• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
MytanFeet

MytanFeet

Costa Rica Travel Information

  • Home
  • Start Here
  • About
  • Blog
  • Booking Services
  • Deals
  • Contact
    • Work with us

How to Get Around Costa Rica: Different Ways, Costs and Efficiency

July 2, 2025 By Sammi 73 Comments

Getting around Costa Rica is a big concern for travelers especially for those who are here for a short period of time and on a budget.

In this article I’m going to outline the different ways and their cost and efficiency to help you figure out how to get around Costa Rica for your vacation.

This post has affiliate links which we may earn a small commission from if you choose to purchase, at no extra cost to you. Listed prices are quoted in USD and are estimates. More info: Disclosure

How to Get Around Costa Rica: Driving, the Most Flexible Way

Driving is the best way to get around Costa Rica to explore the country. It gives you the flexibility and freedom that you can’t get with any other method of transportation.

Leave when you want, go where you want. Simply stated, having a car is the best way to explore Costa Rica.

How to get around Costa Rica - driving
Monteverde roads

There are tradeoffs to driving however.

You have the extra responsibility of driving and car rentals are not very cheap in Costa Rica.

If you want to rent a car in Costa Rica, check out our Costa Rica car rental discount to save money on your car rental and get our extra benefits.

For more details, check out our tips for renting a car in Costa Rica post and our tips for driving in Costa Rica post. Learn about the costs of rental cars, insurance, type of cars and much more.

Three important things if you are renting a car and driving in Costa Rica

First, check your destinations to see if you require a 4wd/high clearance car or if a 2wd car is fine. The price of renting a sedan or 2wd SUV vs a 4×4 can be fairly drastic.

The second is to reserve your car rental well in advance if you are visiting during high season, Christmas, New Years or Easter week. This is due to extremely limited availability and high demand.

Thirdly, research what exactly is included in the rate. Some companies do not include all taxes, fees and insurances until you actually pick up the car.

This is why you will read some online reviews that a company is a “scam.”

The local car rental agency we work with utilizes all-inclusive upfront pricing so you know EXACTLY how much you are paying and what you are paying for. No tricks!

Shared and Private Transportation in Costa Rica: Shuttles

Taking a shuttle is an excellent Costa Rica transportation method for those who don’t want to drive.

It’s faster than taking the bus, they offer door to door hotel service and you don’t have to stress out about driving in a foreign country.

There are two different types of shuttle services in Costa Rica: private and shared.

You can read our detailed Costa Rica shuttles post for more information.

Shared Shuttles

Shared shuttles usually carry up to 10-15 passengers. They have set schedules, usually 1-2 per route. One in the morning, one in the afternoon.

Shared shuttles require a minimum number of passengers, usually 2 people. This is extremely important to check if you are a solo traveler visiting during low season.

Shared shuttles offer door to door hotel service only. No Airbnbs, no airports, vacation rentals or normal houses.

Hotels outside their routes aren’t included, so they’ll drop you off at the nearest destination and then you will need to figure out how to get to your place of accommodation.

Prices range from $59-78 USD per adult depending on the route.

For shared shuttles, get 10% off your Interbus shared shuttle here!

Private Shuttles

Private shuttles can pick you up directly at the airport and they can pick up and drop off at vacation rentals. Only your group will be in the shuttle.

They include one stop along the way for bathroom, supermarket, bank, view points or food. Then if you want to stop somewhere for a longer visit, this is available for an extra fee.

Read our tips for taking shuttles in Costa Rica and contact us for a private shuttle quote.

Tour Interconnections

Want to know how to make a boring transfer more fun? Take a tour and book an interconnection!

Here’s how it works.

You will book a tour like normal. Everything is exactly the same except your pick up and drop off locations.

So you get to skip sitting on a bus or shuttle all day and instead, you get to go on a fun adventure.

For example, the Pacuare River 1 day rafting tour offers an interconnection. The tour operator will pick up and drop off from San Jose, La Fortuna or Puerto Viejo.

How to get around Costa Rica - white water rafting
How to get around Costa Rica – Interconnection tour like the Rio Pacuare white water rafting

So if you aren’t renting a car, this is a great way to get around. If you are landing in San Jose and your next destination is Puerto Viejo, you can do the rafting as a way to get to Puerto Viejo.

Or if you’re in Puerto Viejo and are going to La Fortuna next, you can do this rafting trip for your interconnection. Sooo much better than taking a 6 hour bus ride!

Want to do this 1 day tour and book the interconnection? Get $5 USD off with our Pacuare white water rafting discount.

Related: Read our 13 day Costa Rica itinerary (no car required) that includes the Pacuare white water rafting tour interconnection

Flying around Costa Rica with Local Airlines

Taking a domestic flight is the quickest way to get around Costa Rica. What would take you 4-5 hours driving will take 30 minutes flying!

There are two domestic airlines in Costa Rica: Sansa Air and Green Airways.

Sansa Air has the most flights from San Jose International Airport and Guanacaste Airport to places like La Fortuna, Nosara, Quepos, Tortuguero, Golfito, Cobano, Puerto Jimenez, Drake Bay and Tamarindo.

How to get around Costa Rica - flying local airlines
Flying over the South Pacific coast from Drake Bay to Quepos

It is much more expensive to fly around Costa Rica and the high tourism season has more expensive rates.

Flights can range anywhere from $50 USD to $190 USD one way per person.

Furthermore, there are limited schedules. There may only be 1-2 flights for your route, no flights for your routes or just 1 in high season.

Likewise, for many routes, you will have to fly back to San Jose and then catch a second flight to your final destination as San Jose has the most departure flights.

For flying, it really comes down to time vs money. You spend more by flying but you save an incredible amount of time and erase the stresses of driving. What’s even better is that you get amazing views from the plane!

Planning tip: A lot of people will fly to their destinations and then rent a car for the days they are there. However, you will need to pick destinations that have a local airstrip.

Costa Rica Public Transportation

Taking the public bus is the cheapest way to get around Costa Rica.

Costa Rica public transportation is actually very good if you’re going to popular tourist destinations and major areas. It’s a great way to save money on your trip to Costa Rica!

From San Jose, there are direct routes to nearly every main tourist destination and main local town.

You can read our article on taking the bus in Costa Rica for more information.

How to get around Costa Rica - public transportation.
The public bus from Bagaces to Upala

The downside is that the bus takes much longer, especially if you don’t take the “direct” route. We once took the Tamarindo – San Jose bus via Liberia non-direct and it took us 8 hours without traffic since it made a million stops.

Another downside is you cannot stop when you need to as they have limited bathroom breaks.

Additionally, it can be difficult to get around for many routes.

An example is Tamarindo to La Fortuna. This route requires 3 buses and takes around 7 hours (driving is around 4). La Fortuna to Manuel Antonio requires 4 buses, around 9 hours (driving is around 5).

With limited schedules, you can’t miss your bus. If you miss your cross country bus, there is a huge likelihood that the next one is not until the next day.

When You Shouldn’t Take the Public Bus

We don’t recommend taking the bus if you’re with a large family of young kids/babies/seniors with mobility issues, going to more remote/rural destinations or here for a short trip.

But if you have the time, are keen on a bit of adventure or are on a budget, the public bus is an excellent option for major destinations.

Always be alert, ask the locals if you’re not sure where to go and always keep your belongings with you at all times.

Taxis

Taxis are good for short trips like from the supermarket to the hotel, especially if it’s raining, it’s late out or you’re carrying a lot of stuff. However, it’s best to book a shuttle for long trips instead of taxis.

Read more tips for taking taxis in Costa Rica.

Uber

Uber works in Costa Rica in almost all the tourist destinations.

You can find Uber in the cities like San Jose, Heredia, Alajuela and Cartago. There are now some in major touristic places such as Jaco, Quepos, La Fortuna, Tamarindo and Liberia.

Uber is generally cheaper than taxis. However, we don’t recommend relying on only Uber to get around.

Even for short rides, it may take awhile to call an Uber or the app may accept rides when there aren’t any Ubers around.

Although there are a lot of Ubers in San Jose and around San Jose International Airport, you can’t really call an Uber from Guanacaste Airport.

The police are always looking for Ubers and will gladly stop and ticket the driver if they think they are an Uber.

Didi, another ride share app is in San Jose. Lyft is not in Costa Rica.

Read our tips to using Uber in Costa Rica.

Ferry or Boat Rides

There are a few ferry routes you can take in Costa Rica.

If you’re planning on going to Montezuma or Santa Teresa from San Jose or Puntarenas, the ferry is a fun option.

The ferry takes cars so you can drive from the airport, take the ferry across the Gulf of Nicoya and then drive to your final destination.

Check out our tips for taking the Puntarenas Paquera ferry.

These boat rides are for foot passengers only: taxi-boat-taxi from Arenal to Monteverde across Lake Arenal, a boat from Sierpe to Drake Bay, Jaco to Montezuma boat, boat from La Pavona and Moin to Tortuguero and Golfito to Puerto Jimenez.

Which Costa Rica Transportation Method is Right For You?

To help answer your question of “How to get around Costa Rica?” you will need to figure out what your priorities are and what you’re willing to spend in terms of both aspects.

Costa Rica transportation methods summary

  • Most comfort and flexibility: renting a car.
  • On a budget: the bus.
  • In between car and bus: shared shuttles.
  • For big groups: private shuttles or renting a car.
  • With kids: private shuttles or renting a car.
  • No tight budget & short trip to main tourist destinations: flying.
  • Solo travelers: shared shuttles or bus. Rent a car if not on a budget.

Many people combine transportation methods, you do not have to pick just one. Many people will fly or book a private shuttle to avoid driving the long routes.

Here are some examples.

San Jose – Puerto Viejo

This drive can take around 5-6 hours so instead of driving, people will take a private shuttle or the rafting tour from San Jose to Puerto Viejo.

Then rent a car for their days in Puerto Viejo. Or they fly to Limon Airport and then grab their rental car or book a shuttle to Puerto Viejo or Cahuita.

Drake Bay

A lot of people will rent a car for their whole itinerary but leave Drake Bay as their last destination.

They return the car in Sierpe, take the boat to Drake Bay and then fly to San Jose for their departure flight home.

Check out our Costa Rica 1 month itinerary that includes Drake Bay!

Learn more about driving to Drake Bay and how to get to Drake Bay.

Quepos – San Jose

Many people fly or take a shuttle/bus to Quepos, rent a car while they’re in Quepos/Manuel Antonio and then fly to San Jose for their departure flight out.

Destinations

If you’re going to major touristic destinations in Costa Rica like La Fortuna, Tamarindo, Puerto Viejo, San Jose, Manuel Antonio, Puerto Jimenez, Samara, Tambor, Santa Teresa, Montezuma, Jaco, and Monteverde, you can get there via car, bus and shuttle.

For Tortuguero, it is boat or plane access only. You can fly directly there or take the boat from La Pavona or Moin dock to Tortuguero. You can read about how to get to Tortuguero here.

If you are going to non-touristy places like Atenas, Grecia, San Ramon, Boca Tapada, San Isidro de Perez Zeledon, San Vito, San Gerardo de Dota, Santa Cruz, La Cruz, Nicoya or any remote beach, then a car would be the best way.

You can also get there via bus but then it will very difficult to get around once you are there.

How to Get Around Articles

We wrote articles on how to get to certain destinations which you can read below.

How to get to Playas del Coco/Gulf of Papagayo

How to get to Tamarindo from Liberia Airport

How to get to Puerto Jimenez

How to get to Manuel Antonio

How to get to La Fortuna

How to get to Drake Bay

How to get to Rio Celeste

More Costa Rica travel tips below!

Costa Rica apps

Costa Rica maps

Tipping in Costa Rica

Liberia Airport car rentals

Costa Rica Vacation Checklist

  • First time to Costa Rica? Read our First Time in Costa Rica guide.
  • Click the link to get our detailed Costa Rica Packing List so you know what essential items to bring.
  • Check our Costa Rica destinations map and Costa Rica restaurant map
  • Do not forget to purchase Travel Insurance for your trip to Costa Rica.
  • Stay connected by purchasing a prepaid SIM Card in Costa Rica.
  • Save money with Mytanfeet Deals for tours and hotels and our Costa Rica Car Rental Discount.

Join our mailing list and get our free Costa Rica eBook!

Filed Under: Costa Rica Travel Tips

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Rob@Kenyamigration says

    May 11, 2017

    You have a great guide here for Costa Rica especially on how to get around the country. I must say I would really like a bus ride in that double Decker bus. it looks awesome.

    Reply
    • Sammi says

      May 12, 2017

      Thanks Rob

      Reply
  2. Soňa says

    May 3, 2017

    Hello,

    Firstly, I really appreciate your all helpful information indicated on your blog, thank you very much for that.

    I am going to visit Costa Rica as a solo traveller in May and I will be accomodated in Playa del Coco (M&M Hotel) and due to saving my costs, I would like to visit close beaches (Tamarindo, Flamingo) by public buses from Playa del Coco. I can´t speak Spanish at all yet, but I hope I will learn some basis.
    Having said that, could you please advise if it is easy to travel by bus to those beaches and can I find a bus stop at Playa del Coco easy? I have already receive a recommendation for the following bus schedules.

    Thank you very much in advance and have a nice day. Soňa

    Reply
    • Sammi says

      May 5, 2017

      There is a bus station in Coco which is for the longer routes, and there is a bus stop by Tico’s bakery which goes to Liberia. To get to Tamarindo, the easiest (but longer) way is to take the bus to Liberia than Liberia to Tamarindo. There is also another way which requires getting off at Sardinal, and then catching the next bus to Tamarindo from there but you will need to know where to get off at Sardinal so it may be a little bit more complicated for travelers.

      Reply
  3. Sammi says

    February 22, 2017

    The app uses information from the official Costa Rica bus schedule from the transportation ministry but always arrive at least 20 minutes early because buses are not known for being very punctual for the more non-common routes. You can download the schedule in this post: Public transportation in Costa Rica

    Reply
  4. Alyssa says

    February 22, 2017

    Awesome blog and posts! Im headed to Costa tonight, and flying into Liberia. I’m planning on taking the public bus to playa Samara via nicoya and have had a heck of a time locating consistent bus info. I did download the app you reccomended however the info on the app conflicts with other info. Anyfurther suggestions? Essentially trying to confirm it is a daily* and frequent* service. Thanks!

    Reply
  5. Sammi says

    February 19, 2017

    I’d recommend flying to Drake Bay, the bus is not easy to take since there is no straight bus to Drake, you need to get off at a point on the route to Puerto Jimenez and wait for a colectivo – which doesn’t always come at the right time and there is only 1 so if you miss it, your travel plans will get messed up, not to mention you’ll be stuck and need to find a way back to Puerto Jimenez. Flying is more secure and efficient, though expensive but it’ll be worth saving 10 hours on the bus. Then you can pick up your car in San Jose and drive to Fortuna.

    Another option is to take the bus from San Jose to Palmar Norte, then to Sierpe and take the from Sierpe to Drake. We wrote a post about it here: Boat Sierpe to Drake Bay

    Reply
  6. kristen says

    February 19, 2017

    Hi!

    Love your helpful posts! My boyfriend and I will be traveling to Costa Rica the middle of April and I’m curious if you have any advice on our below travel itinerary. We’re still trying to figure out transportation which is proving to be rather challenging.

    April 13 — Land in San Jose at night, spend the night
    April 14 — Travel to Drake Bay
    April 15-18 — Explore Corcovado and surrounding areas
    April 18 — Travel back to San Jose and then La Fortuna
    April 19-21 — Explore La Fortuna and Arenal
    April 21 — Travel to Santa Teresa and Mal Pais
    April 21-April 28 — Spend time working from Santa Teresa/Mal Pais
    April 28 — Travel back to San Jose
    April 29 — Fly home

    We planned on renting a car the entire time as I’ve driven in Costa Rica before and found it incredibly beautiful, however, we’re not sure whether it makes sense to drive to Drake Bay from San Jose and then all the way to La Fortuna. Would you recommend flying or taking the bus from San Jose to Drake Bay and back, then picking up our rental car to drive to La Fortuna? We’d like to be efficient with our travels but are also quite budget conscious.

    Thank you in advance!

    Reply
  7. Sammi says

    February 6, 2017

    Hi Jolyn, you can do either. If you don’t want to drive or worry about getting lost, book a shuttle. If you don’t mind driving and would like to have the car to explore and have more flexibility, book a car. The driving times between those destinations are pretty long, San Jose to Fortuna is about 3.5 hours, Fortuna to Manuel Antonio is like 5-6 so it’s going to be long travel days. If you don’t want to drive that long of a distance, shuttles are the way to go. We do offer a car rental discount you can check out here: Costa Rica car rental discount.

    Reply
  8. Jolynn says

    February 4, 2017

    Your site is so helpful. Thank you. There will be 8 of us traveling ranging in age from 11 to 60. We will be there in late July and plan to fly into San Jose. Then spend 3 days in La Fortunate and 3 days near Manuel Antonio. Would we be better with a shuttle or car?

    Reply
  9. Khim says

    February 3, 2017

    What are the options from La Fortuna to Golfito? Direct shuttle would be awesome 🙂

    Reply
    • yeison says

      February 4, 2017

      Hello Khim,

      I don’t know if any company that goes from La Fortuna to Golfito that is a long drive. Maybe once you are in La Fortuna you can ask to some local companies butI really doubt it that there is a share shuttle from La Fortuna to Golfito. Maybe you can find something from La Fortuna to Quepos and then take the bus that goes down from Quepos (close to Manuel Antonio) to Golfito, I think that will work better.

      Reply
  10. Josh says

    February 2, 2017

    I’d like to get from Liberia to Drake Bay by public bus, I know there would be a bus change in Puntarenas but which bus would head south from there?

    Reply
    • Sammi says

      February 2, 2017

      From Puntarenas, you can probably grab a bus to Quepos, Quepos to Dominical, then Dominical to Puerto Jimenez where you need to get off at the La Palma (Osa) stop to grab the collective bus to Drake at 4:45 PM. I recommend breaking up the bus ride because there’s no way you can get to La Palma by 4:45 PM (and I have heard that that collective bus isn’t very punctual and sometimes comes, sometimes doesn’t).

      Reply
« Older Comments
Newer Comments »

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

About Mytanfeet

Hi! We are Yeison and Samantha

Mytanfeet is the leading Costa Rica travel information website with detailed guides, local recommendations, photos, videos and maps.

Our Costa Rica City Guides

Tamarindo Costa Rica Travel Guide


Costa Rica Destinations Map

Special rent a car rates for Mytanfeet readers

Check Rates or Reserve


Get Exclusive Costa Rica Travel Tips and our Free Travel Guide Straight to You!

Yes, send me the tips

Footer

About

Who are we ?
Contact us
Our Instagram
Copyright & Disclaimer

Travel

Start here
Destination Map
Join our YouTube Channel

Exclusive deals

Car rental discount and freebies
7% off Arenal tours
White water Rafting special
See all our exclusive deals

Mytanfeet LLC Copyright© 2013 - 2025 - Thank you for supporting our Travel Blog!

Manage Cookie Consent
To provide the best experiences, we use technologies like cookies to store and/or access device information. Consenting to these technologies will allow us to process data such as browsing behavior or unique IDs on this site. Not consenting or withdrawing consent, may adversely affect certain features and functions.
Functional Always active
The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
Preferences
The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
Statistics
The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes. The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
Marketing
The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.
  • Manage options
  • Manage services
  • Manage {vendor_count} vendors
  • Read more about these purposes
View preferences
  • {title}
  • {title}
  • {title}
Manage Cookie Consent
To provide the best experiences, we use technologies like cookies to store and/or access device information. Consenting to these technologies will allow us to process data such as browsing behavior or unique IDs on this site. Not consenting or withdrawing consent, may adversely affect certain features and functions.
Functional Always active
The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
Preferences
The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
Statistics
The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes. The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
Marketing
The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.
  • Manage options
  • Manage services
  • Manage {vendor_count} vendors
  • Read more about these purposes
View preferences
  • {title}
  • {title}
  • {title}