Brazil’s major southern population centers. The routes support economic ties, regional travel, and connectivity between neighboring countries.
Air France’s Caribbean network is not the world’s only island-hopping operation.
United Airlines has its famous Island Hopper across Micronesia, linking Honolulu International Airport (HNL) with Guam International Airport (GUM) via a series of remote Pacific islands. Yet Air France’s version is arguably more unusual, because it effectively connects three different parts of France across two continents, connecting to two different international destinations at each end.
Better still for
SkyTeam flyers, the flights can often be booked very affordably using miles. So, for aviation enthusiasts looking for a genuinely unique airline adventure, there is every incentive to board an Airbus A320 in Miami and island-hop their way across the French Caribbean to South America.








