Lisbon has become one of Europe's most popular group destinations over the past decade, driven by its relatively affordable hotels, excellent food, compact historic centre, and year-round mild climate. For coaches, the city presents a manageable challenge: the standard tourist circuit between the airport, the waterfront Belem district, and Sintra is well-suited to full-size coaches, while the historic hilltop neighbourhoods of Alfama and Mouraria require groups to walk the final stretch. This guide covers the logistics.
Humberto Delgado Airport (LIS) is 7 km north of the city centre, an unusually short distance by European airport standards. Journey time in light traffic: 15 to 25 minutes via the 2nd Circular road (Segunda Circular). In rush hour (7:30am to 9:30am and 5:30pm to 8pm), allow 40 to 50 minutes. The airport coach and bus collection zone is on the ground level outside the international arrivals exit of Terminal 1.
See our Portugal bus hire page for operators covering LIS airport transfers.
Lisbon is built across seven hills (or more, depending on who you ask). The main arterial roads and the waterfront Avenida 24 de Julho and Avenida de Brasilia are fully accessible to full-size coaches. The steep, narrow streets of Alfama, Mouraria, and Bairro Alto are not. Groups visiting these neighbourhoods are dropped at the base — typically at Praca do Comercio for the Alfama approach, or Largo de Camoes for Bairro Alto — and walk or use the city's historic funicular trams (elevadores).
A midi-coach handles more of Lisbon's street network than a full-size coach and is worth considering if your itinerary involves multiple stops in different neighbourhoods.
Belem (Tower and Jeronimos Monastery): Drop on Avenida de Brasilia, the waterfront road. The Belem Tower, Jeronimos Monastery, and Monument to the Discoveries are all within 800 metres of each other along this road. Coach parking on Avenida de Brasilia and the adjacent Calcada da Ajuda approach.
Praca do Comercio (Commerce Square): Large open square on the waterfront, fully accessible to coaches. Good central drop point for the Baixa district and the Alfama approach.
Alfama and Castelo de Sao Jorge: Drop at Praca do Comercio or Martim Moniz. The castle is uphill from both points. Groups walk or take the 28 tram (expect queues in summer).
Parque das Nacoes (Expo district): Modern district built for Expo 98, with wide roads, easy coach access, and the Oceanarium. Coach parking in the dedicated areas off Avenida Dom Joao II.
| Destination | Distance | Drive time | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sintra | 28 km | 35-45 min | Coach park at Pena Palace; shuttle to palace entrance |
| Cascais | 30 km | 35 min | Coastal town; good coach access along the EN6 |
| Obidos | 85 km | 1 hr | Medieval walled town; coaches park outside the walls |
| Evora | 135 km | 1.5 hr | Roman temple, cathedral; UNESCO World Heritage city |
| Porto | 310 km | 3 hr | Full day or overnight; port wine lodges, Ribeira |
For group transport across Portugal, see our Portugal coach hire page.
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