EZE · Transport

WorldCar Remis

Private car

Private car /not cited/ /fixed price/

Fixed-price WorldCar Remis beats haggling with taxis at EZE

WorldCar Remis runs private cars from Ezeiza (terminals A, B, C) with prebooked, fixed-per-car pricing, which Google reviewers highlight as “all-in including tolls.” That flat rate structure usually works out well for couples or groups of 3–4 compared to shuttles that charge per passenger. Cars are standard sedans or similar, so think normal trunk space, not a van; families with two checked bags each still usually fit.

Booking is typically online or via WhatsApp at least a few hours before landing at EZE, according to multiple r/Argentina threads. You choose pickup at terminal A, B, or C arrivals, and you should get a written confirmation with the peso or USD quote. Regular business travelers often tie this to a corporate account so they don’t re-enter card details on every Buenos Aires trip.

On arrival, drivers usually wait in the public arrivals hall with a paper or tablet sign showing your name near the doors from customs in terminal A or B. One traveler mentioned their WorldCar driver holding a sign and that the agreed price covered tolls on the Riccheri highway into Buenos Aires. Walking out to the curb to negotiate with street taxis is still possible, but that’s the stress WorldCar users are paying to skip after a 10–13 hour long-haul.

WorldCar and similar remis companies quote per car, not per person, which Redditors in r/Argentina flag as the key value point compared with shared shuttles that charge each passenger separately. Some reviews mention quotes in USD but payment taken in ARS, and that the card exchange rate can be worse than using physical pesos. Cash pesos often track the quoted rate more closely than cards for the same ride.

Watch out for two things regulars complain about: late drivers and unclear signage in the crowd at arrivals, plus extra waiting charges. Smaller remis firms sometimes start billing after a grace period if you did not send your flight number and your EZE arrival gets delayed by an hour or more. Expats in r/BuenosAires say they always message their flight number on WhatsApp and then send a quick “landed at A/B/C” text before leaving customs.

Basic step-by-step from EZE arrivals with WorldCar Remis

  • 1. Before you fly, book through WorldCar’s website or WhatsApp and confirm the fixed price in ARS or USD for your date.
  • 2. Send your airline and flight number so they can track your actual arrival time into terminal A, B, or C.
  • 3. After landing, clear immigration and customs at EZE; this usually takes 20–45 minutes in terminals A and B during daytime.
  • 4. Enter the public arrivals hall and look for your name on a paper or tablet sign around the main exit doors; if you don’t see it after 5–10 minutes, call or WhatsApp.
  • 5. Confirm the agreed fare and payment method with the driver before leaving the terminal, especially if you plan to pay pesos in cash instead of by card.
  • 6. Load bags into the car, check that child seats or extra space you requested are actually there, then head toward Buenos Aires via the Riccheri and 25 de Mayo highways.

One last tip: screenshot your booking confirmation with the quoted amount and currency before you land at EZE, so you can still show it even if mobile data or Wi‑Fi fails at terminals A, B, or C.

Other transport at EZE