Public Transport in Lisbon: Apps, Tickets & Tips 2026

Last updated: May 2026
Hills, trams and a metro that drops you in the airport terminal

Lisbon's public transport is dense, cheap and surprisingly easy once you have the right card. The Navegante Occasional card (rebranded from Viva Viagem in 2026) is the universal paper smartcard — €0,50 from any metro vending machine, valid on Metro, Carris buses & trams, Transtejo ferries to Cacilhas and CP suburban trains to Sintra/Cascais. Critical 2026 update: the yellow AeroBus airport shuttle has been permanently discontinued — the Metro Red Line now serves the airport directly for €1,90.

iOS: Carris Metropolitana | Android: Carris Metropolitana

Essential Info

Main Form of Payment Navegante Occasional card (paper smartcard, €0,50) Multiple people No (one Navegante card per passenger) Check-in/validate Tap-in at metro gates and at bus/tram readers Payment methods Navegante card, contactless bank card on metro (€1,92), cash on board bus/tram (€2,30/€3,30) Fine for fare evasion €120 – €350 (50% discount if paid within 15 working days) Night transport after 01:00 Yes (Rede da Madrugada night buses, regular fare) Exit scan required? No — flat fare, tap-in only Metro operating hours 06:30 – 01:00 daily Real-time info Yes (Carris Metropolitana, Citymapper, Google Maps) Airport → Centre Metro Red Line: €1,90, 20–25 min to Saldanha/Alameda
CRITICAL INFO FOR LISBON!

1. The AeroBus has been permanently discontinued. Many older blogs and guidebooks still recommend it — they are wrong. Use the Metro Red Line directly from Aeroporto station in the terminal: €1,90 with a Navegante card, every 6–9 minutes, 20–25 minutes to the centre.

2. Buy a Navegante card before boarding! Paying cash on a bus costs €2,30 (single journey) or €3,30 on a tram — versus €1,90 with the card. The €0,50 card pays for itself on your first trip.

3. Tram 28 is famous — and pickpocket central. Carry valuables in front pockets or a money belt. Locals avoid the tourist-packed sections; consider tram 12 or 18 for a similar experience without the crush.

4. Hills are real. Lisbon is built on seven of them. If you have luggage or mobility issues, prioritise the Metro (lifts at most stations) over buses; check accessibility before relying on funiculars (Glória, Bica) or the Santa Justa Lift.

Quick Check before boarding

Which Ticket to Choose?

ROAMMATE ADVICE: For most visitors → buy a Navegante Occasional card (€0,50) and load it with Zapping credit (€1,72 per ride). The 24h pass (€7,25) only pays off if you make 5+ rides in a day — most tourists walk between sights and don't hit that. If you plan to visit 3+ paid museums, the Lisboa Card is the better deal because it bundles transport with entry to Jerónimos, St. George's Castle, Belém Tower and more.
Ticket Type Price (2026) Validity When to choose?
Navegante Occasional card + Zapping €0,50 card + €1,72 per ride Stored value, 1 year BEST CHOICE! Pay-as-you-go for 1–4 rides per day
Carris/Metro single (on Navegante) €1,90 60 min, one trip + transfers Occasional rider, prefer flat single fare
24h Carris/Metro pass €7,25 24 hours unlimited 5+ rides in a single day
24h Carris/Metro/Transtejo €10,35 24 hours unlimited + Cacilhas ferry Heading across the Tagus for the day
24h Carris/Metro/CP €11,40 24 hours unlimited + CP suburban trains Day trip to Sintra or Cascais included
Lisboa Card 24h / 48h / 72h €31 / €51 / €62 (adult)
€21 / €28 / €35 (child 4–15)
Transport + 50+ attractions Sightseeing-heavy itinerary (3+ paid sites/day)
Contactless bank card (Metro only) €1,92 per ride Per ride, metro only One-off metro hop; not accepted on most buses/trams
Bus / tram on-board (cash) €2,30 bus / €3,30 tram Single journey, no transfers Avoid — always cheaper with a Navegante card
Avoid travel stress and fines. Receive a free Lisbon public transport update in your inbox 2 weeks before departure.

Humberto Delgado Airport (LIS) sits just 7 km from the city centre — closer than almost any other European capital. Since the AeroBus was discontinued, the Metro Red Line is now the best option for almost every traveller.

AeroBus discontinued

The yellow AeroBus shuttle (Lines 1 and 2) has been permanently discontinued in 2026. If your guidebook recommends it, ignore that page. The Metro Red Line covers the same route faster and cheaper.

Option Time Price Frequency
Metro Red Line 20–25 min to Saldanha/Alameda €1,90 (Navegante) Every 6–9 min
Carris bus 744 / 783 30–45 min depending on traffic €1,90 (Navegante) / €2,30 (cash) Every 15–25 min

Metro Red Line (RECOMMENDED)

  • Route: Aeroporto → Alameda (transfer to Green Line) → Saldanha (transfer to Yellow Line) → São Sebastião (transfer to Blue Line)
  • Time: 20–25 minutes to the centre; ~10 min to Alameda; ~12 min to Saldanha
  • Price: €1,90 with a Navegante Occasional card (€0,50, buy from the vending machines in arrivals)
  • Frequency: Every 6–9 minutes, 06:30 – 01:00 daily
  • Note: The metro station is INSIDE the terminal (signposted from arrivals — follow the M symbol).
Card buying tip: The vending machines at Aeroporto station accept contactless bank cards and have English instructions. Buy a Navegante Occasional card (€0,50) and load €3–5 of Zapping; you can top up again later. Avoid the queue at the ticket desk.

Carris bus 744 / 783

  • 744: Airport → Marquês de Pombal (city centre)
  • 783: Airport → Amoreiras (western city)
  • Price: €1,90 with a Navegante card, €2,30 in cash on board
  • Suitable for: Travellers heading to neighbourhoods not on the Red Line, or carrying heavy luggage who want to avoid metro stairs at transfer stations

Age Limits & Prices

Age Price Card needed?
0–3 years FREE No
4–15 years (tourist) Adult fare on Metro/Carris; Lisboa Card child rate available Navegante card recommended
Lisboa Card child (4–15) €21 / €28 / €35 (24h / 48h / 72h) Lisboa Card
4–23 years (resident students) FREE via Navegante 4_18 / Sub23 Personalised Navegante — residents only

Tips for Families

  • Children under 4 travel free on Metro, Carris buses & trams, Transtejo ferries and CP trains — no card needed
  • The Lisboa Card child rate (4–15) is the strongest deal for families visiting attractions like Jerónimos and the Castle
  • Strollers are allowed on the Metro — use the lifts; the older trams 12, 15E, 18, 24E, 25 and 28 are NOT stroller-friendly (steps, narrow aisles)
  • The Navegante 4_18 and Sub23 free-travel programmes only apply to students registered in the Lisbon Metropolitan Area — not to visiting children
Note for non-resident families

Unlike in some other European cities, visiting children aged 4+ pay the same as adults on regular tickets in Lisbon. The 4_18 free programme is restricted to local schoolchildren. Plan around the Lisboa Card or share Zapping carefully (one tap-in per person).

🧮 Cost Estimate for a 3-day Family Trip (2 adults + 2 kids 6/9)

  • 2 × Lisboa Card 72h adult: €124
  • 2 × Lisboa Card 72h child: €70
  • Total: €194 — includes unlimited transport + 50+ free entries (Jerónimos, Belém Tower, St. George's Castle, Sintra/Cascais train)

Rating: ★★★☆☆ (3/5 stars)

Lisbon's accessibility has improved dramatically — the Metro now has 46 stations (~82%) with lift access, and most Carris buses are low-floor. But the city's hills, cobblestones and historic trams remain serious obstacles, and a few core city-centre metro stations still lack lifts.

Metro: Mostly Accessible

  • Lifts: 46 of 56 stations have lifts (~82%); 117 lifts across the network (figures as of late 2025). Recent additions: Campo Pequeno and Picoas got lifts in 2025.
  • Still without lift access: A handful of older central stations — verify before travelling via the Metro de Lisboa live status page.
  • Tactile guidance paths: Standard at all stations
  • Real-time lift status: Check metrolisboa.pt before relying on a transfer

Buses: Largely Accessible

  • Carris and Carris Metropolitana operate predominantly low-floor fleets with ramps
  • The driver deploys the ramp on request — board at the front door
  • Tighter routes through Alfama and Chiado may still use smaller, non-accessible vehicles

Trams: Mixed

  • Tram 15E (Praça da Figueira – Belém): Modern Articulado low-floor trams with wheelchair access — the only fully accessible historic-feeling route
  • Trams 12, 18, 24E, 25, 28 (Remodelado historic): NOT wheelchair accessible — three steep steps, ~45 cm aisle, no ramps
  • Funiculars (Glória, Bica, Lavra) and Santa Justa Lift: NOT wheelchair accessible — steps and narrow turnstiles

Transtejo Ferries

  • Cais do Sodré, Belém and Cacilhas terminals have step-free boarding
  • On-deck wheelchair spaces; staff will assist if you flag them at the gate

🛠️ Assistance & Discounts

  • Metro assistance: Free service — call +351 213 500 115 in advance for help at major interchanges
  • Companion travel: Disability concessions exist for Portuguese residents; non-residents pay the regular fare
  • Guide dogs: Allowed on all Metro, Carris and Transtejo services

Best Accessible Tourist Routes

1. Airport → Centre

Metro Red Line — Aeroporto, Alameda and Saldanha all have lift access; level boarding at the airport platform.

2. Centre → Belém (Jerónimos, Belém Tower)

Tram 15E from Praça da Figueira — low-floor modern tram with ramp; bypasses the inaccessible historic trams entirely.

3. Baixa → Parque das Nações (modern district)

Metro Red Line — Oriente station is one of Europe's most accessible interchanges, with lifts to all levels.

4. Cais do Sodré → Cacilhas (across the Tagus)

Transtejo ferry — step-free boarding both ends; ferry deck is level.

Accessibility Tip: Avoid the historic trams 12, 18, 24E, 25 and 28 entirely if you use a wheelchair. The Metro plus tram 15E covers the vast majority of tourist sights. Lisbon's cobblestones (calçada portuguesa) are uneven — consider a power wheelchair or scooter, or budget extra time on foot routes.

Visual Impairment

  • Tactile paving: Installed at all Metro platforms and most major bus stops
  • Braille: Lift buttons and station name plates on platforms have Braille
  • Audio announcements: All Metro trains announce the next station; lifts announce the floor
  • Recommended: Use the Navegante card (single beep on tap) rather than contactless bank card; the touchscreen ticket machines have no audio guidance

When does the Metro stop?

The Metro runs until 01:00, with last trains leaving terminal stations at 01:00. After that, the Carris Rede da Madrugada (night-bus network, lines 201–210) covers the main corridors until daytime services resume around 05:00–06:00. Since April 2025, Carris Metropolitana has run a 24-hour bus network in parts of the Lisbon metropolitan area with over 70 night schedules.

Transport Last service First service
Metro 01:00 06:30
Carris daytime buses ~00:00 (route-dependent) ~05:30
Trams (12, 15E, 18, 24E, 25, 28) ~22:30–23:30 ~06:00
Rede da Madrugada (night bus) 06:00 01:00
Transtejo ferries (Cacilhas) ~02:00 (Fri/Sat reduced) ~05:30

Rede da Madrugada Night Buses

Ten core night-bus lines (201–210) link Cais do Sodré, Marquês de Pombal, Saldanha, Oriente and the outer parishes between 01:00 and 06:00. Pay the regular €1,90 Carris/Metro single with your Navegante card, or €2,30 in cash.

Useful night buses for tourists:

Line Route Fare
201 Cais do Sodré → Algés (riverside west) €1,90
202 Cais do Sodré → Bairro Padre Cruz (north) €1,90
208 Cais do Sodré → Oriente / Parque das Nações €1,90
Night Transport Tip: Bairro Alto's nightlife ends well after 02:00. Most night buses pass through or near Cais do Sodré, a five-minute walk downhill. After 01:00, Uber/Bolt prices spike on weekends — but a Madrugada bus is still €1,90.

✅ Do this

  • Tap your card on every boarding — including on Carris buses and trams, even with a 24h pass. Inspectors fine for unvalidated tickets.
  • Buy the Navegante card before your first trip — €0,50 at any vending machine. Paying cash on board costs 20–75% more.
  • Use the Metro for cross-city moves — buses get stuck in steep cobbled streets and historic-centre traffic.
  • Stand right on escalators — Lisboners walk on the left.
  • Carry your Navegante carefully — it's paper. A wet wallet ruins it; the chip survives bending but not a washing machine.

❌ Don't do this

  • Don't expect bank-card tap on Carris buses or trams — contactless works on the Metro (€1,92), but not on Carris vehicles. You need a Navegante card or exact cash.
  • Don't take tram 28 with valuables on display — it's Europe's most pickpocketed line. Phone in front pocket, wallet in a money belt.
  • Don't rely on the AeroBus — it's gone.
  • Don't share one Navegante between two passengers — the card is single-rider only; tapping twice in succession won't register a second fare.
  • Don't board the funiculars (Glória, Bica, Lavra) at peak times — they're always packed; a 10-minute uphill walk often beats the 30-minute queue.
Local Insight: For the tram 28 experience without the crowds, board at Martim Moniz at 08:00–09:00 on a weekday morning. By 10:00 the queue is 30+ minutes and the tram is sardine-packed all the way to Estrela.

Transtejo & Soflusa Ferries

Lisbon sits on the north bank of the Tagus; ferries are part of daily commuting and a cheap way to see the city from the water.

  • Cais do Sodré ↔ Cacilhas: €1,55 single — included in the €10,35 24h Carris/Metro/Transtejo pass. Every 10–20 minutes; 10-minute crossing.
  • Belém ↔ Trafaria/Porto Brandão: €1,55 single
  • Terreiro do Paço ↔ Barreiro (Soflusa): €2,80 single — gateway to Alentejo trains
  • Pay with Navegante (Zapping) or buy a single from the terminal vending machine

Cycling & Scooters

Cycling in central Lisbon is challenging because of the hills, but the riverside path between Belém and Parque das Nações is flat, scenic and well-marked.

  • GIRA (Lisbon city bikes): 130+ stations, electric assist on most bikes — register via the GIRA app. €2/day or €25/month, plus per-trip fees
  • Bolt / Lime / Bird e-scooters: Widely available — €1 unlock + ~€0,20/min. Banned on most pavements; check sober before riding home from Bairro Alto
  • Cobblestones: Brutal on small wheels — stick to asphalted bike lanes
Transport Tip: The Cacilhas ferry at sunset is the local secret to Lisbon's skyline. €1,55, 10 minutes across the Tagus, and the view of Lisbon from the south bank rivals any rooftop bar. Pair it with dinner at the seafood restaurants along Cacilhas's waterfront.
Roammate Tip
Tip: All-in-one app for shared transport

In Lisbon you can use the app umob. With this you book and pay easily for all shared transport (bikes, scooters, cars) from different providers in one handy app. Convenient, because you no longer need separate accounts.

Lisbon has excellent 4G/5G coverage across the city and on the Metro. EU roaming applies for European travellers, but visitors from outside the EU should get an eSIM for the best rates. Free WiFi is available at the airport, on Carris buses and at most cafés.

Roammate Tip
Airalo eSIM From €4,50

Best choice for most travellers. Instant activation, excellent 5G coverage in Portugal. Europe-wide plans available if you're combining Lisbon with other EU stops.

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Firsty (Free Backup) Free / Paid

Perfect safety net. Free basic data for essential apps like WhatsApp or Maps — no credit card needed.

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Holafly (Unlimited) From €19,00

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Lisbon tip: Activate your eSIM at home before departure — the Metro Red Line from the airport has full coverage, so you can pull up Google Maps the moment you land. EU travellers can use their home plan thanks to roam-like-at-home rules.

Lisbon's hilly cobbled streets and narrow tram alleys make rolling a suitcase a punishing exercise. Drop your bags first — most luggage networks cluster near the main stations (Oriente, Santa Apolónia, Rossio) and around Baixa-Chiado.

Most Locations
Bounce Luggage Storage Typically €5,00/day

Store your bags in 80+ local shops and hotels. Strong coverage in Baixa, Chiado, Alfama and around Rossio station.

$10,000 Protection Free Cancellation Vetted locations
Find Storage Near Me →
Stasher Typically €6,00/day

Premium storage network with vetted hotels and businesses. Fully insured and bookable in advance.

Fully Insured Vetted hosts
Book Storage with Stasher →

Station Lockers

Self-service lockers are available at Oriente and Santa Apolónia CP stations. Sizes range from cabin (~€4/day) to large (~€8/day).

  • Oriente: Mostly large lockers; ideal for layovers
  • Santa Apolónia: Smaller bank; arrive early in peak season
  • Rossio: No dedicated lockers — use Bounce or Stasher nearby
Roammate Advice: Book a Bounce or Stasher spot near your first or last sightseeing stop, not your hotel — that way you don't waste a metro trip just to drop bags. Most central drop-points are within a 5-minute walk of Baixa-Chiado or Rossio metro.