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Or you could bus to Porto and train onward, easily, from there! (Variety; about the same price; more walking around vs. sitting.)It’s a long boring bus ride on the highway and includes a stop in a highway rest stop. But it’ll get you there.
In fall of 2018 after the Camino, my daughter and I flew from Santiago to Lisbon via Madrid. Easy and not overly expensive.having trouble getting from santiago to lisbon. has anyone tried rideshare to porto?
I don't know about the Spanish system, but the Portuguese rail system (CP) has a huge range of discounts! And no Portuguese or EU citizenship required for any of them.Rail preferable for me. Prepare to be flexible with arrangements AND always ask for discounts!
That was our experience in 2019. However, in our case, the Spanish train from Santiago went to the Guixar station in Vigo, which is also where we picked up the Portuguese train for Porto, about an hour or two later. I can't explain the discrepancy. What I would suggest is: download the apps for Renfe (Spanish rail) and Comboios de Portugal (Portuguese rail) and then figure out an appropriate schedule. In our case, putting the two together (buying separate tickets) made an easy and comfortable way to get back to Porto from Santiago. And as simoneva says, easy to get to Lisbon from Porto.You can get a train all the way. One train a day to vigo then 30 minute connection time to Porto; then hourly trains to Lisbon.
It is a bit rushed as you have to walk/run 1.4km between the two stations in Vigo. The first station is huge so up 3 escalators to exit using maybe 10 minutes; and then a few of the roads on the route are closed so some panic involved. The rail company don't sell it as a connecting journey for that reason. However it is doable.
I don't remember the names of the two stations, but I think I rememberthat the big one down near the waterfront (the original) was closed down, the first time we visited Vigo (late 2010s, I think.) It was in the middle of a major rebuild, I believe. It could be that in 2019, all the trains were going through Guixar, if that's the upper one, and that now they've finished the rebuild and re-aligned the routes out of the two stations.That was our experience in 2019. However, in our case, the Spanish train from Santiago went to the Guixar station in Vigo, which is also where we picked up the Portuguese train for Porto, about an hour or two later. I can't explain the discrepancy.
I hate really tight connections. I especially didn't want to break the calm and centered feeling I had after I finished my pilgrimage, so after my Camino I took the train to Vigo, stayed overnight, took the early train to Porto, then a train to Lisbon. (lots of trains every day from Porto to Lisbon). Vigo is a pleasant town to visit. The Cathedral of Santa Maria de Vigo is worth a look. Lovely journey.You can get a train all the way. One train a day to vigo then 30 minute connection time to Porto; then hourly trains to Lisbon.
It is a bit rushed as you have to walk/run 1.4km between the two stations in Vigo. The first station is huge so up 3 escalators to exit using maybe 10 minutes; and then a few of the roads on the route are closed so some panic involved. The rail company don't sell it as a connecting journey for that reason. However it is doable.