The Alfa Pendular covers 314 km between Lisboa and Porto in 2 hours and 39 minutes. It is the fastest scheduled service between the two cities, and for most travellers with a direct one-way trip in mind, it is the right choice.
But the route between Lisbon and Porto passes through some of the most visited cities in Portugal — Coimbra, Aveiro, Óbidos, Nazaré, Fátima. The train does not stop at any of them. It runs alongside them at 220 km/h.
This article covers all three options for the journey: train, bus, and private transfer with stops. For each, I give the current price, the realistic travel time, and the practical details that comparison sites typically skip — which station in Lisbon to use, how far in advance to book, and what the private transfer actually includes that a train ticket does not.
If you are travelling between the two cities and nothing else, the train wins on every metric. If you are travelling from Lisbon to Porto y want to see something along the way, the calculation changes. I have been running private transfers between Lisbon and Porto since 2013. Most clients who book the transfer have already considered the train — they choose the road because they want Coimbra or Aveiro in the same day.
Alfa Pendular: The Fastest Way from Lisbon to Porto
The Alfa Pendular is CP’s (Comboios de Portugal) flagship intercity train. It runs between Lisboa Oriente station and Porto Campanhã, with intermediate stops at Santarém, Coimbra-B, and Aveiro — but these are brief platform stops, not sightseeing time.
Key facts:
- Distance: 314 km
- Journey time: 2h 39min (Alfa Pendular) / 3h 04min (Intercidades)
- Price (2026, 2nd class): €35.70 Alfa Pendular / €28.05 Intercidades
- Departure station: Lisboa Oriente (not Rossio — Rossio serves Sintra only)
- Arrival station: Porto Campanhã (then 5 min by metro to city centre)
- Frequency: roughly every hour throughout the day
- Booking: cp.pt — advance booking recommended on weekends and summer
Most clients who have never been to Porto ask me which station to book from. The answer is always Oriente — it is served by Metro (Blue and Red lines), 15 minutes from Baixa-Chiado. Rossio is closer to the centre but only goes to Sintra.
The Alfa Pendular stops in Aveiro for approximately three minutes. This is enough time to read the name of the station on the platform and not enough time to see the canals, the moliceiros, or anything else Aveiro is known for. The train has made this calculation and moved on.
Bus: Rede Expressos and FlixBus
The bus is slower than the train and significantly cheaper. It is the right option for travellers with flexible schedules and tight budgets.
Sedes Expresas is the main intercity bus operator in Portugal.
- Journey time: ~3h 15min (direct, no stops).
- Price: from ~€15 one-way.
- Frequency: roughly hourly.
- Departure: Sete Rios bus terminal, Lisbon (Metro Blue line, Jardim. Zoológico station)
- Arrival: Campo 24 de Agosto, Porto (Metro D line).
- Booking: rede-expressos.pt.
FlixBus operates on the same route at lower prices.
- Price: from €8.99 (advance booking)
- Journey time: 3h 30min average
- Same terminal as Rede Expressos
Key difference from train: Bus terminals in both cities are less central than train stations. Factor in 20–30 minutes of local transit at each end when comparing total travel time.
The bus makes sense for solo travellers on multi-week trips watching their budget. For a family of four, the price difference versus the train is smaller than it looks once you add luggage and terminal transfers.
Private Transfer: Lisbon to Porto with Stops
A private driver from Lisbon to Porto is not a taxi service. It is a dedicated vehicle with an English-speaking driver-guide: the route is yours, the stops are yours, and the schedule is set at booking.
Yellow Cab TT Tours pricing (per vehicle, 2026):
- Sedan (1–3 passengers): €580.
- Van (4–6 passengers): €680.
- Optional stop (1 stop en route): +€60.
- Optional stop (2 stops en route): +€100.
- Departure: flexible — your hotel or any Lisbon address.
- Arrival: your hotel or any Porto address.
What is included: private vehicle, English-speaking driver-guide, door-to-door service, all tolls (A1 motorway tolls: ~€22.20 one way).
What is not included: entrance tickets to any sites visited at intermediate stops.
Journey time without stops: ~3h (274 km via A1 — Autoestrada do Norte, Portugal’s main north-south motorway).
Journey time with stops: typically 8–10h as a full-day transfer, depending on number of stops and time spent at each.
The clients who get the most value from this service are groups of 3–6 who were going to rent a car anyway. When you factor in the rental, fuel, tolls, parking in Porto, and navigating an unfamiliar city, the price difference narrows considerably — and you arrive having already seen Coimbra.
A private transfer from Lisbon to Porto costs more than the Alfa Pendular. It also takes longer. These are the facts, and they are not an argument against it — they are a description of a different product. The train takes you between two cities. The transfer takes you between two cities while the country passes through the window at a speed at which you can actually identify it.
What to See Along the Route
Coimbra — 2h from Lisbon
Coimbra is home to the University of Coimbra, founded in 1290 by King Dinis I — the oldest university in Portugal and one of the oldest still operating in the world. The Joanina Library (Biblioteca Joanina, completed 1728) is its most-visited building: a Baroque interior with hand-painted ceilings, approximately 60,000 volumes, and a documented colony of bats that protect the collection by eating bookworms at night. The university complex received UNESCO World Heritage status in 2013.
A stop of 2–3 hours covers the Joanina Library, the university tower (views over the Mondego river), and the lower town. Coimbra is 198 km from Lisbon.
Aveiro — 2h 45min from Lisbon (260 km)
Aveiro sits on a coastal lagoon (Ria de Aveiro) connected to the Atlantic. The city is known for its moliceiro boats — flat-bottomed painted vessels originally used to harvest seaweed (moliço) from the lagoon as agricultural fertilizer. As chemical fertilizers replaced seaweed in the 20th century, the boats transitioned to tourism. The Art Nouveau architecture along the central canal dates from the early 20th century, funded by local families who had returned wealthy from Brazil.
A stop of 1.5–2 hours covers the central canal, a moliceiro cruise (45 min), and the main market building.
Óbidos — 1h from Lisbon (80 km, short detour)
If leaving Lisbon early, Óbidos makes a natural first stop: a walled medieval town where the entire historic centre is enclosed within 13th-century walls. The town is 3 km off the A8 motorway. A 45-minute walk covers the walls, the main street (Rua Direita), and the castle — now a pousada. Óbidos is sold exclusively as a short stop, not a half-day destination.
For clients doing Lisbon → Porto in one day with two stops, the most natural combination is Coimbra + Aveiro. Óbidos + Coimbra also works if departing Lisbon at 08:00.
Aveiro is described in most guides as “the Venice of Portugal.” Venice is described in most guides as “Venice.” Aveiro has canals, painted boats, and considerably shorter queues. Whether this makes it a lesser Venice or a more practical one is a question each visitor answers independently.
Which Option Is Right for You?
| Train (Alfa Pendular) | Bus (Rede Expressos) | Private Transfer | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tiempo | 2h 39min | ~3h 15min | 3h direct / 8–10h with stops |
| Price (1 person) | €35.70 | from €15 | €580/vehicle |
| Price (4 persons) | €142.80 | from €60 | €650/vehicle |
| Intermediate stops | None | None | Coimbra, Aveiro, Óbidos, Nazaré, Fátima |
| Door-to-door | ❌ | ❌ | ✅ |
| Booking required | Yes (advance) | Sí | Sí |
| Ideal para | Solo travellers, direct city-to-city | Budget travellers | Groups 3–6, day with stops |
When to take the train: you are going directly between the two cities, have a flexible budget for speed, and have already seen — or are not interested in — the stops along the route.
When to take the bus: budget is the primary factor and time is not.
When to book a private transfer: you are travelling as a group of 3 or more, want to stop in Coimbra or Aveiro, and prefer a single vehicle from door to door rather than managing connections.
Travel from Lisbon to Porto with Yellow Cab TT Tours
The private transfer option is designed for travellers who want more than a direct connection. All vehicles depart from your Lisbon hotel and arrive at your Porto address. Intermediate stops at Coimbra, Aveiro, or Óbidos can be added at booking.
- Private Transfer Lisbon → Porto — sedan or van, from €580/vehicle.
- Tours Privados desde Lisboa — transfers to other destinations from €490/vehicle.
Preguntas frecuentes
¿Cuánto tiempo se tarda en ir de Lisboa a Oporto en tren?
¿Qué estación en Lisboa debo usar para el tren a Oporto?
¿Cuánto cuesta el tren de Lisboa a Oporto en 2026?
¿Hay un autobús directo de Lisboa a Oporto?
¿A qué distancia está Lisboa de Oporto?
Can I stop in Coimbra or Aveiro on the way to Porto?
How much does a private transfer from Lisbon to Porto cost?
Is it worth stopping in Aveiro on the way to Porto?
What is the fastest way to get from Lisbon to Porto?
Do you provide a private driver from Lisbon to Porto?
Can I book a private transfer with stops for a group?
Fundador y Director de Yellow Cab TT Tours. Guía en Portugal durante más de 20 años.
Fundó Yellow Cab TT Tours en 2013. 3.372 reseñas de cinco estrellas en Tripadvisor.