EZE · Transport

AeroBus Ezeiza

Shuttle bus

Shuttle bus /not cited/ /cash preferred/

Aerobus runs from Ezeiza to Liniers, not downtown Microcentro

AeroBus Ezeiza sits in the middle ground: cheaper than Tienda León, but far easier to figure out than Línea 8 if you just landed at Terminals A, B, or C. It mainly links the airport with Liniers and a few suburban terminals, so plan on a second ride (Subte, train, or city bus) if you need Plaza de Mayo, Retiro, or Palermo.

The shuttle usually stops at marked bays outside Terminals A–C, with tickets sold at a small Aerobus kiosk or directly by the driver in Argentine pesos. Card machines appear on some buses, but reviews from 2023 and 2024 say cash is still the only thing that reliably works, so hit an ATM or cambio in EZE before you walk out to the stand.

Timetables skew toward commuters during the week, then thin out on Saturdays, Sundays, and public holidays in Argentina. Miss a weekday bus and you might wait 20–40 minutes; miss a weekend one and you can feel stuck for close to an hour. If your flight lands around Christmas, New Year, or election days, assume extra gaps and have a backup plan like a remis or taxi quote in pesos.

Most buses are older single-deck coaches with basic seats and limited air conditioning, and several summer 2024 reviews mention feeling the 30°C+ heat on runs out to Liniers. Luggage usually goes in a bay under the bus, but there is no fancy tag system like long‑distance coaches; keep a photo of your bag and stay near the door when you’re close to your stop.

Tickets cost less than Tienda León and more than a standard city colectivo ride, which makes it attractive if you’re price‑sensitive but still want a clearly marked airport link. One Reddit regular uses Aerobus from EZE straight to Liniers to catch long‑distance coaches to Córdoba and Mendoza instead of backtracking to Retiro, saving one extra transfer plus a few hundred pesos each way.

English information is thin: printed boards at the stop, Spanish‑only staff, and live updates mainly on local social channels. Regulars say to check those feeds or call the listed number on strike days, since Aerobus can be caught up in the same paro actions that shut down other Buenos Aires buses. Final tip: if your connection at Liniers is tight, build a 45–60 minute buffer in case your bus runs late or the next departure is pushed back.

  • Step 1: On arrival at Terminal A, B, or C, clear customs and hit an ATM for pesos before exiting.
  • Step 2: Walk to the signed bus bays outside your terminal and look for the AeroBus Ezeiza stand or logo.
  • Step 3: Buy a ticket at the kiosk or from the driver in cash; ask clearly for “Liniers” if that’s your stop.
  • Step 4: Load checked bags into the underfloor compartment, then grab a seat away from the rear if it’s a hot day and the AC seems weak.
  • Step 5: Track progress on Google Maps using mobile data, and get ready to step off promptly at Liniers or your suburban terminal so your bag comes off with that stop’s group.

Other transport at EZE