Bus to Miami, FL

Bus stations and stops in Miami, FL

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Fast, easy, and affordable options from / to Miami, FL

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Frequently asked questions

To book your Greyhound bus ticket to Miami, visit the Greyhound website or download the free Greyhound app. You can quickly select your travel dates, seats, and complete payment with various methods. For more details, see the payment methods page. Booking in advance and choosing off-peak times can help you find cheaper tickets to Miami!
Greyhound bus tickets to Miami start from just $8.48. To get the best rates, try to book early and consider traveling during less busy times like weekdays and off-peak hours.
You can easily track your Greyhound bus heading to Miami using the Greyhound app or by visiting our bus tracker. This service provides real-time updates on your bus's location and status.
When you're traveling to Miami with Greyhound, you're allowed one carry-on bag (up to 25 lbs, 16x12x7 inches) and one checked bag under the bus for free. If you have a Flexible fare, you can also check a second bag at no additional cost. For more details, see our baggage policy page.
Yes, you can choose your seat on most Greyhound buses heading to Miami. During the booking process, you can select your preferred seat, though a small fee will apply depending on the route. Visit our seat reservation guide for more information.
Using your Greyhound ticket to Miami is simple. Just show the PDF with the QR code or access your ticket directly in the app. The bus driver will scan it, and you'll be on your way.
If you're looking for Greyhound bus stations in Miami, check the map on this page. It shows all the stops available in the Miami.
Traveling to Miami with Greyhound is easy, with 55 different routes available. Just enter your departure city, destination, and travel date to view the schedule and choose your preferred ride.
Greyhound buses are equipped to accommodate passengers with mobility devices, such as wheelchairs or scooters, and service animals. It's advisable to book your trip to Miami in advance to secure the necessary accommodations. For more information, visit our accessibility page.
On your trip to Miami, Greyhound offers several amenities, including free Wi-Fi, power outlets, comfortable seats with extra legroom, overhead storage and an onboard restroom.
From Miami, Greyhound and FlixBus connect you to 55 destinations, with top choices being Orlando, Fort Myers, Tampa.

Bus to Miami

Miami sits on the southeast tip of Florida, wedged between Biscayne Bay and the Everglades, with the Atlantic on one side and the Gulf Stream weather running up the coast. It's roughly 230 miles south of Orlando on Florida's Turnpike, about 25 miles south of Fort Lauderdale and 70 miles south of West Palm Beach along I-95, and around 160 miles northeast of Key West along the Overseas Highway. It is the largest city in South Florida and the cultural crossroads of the Caribbean and Latin America, which is why a short walk through any neighbourhood turns up Spanish, Haitian Creole and English in roughly equal measure. Taking the bus to Miami drops you straight into that mix without the rental-car logistics of the airport. People come for the beaches and Art Deco hotels of South Beach, for the murals and galleries of Wynwood, for Cuban food and music in Little Havana, and for the Vizcaya estate and Coconut Grove waterfront further south. Miami is also a useful jumping-off point for the Florida Keys, the Everglades and onward bus connections up the coast to Orlando, Tampa and Jacksonville. The Miami most people picture from postcards is really half a dozen different cities stitched together by causeways and a free downtown people mover, so it pays to plan around two or three neighbourhoods rather than picking only one.

Greyhound stops in Miami

Greyhound has 4 stops in Miami. The main one is at the Miami Intermodal Center, 3801 NW 21st Street, just east of Miami International Airport. The MIC is a proper transit hub rather than a curbside stop, with Tri-Rail commuter trains, the Metrorail Orange Line and the MIA Mover people mover to the airport terminals all under one roof, plus rental cars and local Metrobus routes on site. It sits about six miles northwest of downtown, around fifteen minutes by Metrorail or rideshare in moderate traffic. If you are connecting onward by air, train or rideshare, this is the easiest stop to use.

The Downtown Miami stop is at 401 Biscayne Boulevard, on the bayfront opposite Bayside Marketplace and a short walk from the Kaseya Center, MiamiCentral Brightline station and the Metromover loop. It is the most central stop for travellers heading to downtown hotels, the financial district or onward Brightline trains to Fort Lauderdale, West Palm Beach and Orlando. The Miami Beach stop sits at 4101 Collins Avenue in mid-Beach, about four miles east of downtown across the MacArthur and Julia Tuttle causeways, the right pick if your accommodation is on the barrier island and you want to skip the cab ride across the causeway. The Miami Golden Glades stop at 15890 NW 7th Avenue serves the north side of the city and sits next to the Tri-Rail Golden Glades station, around twelve miles north of downtown along I-95 and useful if you are staying in Aventura, Hollywood or further north.

Getting around Miami after your bus to Miami arrives

Miami's public transport is built around three rail systems and a free downtown loop, so the right combination depends on where your bus pulls in. From the Miami Intermodal Center, the Metrorail Orange Line runs straight into downtown and Brickell, with a transfer to the Green Line for Coconut Grove and the University of Miami area. Tri-Rail covers the longer commute up the coast to Fort Lauderdale and West Palm Beach. From Downtown Miami, the Metromover is the easiest way to get around the central core: it is free, runs on an elevated track, and stops every couple of blocks across downtown, Brickell, Park West and the Arts and Entertainment District.

For Miami Beach, the most reliable option from the mainland is the Metrobus across the MacArthur or Julia Tuttle causeway, or a rideshare if you are carrying luggage. Once you are on the island, the local Miami Beach Trolley runs free loops along Collins Avenue and the surrounding streets. Brightline, the higher-speed intercity service, leaves from MiamiCentral downtown and is the fastest way up to Aventura, Fort Lauderdale, West Palm Beach and Orlando. Rideshare is easy at every Greyhound stop, and bike share docks are common in Wynwood, the Design District, Brickell and South Beach. For day trips into the Everglades or the Keys you will generally need a rental car, and the MIC is the simplest place to pick one up.

Top things to do in Miami

  • South Beach. The southern end of Miami Beach is the strip of pastel hotels, Ocean Drive cafes and palm-lined sand that most visitors picture when they think of Miami. The Art Deco Historic District here is one of the largest collections of 1930s Streamline Moderne architecture in the country, and walking Ocean Drive between South Pointe and 15th Street covers most of the famous facades.
  • Wynwood Walls. This open-air street art museum at 2516 NW 2nd Avenue opened in 2009 and has grown into a rotating gallery of large-scale murals by international artists. The surrounding Wynwood Art District has galleries, breweries and design shops along NW 2nd Avenue.
  • Little Havana and Calle Ocho. Southwest 8th Street west of downtown is the heart of Miami's Cuban community, lined with cigar rollers, domino players in Maximo Gomez Park, Cuban coffee windows and the Walk of Fame stars set into the pavement. Viernes Culturales runs on the last Friday of the month with live music and open galleries between 14th and 17th Avenues.
  • Vizcaya Museum and Gardens. Built 1914 to 1923 as the winter home of industrialist James Deering, this Italian Renaissance-style estate at 3251 South Miami Avenue opens onto Biscayne Bay with formal gardens and a stone barge in the water. It became a National Historic Landmark in 1994 and is reachable by the Metrorail Vizcaya station.
  • Bayfront Park and Bayside Marketplace. The downtown waterfront is a useful starting point for boat tours of Biscayne Bay and a short Metromover hop from Brickell or the Arts and Entertainment District.
  • Perez Art Museum Miami and Frost Science. These two museums sit side by side in Museum Park on the downtown bayfront. PAMM focuses on 20th and 21st-century art with a strong Caribbean and Latin American collection; Frost Science covers astronomy, marine biology and a planetarium.
  • Coconut Grove. Miami's oldest neighbourhood is a leafy bayfront village south of downtown with sailboats in the marina, sidewalk cafes around CocoWalk and shaded streets of old Florida bungalows. Reachable by Metrorail or a short rideshare from downtown.
  • Miami Design District. North of Wynwood, the Design District clusters luxury fashion, contemporary architecture and public art around 40th Street, with the Institute of Contemporary Art at the centre.
  • Lummus Park and the South Beach boardwalk. The grassy strip between Ocean Drive and the sand has volleyball courts, exercise stations and the wooden boardwalk that runs the length of the beach.
  • Day trip to Everglades National Park. The Ernest F. Coe (eastern) entrance near Homestead is around 40 miles southwest of downtown Miami, roughly an hour by car; the Shark Valley entrance off the Tamiami Trail is closer to 30 miles west. Airboat operators line the Tamiami Trail, and Royal Palm sits another twenty minutes inside the Coe entrance. It is the easiest way to see alligators, herons and saw grass without committing to an overnight.

Neighbourhoods to explore in Miami

South Beach and Mid-Beach occupy the southern half of the barrier island, with Ocean Drive, Lincoln Road and Collins Avenue forming the spine. The architecture, the beach and the late-night scene draw most of the attention, but the side streets between Washington and Alton hide quieter cafes and boutique hotels.

Wynwood and the Design District sit just north of downtown and are the city's creative core. Wynwood is grittier, with murals on every warehouse and a cluster of breweries and food halls; the Design District is polished, with luxury flagships and architectural set pieces. Little Havana, west of downtown along Calle Ocho, is the place to slow down for Cuban coffee and the rhythm of dominos on park tables. Coconut Grove, further south on the bay, swaps the urban grid for tree canopy, sailboats and a village pace, and Coral Gables next door has the Mediterranean Revival streetscapes and the Venetian Pool.

Food and drink in Miami

Miami's food culture runs on Cuban, Caribbean and Latin American influences, with stone crab and fresh fish layered on top. The Cuban sandwich is the obvious starting point, alongside ropa vieja, lechon asado, croquetas and the small sweet shots of cafecito served at corner ventanitas across Little Havana. Haitian griot, Dominican mofongo, Venezuelan arepas and Argentine empanadas turn up on neighbourhood menus in Little Haiti and Allapattah. Stone crab claws, in season October through May, are a local specialty, and ceviche, conch fritters and Florida snapper appear on most seafood menus along the bay.

Calle Ocho between 12th and 17th Avenues is the densest stretch of Cuban food, with bakeries, cafeterias and cigar lounges side by side. The Wynwood food halls and Lincoln Road cafes in South Beach pull in a more international crowd. For market shopping, the Coconut Grove Saturday Morning Market and Lincoln Road farmers' market are the easiest entry points.

Best time to visit Miami

The dry season from late November through April is the most comfortable stretch for visiting Miami, with daytime temperatures in the high 70s and low 80s and reliably blue skies. This is also the busiest window, with Art Basel in early December, the Miami International Boat Show in February and the Calle Ocho Festival in March, so hotels book up well in advance. May through October is hot, humid and tropical, with afternoon thunderstorms most days and Atlantic hurricane season officially running June through November. The shoulder months of late April, May and November tend to give the best balance of warm weather, lower prices and thinner crowds. Carnaval Miami, the Miami Film Festival and Art Basel are the calendar anchors most travellers plan around.

Picture pulling into the Downtown Miami stop on Biscayne Boulevard in the late afternoon. The bay is glinting across the road, the Metromover slides past on its elevated track, and the salt-and-cafecito smell of a downtown afternoon is already on the breeze. A short rideshare west and you are at a domino table on Calle Ocho with a cortadito in front of you; a Metromover hop south, and Brickell's bayfront restaurants open up; a causeway crossing east and Ocean Drive's Art Deco facades light up at sunset. That is the kind of city the bus to Miami delivers you into, with no airport queues and no rental car. Use the search bar on this page to check bus tickets to Miami and pick the stop that lines up with where you are headed.

Searching for Greyhound Bus Tickets to Miami?

Your search ends here! Find all the information you need to book your bus trip to Miami! Miami hosts 4 Greyhound bus stops. You can find the Greyhound at Downtown Miami, Miami Beach, Miami Golden Glades, Miami Intermodal Center. The fare for traveling to Miami starts at just $8.48. If you're on the hunt for a cheap ticket to Miami, remember to book early. Traveling on weekdays or during non-peak hours can also lead you to some of the most budget-friendly fares available! Greyhound connects Miami to 43 destinations, providing ample options for your bus trip.

Why travel to Miami with Greyhound

With Greyhound, enjoy a comfortable seat and complimentary Wi-Fi on your journey. Stay engaged and online as we take you to your destination! Enjoy a comfy trip to Miami with our onboard facilities like free Wi-Fi and power outlets. Choose your favorite seat while booking and travel with peace of mind rest easy knowing your ticket covers one carry-on and one checked bag.

How to book your bus ticket to Miami

Booking a ticket with Greyhound is a breeze: on this website or on the free Greyhound App, you can complete your booking in a few clicks. When purchasing your ticket to Miami online, you can choose between different secured online payment methods, such as credit and debit cards. Alternatively, you can pay in cash at a sales point.