Bus service between small towns in Spain










5















I'm planning to rent a car for a road trip in Spain for this coming August, but I could also consider just going from town to town using bus, if available.



Is it possible to get from any city to any other city in Spain by public bus? How about from small towns to larger, nearby cities? Or would a car be needed? Is there a centralized website where I can see fare and time information?










share|improve this question



















  • 1





    I think it's very difficult to answer this question in the way it's stated now. You should specify which cities and which towns.

    – Charo
    Jul 1 '16 at 20:53











  • @Charo I was hoping to get a general answer. Normally countries either have a good bus system or a bad bus system. It's kind of hard to specify cities since I'm planning to visit all over Spain.

    – zundi
    Jul 1 '16 at 21:09






  • 2





    At least southern Spain has an extensive bus network. Some major bus companies are Alsa and Damas, and you can find English schedules at their web sites when you have an itinerary.

    – Andrew Lazarus
    Jul 1 '16 at 21:33






  • 2





    @zundi: It's not that way in Spain: there are cities and towns well connected by public transportation and others that are not.

    – Charo
    Jul 1 '16 at 21:36











  • Besides buses there are trains and those have a good centralized website. Renfe, which is also available in English.

    – Willeke
    Jul 1 '16 at 22:07















5















I'm planning to rent a car for a road trip in Spain for this coming August, but I could also consider just going from town to town using bus, if available.



Is it possible to get from any city to any other city in Spain by public bus? How about from small towns to larger, nearby cities? Or would a car be needed? Is there a centralized website where I can see fare and time information?










share|improve this question



















  • 1





    I think it's very difficult to answer this question in the way it's stated now. You should specify which cities and which towns.

    – Charo
    Jul 1 '16 at 20:53











  • @Charo I was hoping to get a general answer. Normally countries either have a good bus system or a bad bus system. It's kind of hard to specify cities since I'm planning to visit all over Spain.

    – zundi
    Jul 1 '16 at 21:09






  • 2





    At least southern Spain has an extensive bus network. Some major bus companies are Alsa and Damas, and you can find English schedules at their web sites when you have an itinerary.

    – Andrew Lazarus
    Jul 1 '16 at 21:33






  • 2





    @zundi: It's not that way in Spain: there are cities and towns well connected by public transportation and others that are not.

    – Charo
    Jul 1 '16 at 21:36











  • Besides buses there are trains and those have a good centralized website. Renfe, which is also available in English.

    – Willeke
    Jul 1 '16 at 22:07













5












5








5








I'm planning to rent a car for a road trip in Spain for this coming August, but I could also consider just going from town to town using bus, if available.



Is it possible to get from any city to any other city in Spain by public bus? How about from small towns to larger, nearby cities? Or would a car be needed? Is there a centralized website where I can see fare and time information?










share|improve this question
















I'm planning to rent a car for a road trip in Spain for this coming August, but I could also consider just going from town to town using bus, if available.



Is it possible to get from any city to any other city in Spain by public bus? How about from small towns to larger, nearby cities? Or would a car be needed? Is there a centralized website where I can see fare and time information?







planning buses spain maps






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jul 6 '16 at 14:29









JoErNanO

44.2k12137225




44.2k12137225










asked Jul 1 '16 at 20:08









zundizundi

23629




23629







  • 1





    I think it's very difficult to answer this question in the way it's stated now. You should specify which cities and which towns.

    – Charo
    Jul 1 '16 at 20:53











  • @Charo I was hoping to get a general answer. Normally countries either have a good bus system or a bad bus system. It's kind of hard to specify cities since I'm planning to visit all over Spain.

    – zundi
    Jul 1 '16 at 21:09






  • 2





    At least southern Spain has an extensive bus network. Some major bus companies are Alsa and Damas, and you can find English schedules at their web sites when you have an itinerary.

    – Andrew Lazarus
    Jul 1 '16 at 21:33






  • 2





    @zundi: It's not that way in Spain: there are cities and towns well connected by public transportation and others that are not.

    – Charo
    Jul 1 '16 at 21:36











  • Besides buses there are trains and those have a good centralized website. Renfe, which is also available in English.

    – Willeke
    Jul 1 '16 at 22:07












  • 1





    I think it's very difficult to answer this question in the way it's stated now. You should specify which cities and which towns.

    – Charo
    Jul 1 '16 at 20:53











  • @Charo I was hoping to get a general answer. Normally countries either have a good bus system or a bad bus system. It's kind of hard to specify cities since I'm planning to visit all over Spain.

    – zundi
    Jul 1 '16 at 21:09






  • 2





    At least southern Spain has an extensive bus network. Some major bus companies are Alsa and Damas, and you can find English schedules at their web sites when you have an itinerary.

    – Andrew Lazarus
    Jul 1 '16 at 21:33






  • 2





    @zundi: It's not that way in Spain: there are cities and towns well connected by public transportation and others that are not.

    – Charo
    Jul 1 '16 at 21:36











  • Besides buses there are trains and those have a good centralized website. Renfe, which is also available in English.

    – Willeke
    Jul 1 '16 at 22:07







1




1





I think it's very difficult to answer this question in the way it's stated now. You should specify which cities and which towns.

– Charo
Jul 1 '16 at 20:53





I think it's very difficult to answer this question in the way it's stated now. You should specify which cities and which towns.

– Charo
Jul 1 '16 at 20:53













@Charo I was hoping to get a general answer. Normally countries either have a good bus system or a bad bus system. It's kind of hard to specify cities since I'm planning to visit all over Spain.

– zundi
Jul 1 '16 at 21:09





@Charo I was hoping to get a general answer. Normally countries either have a good bus system or a bad bus system. It's kind of hard to specify cities since I'm planning to visit all over Spain.

– zundi
Jul 1 '16 at 21:09




2




2





At least southern Spain has an extensive bus network. Some major bus companies are Alsa and Damas, and you can find English schedules at their web sites when you have an itinerary.

– Andrew Lazarus
Jul 1 '16 at 21:33





At least southern Spain has an extensive bus network. Some major bus companies are Alsa and Damas, and you can find English schedules at their web sites when you have an itinerary.

– Andrew Lazarus
Jul 1 '16 at 21:33




2




2





@zundi: It's not that way in Spain: there are cities and towns well connected by public transportation and others that are not.

– Charo
Jul 1 '16 at 21:36





@zundi: It's not that way in Spain: there are cities and towns well connected by public transportation and others that are not.

– Charo
Jul 1 '16 at 21:36













Besides buses there are trains and those have a good centralized website. Renfe, which is also available in English.

– Willeke
Jul 1 '16 at 22:07





Besides buses there are trains and those have a good centralized website. Renfe, which is also available in English.

– Willeke
Jul 1 '16 at 22:07










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















9














Spain has a very extensive intercity bus system, in fact they have one of the larger bus systems in Europe. You'll likely find it easy to travel without a car.



That said, it depends where you go. There are very different levels of service across regions and specific cities. If you're close to a beach or a city you'll likely find plenty of bus connections, but if you're in a more rural inland area the options can be limited, to a single bus a day, and some places just aren't covered by the bus network.



Spain regulates their domestic bus system meaning, with a few exceptions, only one operator is allowed to serve any given city pair. This makes longer journeys more complicated, because the point where you need to make an interconnection between two lines of different companies is often unclear. The regulatory system differentiates between longer routes, connecting various autonomous communities and shorter routes, within a single autonomous community. Each route is given out from the government to private bus companies as a contract for a certain number of years, prices and level of service are part of the agreement, the great thing about that is that the network doesn't change often and service is very reliable.



In contrast, on international routes to and from Spain you'll find competing operators who change their schedules quite frequently, but competition means they often have more aggressive pricing and better amenities.



At Busbud, we're building a centralized booking system for buses in Spain. The routes, schedules and tickets for the largest bus companies (ALSA, Avanza, and many others) are up on our site and apps already, and we're adding new companies every week at this point. We've identified over 200 companies that operate regular routes, we're working hard to get those all viewable at once.






share|improve this answer

























  • I find the bragging about BusBud's coverage hard to believe, since it has NEVER told me anything but Alsa on routes where I have used other companies. I'll give it another chance. Also, on every route I've been (in my ten-plus months in Spain) there has been more than one company.

    – WGroleau
    Oct 22 '17 at 14:21











  • Rome2Rio also never says anything but Alsa on the places I've been.

    – WGroleau
    Oct 22 '17 at 14:22











  • @WGroleau thanks for considering us. I'd be really curious about any example routes you could share where you found coverage not on Busbud. We cover nearly all buses in Spain these days.

    – Carl from Busbud
    Oct 23 '17 at 4:00



















1














Buses between cities are easy and generally cheap to do, and there are many buses adapting basically any timeshift you want... however, excepting a few major cities, public transport for moving within the cities (specially if you go to the suburbs or surrounding towns) is generally an issue: taxi cabs are typically very expensive on those cities (it's cheaper on big cities with nicer public transport -metro, bus, tram-, but on those with rather bad public transport, they have pretty high fares), and buses can be very delayed and kind of expensive for isolated tickets.



If you go to rural areas, forget public transport: it might range from bad to unexistant (and that's why basically every family in Spain except on those big cities I mentioned has at least one or two cars).



There's no good answer for your question unless you are more specific: Spain is pretty big and there are many differences between visiting cities like Seville, Valencia, Madrid or Barcelona, or visiting more rural areas or smaller region capitals.






share|improve this answer






















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    2 Answers
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    active

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    2 Answers
    2






    active

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    active

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    votes






    active

    oldest

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    9














    Spain has a very extensive intercity bus system, in fact they have one of the larger bus systems in Europe. You'll likely find it easy to travel without a car.



    That said, it depends where you go. There are very different levels of service across regions and specific cities. If you're close to a beach or a city you'll likely find plenty of bus connections, but if you're in a more rural inland area the options can be limited, to a single bus a day, and some places just aren't covered by the bus network.



    Spain regulates their domestic bus system meaning, with a few exceptions, only one operator is allowed to serve any given city pair. This makes longer journeys more complicated, because the point where you need to make an interconnection between two lines of different companies is often unclear. The regulatory system differentiates between longer routes, connecting various autonomous communities and shorter routes, within a single autonomous community. Each route is given out from the government to private bus companies as a contract for a certain number of years, prices and level of service are part of the agreement, the great thing about that is that the network doesn't change often and service is very reliable.



    In contrast, on international routes to and from Spain you'll find competing operators who change their schedules quite frequently, but competition means they often have more aggressive pricing and better amenities.



    At Busbud, we're building a centralized booking system for buses in Spain. The routes, schedules and tickets for the largest bus companies (ALSA, Avanza, and many others) are up on our site and apps already, and we're adding new companies every week at this point. We've identified over 200 companies that operate regular routes, we're working hard to get those all viewable at once.






    share|improve this answer

























    • I find the bragging about BusBud's coverage hard to believe, since it has NEVER told me anything but Alsa on routes where I have used other companies. I'll give it another chance. Also, on every route I've been (in my ten-plus months in Spain) there has been more than one company.

      – WGroleau
      Oct 22 '17 at 14:21











    • Rome2Rio also never says anything but Alsa on the places I've been.

      – WGroleau
      Oct 22 '17 at 14:22











    • @WGroleau thanks for considering us. I'd be really curious about any example routes you could share where you found coverage not on Busbud. We cover nearly all buses in Spain these days.

      – Carl from Busbud
      Oct 23 '17 at 4:00
















    9














    Spain has a very extensive intercity bus system, in fact they have one of the larger bus systems in Europe. You'll likely find it easy to travel without a car.



    That said, it depends where you go. There are very different levels of service across regions and specific cities. If you're close to a beach or a city you'll likely find plenty of bus connections, but if you're in a more rural inland area the options can be limited, to a single bus a day, and some places just aren't covered by the bus network.



    Spain regulates their domestic bus system meaning, with a few exceptions, only one operator is allowed to serve any given city pair. This makes longer journeys more complicated, because the point where you need to make an interconnection between two lines of different companies is often unclear. The regulatory system differentiates between longer routes, connecting various autonomous communities and shorter routes, within a single autonomous community. Each route is given out from the government to private bus companies as a contract for a certain number of years, prices and level of service are part of the agreement, the great thing about that is that the network doesn't change often and service is very reliable.



    In contrast, on international routes to and from Spain you'll find competing operators who change their schedules quite frequently, but competition means they often have more aggressive pricing and better amenities.



    At Busbud, we're building a centralized booking system for buses in Spain. The routes, schedules and tickets for the largest bus companies (ALSA, Avanza, and many others) are up on our site and apps already, and we're adding new companies every week at this point. We've identified over 200 companies that operate regular routes, we're working hard to get those all viewable at once.






    share|improve this answer

























    • I find the bragging about BusBud's coverage hard to believe, since it has NEVER told me anything but Alsa on routes where I have used other companies. I'll give it another chance. Also, on every route I've been (in my ten-plus months in Spain) there has been more than one company.

      – WGroleau
      Oct 22 '17 at 14:21











    • Rome2Rio also never says anything but Alsa on the places I've been.

      – WGroleau
      Oct 22 '17 at 14:22











    • @WGroleau thanks for considering us. I'd be really curious about any example routes you could share where you found coverage not on Busbud. We cover nearly all buses in Spain these days.

      – Carl from Busbud
      Oct 23 '17 at 4:00














    9












    9








    9







    Spain has a very extensive intercity bus system, in fact they have one of the larger bus systems in Europe. You'll likely find it easy to travel without a car.



    That said, it depends where you go. There are very different levels of service across regions and specific cities. If you're close to a beach or a city you'll likely find plenty of bus connections, but if you're in a more rural inland area the options can be limited, to a single bus a day, and some places just aren't covered by the bus network.



    Spain regulates their domestic bus system meaning, with a few exceptions, only one operator is allowed to serve any given city pair. This makes longer journeys more complicated, because the point where you need to make an interconnection between two lines of different companies is often unclear. The regulatory system differentiates between longer routes, connecting various autonomous communities and shorter routes, within a single autonomous community. Each route is given out from the government to private bus companies as a contract for a certain number of years, prices and level of service are part of the agreement, the great thing about that is that the network doesn't change often and service is very reliable.



    In contrast, on international routes to and from Spain you'll find competing operators who change their schedules quite frequently, but competition means they often have more aggressive pricing and better amenities.



    At Busbud, we're building a centralized booking system for buses in Spain. The routes, schedules and tickets for the largest bus companies (ALSA, Avanza, and many others) are up on our site and apps already, and we're adding new companies every week at this point. We've identified over 200 companies that operate regular routes, we're working hard to get those all viewable at once.






    share|improve this answer















    Spain has a very extensive intercity bus system, in fact they have one of the larger bus systems in Europe. You'll likely find it easy to travel without a car.



    That said, it depends where you go. There are very different levels of service across regions and specific cities. If you're close to a beach or a city you'll likely find plenty of bus connections, but if you're in a more rural inland area the options can be limited, to a single bus a day, and some places just aren't covered by the bus network.



    Spain regulates their domestic bus system meaning, with a few exceptions, only one operator is allowed to serve any given city pair. This makes longer journeys more complicated, because the point where you need to make an interconnection between two lines of different companies is often unclear. The regulatory system differentiates between longer routes, connecting various autonomous communities and shorter routes, within a single autonomous community. Each route is given out from the government to private bus companies as a contract for a certain number of years, prices and level of service are part of the agreement, the great thing about that is that the network doesn't change often and service is very reliable.



    In contrast, on international routes to and from Spain you'll find competing operators who change their schedules quite frequently, but competition means they often have more aggressive pricing and better amenities.



    At Busbud, we're building a centralized booking system for buses in Spain. The routes, schedules and tickets for the largest bus companies (ALSA, Avanza, and many others) are up on our site and apps already, and we're adding new companies every week at this point. We've identified over 200 companies that operate regular routes, we're working hard to get those all viewable at once.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Jul 7 '16 at 15:58

























    answered Jul 6 '16 at 12:56









    Carl from BusbudCarl from Busbud

    8,87832558




    8,87832558












    • I find the bragging about BusBud's coverage hard to believe, since it has NEVER told me anything but Alsa on routes where I have used other companies. I'll give it another chance. Also, on every route I've been (in my ten-plus months in Spain) there has been more than one company.

      – WGroleau
      Oct 22 '17 at 14:21











    • Rome2Rio also never says anything but Alsa on the places I've been.

      – WGroleau
      Oct 22 '17 at 14:22











    • @WGroleau thanks for considering us. I'd be really curious about any example routes you could share where you found coverage not on Busbud. We cover nearly all buses in Spain these days.

      – Carl from Busbud
      Oct 23 '17 at 4:00


















    • I find the bragging about BusBud's coverage hard to believe, since it has NEVER told me anything but Alsa on routes where I have used other companies. I'll give it another chance. Also, on every route I've been (in my ten-plus months in Spain) there has been more than one company.

      – WGroleau
      Oct 22 '17 at 14:21











    • Rome2Rio also never says anything but Alsa on the places I've been.

      – WGroleau
      Oct 22 '17 at 14:22











    • @WGroleau thanks for considering us. I'd be really curious about any example routes you could share where you found coverage not on Busbud. We cover nearly all buses in Spain these days.

      – Carl from Busbud
      Oct 23 '17 at 4:00

















    I find the bragging about BusBud's coverage hard to believe, since it has NEVER told me anything but Alsa on routes where I have used other companies. I'll give it another chance. Also, on every route I've been (in my ten-plus months in Spain) there has been more than one company.

    – WGroleau
    Oct 22 '17 at 14:21





    I find the bragging about BusBud's coverage hard to believe, since it has NEVER told me anything but Alsa on routes where I have used other companies. I'll give it another chance. Also, on every route I've been (in my ten-plus months in Spain) there has been more than one company.

    – WGroleau
    Oct 22 '17 at 14:21













    Rome2Rio also never says anything but Alsa on the places I've been.

    – WGroleau
    Oct 22 '17 at 14:22





    Rome2Rio also never says anything but Alsa on the places I've been.

    – WGroleau
    Oct 22 '17 at 14:22













    @WGroleau thanks for considering us. I'd be really curious about any example routes you could share where you found coverage not on Busbud. We cover nearly all buses in Spain these days.

    – Carl from Busbud
    Oct 23 '17 at 4:00






    @WGroleau thanks for considering us. I'd be really curious about any example routes you could share where you found coverage not on Busbud. We cover nearly all buses in Spain these days.

    – Carl from Busbud
    Oct 23 '17 at 4:00














    1














    Buses between cities are easy and generally cheap to do, and there are many buses adapting basically any timeshift you want... however, excepting a few major cities, public transport for moving within the cities (specially if you go to the suburbs or surrounding towns) is generally an issue: taxi cabs are typically very expensive on those cities (it's cheaper on big cities with nicer public transport -metro, bus, tram-, but on those with rather bad public transport, they have pretty high fares), and buses can be very delayed and kind of expensive for isolated tickets.



    If you go to rural areas, forget public transport: it might range from bad to unexistant (and that's why basically every family in Spain except on those big cities I mentioned has at least one or two cars).



    There's no good answer for your question unless you are more specific: Spain is pretty big and there are many differences between visiting cities like Seville, Valencia, Madrid or Barcelona, or visiting more rural areas or smaller region capitals.






    share|improve this answer



























      1














      Buses between cities are easy and generally cheap to do, and there are many buses adapting basically any timeshift you want... however, excepting a few major cities, public transport for moving within the cities (specially if you go to the suburbs or surrounding towns) is generally an issue: taxi cabs are typically very expensive on those cities (it's cheaper on big cities with nicer public transport -metro, bus, tram-, but on those with rather bad public transport, they have pretty high fares), and buses can be very delayed and kind of expensive for isolated tickets.



      If you go to rural areas, forget public transport: it might range from bad to unexistant (and that's why basically every family in Spain except on those big cities I mentioned has at least one or two cars).



      There's no good answer for your question unless you are more specific: Spain is pretty big and there are many differences between visiting cities like Seville, Valencia, Madrid or Barcelona, or visiting more rural areas or smaller region capitals.






      share|improve this answer

























        1












        1








        1







        Buses between cities are easy and generally cheap to do, and there are many buses adapting basically any timeshift you want... however, excepting a few major cities, public transport for moving within the cities (specially if you go to the suburbs or surrounding towns) is generally an issue: taxi cabs are typically very expensive on those cities (it's cheaper on big cities with nicer public transport -metro, bus, tram-, but on those with rather bad public transport, they have pretty high fares), and buses can be very delayed and kind of expensive for isolated tickets.



        If you go to rural areas, forget public transport: it might range from bad to unexistant (and that's why basically every family in Spain except on those big cities I mentioned has at least one or two cars).



        There's no good answer for your question unless you are more specific: Spain is pretty big and there are many differences between visiting cities like Seville, Valencia, Madrid or Barcelona, or visiting more rural areas or smaller region capitals.






        share|improve this answer













        Buses between cities are easy and generally cheap to do, and there are many buses adapting basically any timeshift you want... however, excepting a few major cities, public transport for moving within the cities (specially if you go to the suburbs or surrounding towns) is generally an issue: taxi cabs are typically very expensive on those cities (it's cheaper on big cities with nicer public transport -metro, bus, tram-, but on those with rather bad public transport, they have pretty high fares), and buses can be very delayed and kind of expensive for isolated tickets.



        If you go to rural areas, forget public transport: it might range from bad to unexistant (and that's why basically every family in Spain except on those big cities I mentioned has at least one or two cars).



        There's no good answer for your question unless you are more specific: Spain is pretty big and there are many differences between visiting cities like Seville, Valencia, Madrid or Barcelona, or visiting more rural areas or smaller region capitals.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Jul 18 '16 at 20:37









        JclJcl

        24115




        24115



























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