Bus to Colorado Springs, CO

Bus stations and stops in Colorado Springs, CO

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Frequently asked questions

Buses to Colorado Springs start at just $12.48, depending on your starting location. To secure the most budget-friendly options, ensure you book early and consider traveling on weekdays and during off-peak hours for the cheapest deals!
The best way to buy bus tickets to Colorado Springs is through the Greyhound website or the free Greyhound app. With just a few clicks, you can easily book your bus trip and choose your preferred seating. You can pay for your bus to Colorado Springs using a variety of payment methods, including debit and credit cards. For more information on payment methods, please visit the payment methods page. Looking for a cheap ticket to Colorado Springs? Make sure to book in advance and consider traveling during weekdays and peak-off times to get the best deals!
Onboard services available on Greyhound buses to Colorado Springs include free Wi-Fi for all passengers, personal power outlets near every seat, reclining leather seats with footrests, extra legroom, overhead storage, an on-board restroom, and eco-friendly technology to reduce impact on the environment.
You can use your Greyhound bus ticket to Colorado Springs by either presenting the PDF with a QR code when booked online or by accessing it directly in the app if purchased within the app. Simply show your ticket to the bus driver at boarding and they will scan it to validate your travel.
With Greyhound and FlixBus, you can easily reach 15 destinations from Colorado Springs, including Denver, Albuquerque, Pueblo.
Not sure about where to catch the bus in Colorado Springs? Don't worry, Greyhound has got you covered. We've listed all the stops in Colorado Springs on the map on this page.
Yes, you can track your bus to Colorado Springs using the Greyhound app or by visiting the bus tracker. This will give you real-time information on the location and status of your bus.
Going to Colorado Springs by bus is easy with Greyhound, with 15 different rides to choose from. You can check the bus schedule once you select your departure city, destination city, and desired trip date.
Yes, you can reserve your preferred seat on most of the buses to Colorado Springs. All customers will be assigned a seat, but you have the option to choose your preferred one. If available, you’ll see the option when you add the passenger name to your booking. If you’d like to choose your seat, a small fee will be charged and will vary based on the route you are taking. Please visit our guide on seat reservations for more information.
When traveling by bus to Colorado Springs with Greyhound, you are allowed to bring one carry-on bag with you (maximum 25 lbs, 16x12x7 inches). The first bag that you store under the bus is free, and if you have a Flexible fare, the second bag stored under the bus is also free. For more information about our luggage policies and how to book extra baggage, please visit our dedicated baggage page.
Greyhound buses are equipped with wheelchair lifts to assist passengers using wheelchairs or mobility scooters. Each bus has space for two passengers with these devices. It's recommended to book your bus ticket to Colorado Springs in advance to ensure a spot. If you'd like to transfer to a regular seat, our drivers will stow your device for you. Service animals are also welcome on board our buses. For further details on accessibility and service animal policies, please check this link.

Bus to Colorado Springs

Colorado Springs sits at the foot of Pikes Peak on the Front Range, an hour south of Denver where the high plains meet the Southern Rockies. It's a year-round outdoor city of just under 500,000 people, with the Garden of the Gods, the Air Force Academy, the Olympic and Paralympic Training Center and the long, dramatic skyline of Pikes Peak all within the city limits or a short drive away. The bus to Colorado Springs drops you on the south side of downtown at the Tejon Park-N-Ride, with the central downtown, Old Colorado City and the Manitou Springs corridor all reachable by short rideshare or local bus. People come for the Garden of the Gods, for Pikes Peak by cog railway or summit highway, for the Cave of the Winds and the Royal Gorge a few hours west, for Olympic and Paralympic training tours, and for the wider hiking and skiing access of the Southern Rockies. A Colorado Springs bus ticket lands you within minutes of the central downtown.

Greyhound stops in Colorado Springs

Colorado Springs has four Greyhound stops, which is unusual for a city this size. The most central is the Tejon Park-N-Ride at 1251 South Tejon Street, between South Nevada Avenue and South Tejon Street under Highway 25, on the south edge of downtown. The Mountain Metro Transit Center at 127 East Kiowa Street is the central downtown transit hub. The Woodmen Park-and-Ride at 6800 Corporate Drive sits on the north side of the city, and the 7-Eleven flag stop at 1475 B Street is on the western corridor toward Old Colorado City.

For most travellers, the Tejon Park-N-Ride or the Mountain Metro Transit Center is the right choice — both are central and put you within reach of the downtown core, the Olympic Museum and the central restaurants. The Tejon Park-N-Ride has parking and is a short walk to the Pioneers Museum and the central blocks. The Kiowa Street transit centre has indoor seating and is the local transit hub. The Woodmen and B Street stops are useful only if your trip ends naturally on the north side or the Old Colorado City corridor.

If you're being met, all four locations are familiar territory for rideshare drivers. Plan to arrive in good time at any of the stops; the B Street stop is a flag stop, so plan to arrive at least 15 minutes before departure. Have your ticket ready on your phone or printed for boarding.

Getting around Colorado Springs after your bus to Colorado Springs arrives

Colorado Springs is a car-leaning city by Western standards, but the central downtown and the surrounding districts have a tighter walkable footprint than the metro suggests. From either central stop, the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Museum, the Pioneers Museum, the Tejon Street commercial spine and the central restaurants are within a short walk.

Mountain Metropolitan Transit — known as Mountain Metro — runs the local bus network with a hub at the Kiowa Street transit centre. Useful routes connect downtown to Old Colorado City, Manitou Springs, the Air Force Academy and the Citadel Mall. Service runs through the day on weekdays and lighter on weekends. Rideshare runs reliably across the city and is the realistic option for evening trips and for the further attractions like the Garden of the Gods and Cheyenne Mountain Zoo.

For the wider region — Pikes Peak summit, Cripple Creek, the Royal Gorge, Cave of the Winds — a rental car or a tour shuttle is the practical option. The Pikes Peak Cog Railway runs from Manitou Springs up to the summit, an unusual onward connection that takes about three hours round trip. Cycling is also viable on the Pikes Peak Greenway and the New Santa Fe Regional Trail, which together give miles of north-south path along Monument Creek. Note the elevation: Colorado Springs sits around 6,035 feet and Pikes Peak rises to 14,115 — give yourself time to acclimatise.

Top things to do in Colorado Springs

  • The Garden of the Gods, the city park of dramatic red sandstone fins and spires at the western edge of the city, with hiking, climbing, scenic drives and the Visitor and Nature Center. Free entry.
  • Pikes Peak — "America's Mountain" — the 14,115-foot summit reachable by the Pikes Peak Cog Railway from Manitou Springs, the Pikes Peak Highway from Cascade, or the Barr Trail for serious hikers. The summit visitor centre has the Pikes Peak doughnuts that are a regional tradition.
  • The U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Museum, downtown on Sierra Madre Street, with strong interactive exhibits on Team USA, the history of the Olympic movement and the Paralympic story. Plan a couple of hours.
  • Manitou Springs, the small mountain town just west of Colorado Springs, with the Cog Railway terminus, mineral springs you can drink from, restaurants, art galleries and a steady tourist atmosphere.
  • The Cave of the Winds Mountain Park, on the road up to Pikes Peak, with cave tours through limestone caverns and an outdoor adventure park with the Bat-A-Pult zip line.
  • Old Colorado City, the historic district west of central downtown, with restored 1860s commercial buildings, restaurants, art galleries and the long-running independent shops.
  • The Colorado Springs Pioneers Museum, in the restored 1903 El Paso County Courthouse downtown, with strong exhibits on the founding of the city, the Native peoples of the Pikes Peak region and the railroad and mining history. Free entry.
  • The Air Force Academy north of the city, with the Cadet Chapel — the modernist 17-spire building from 1962 — and the visitor centre. Open to the public with a security check on entry; check current visitor policy before you go.
  • Seven Falls, on the southwest side, the long cascade running down the Cheyenne Canyon walls, with a stairway alongside and walking trails to the top.
  • The Manitou Cliff Dwellings, west of the city, with reconstructed Ancestral Puebloan cliff dwellings (the structures were relocated from elsewhere in the early 20th century) and a small interpretive museum.
  • The Broadmoor and Cheyenne Mountain area, with Will Rogers Shrine of the Sun on the mountain side and walking trails through the historic resort grounds.

Neighbourhoods to explore in Colorado Springs

Downtown is the centre of gravity, with the central restaurants, the Olympic Museum and the Pioneers Museum. Old Colorado City to the west has the historic 1860s commercial spine on Colorado Avenue, with restored brick buildings, restaurants, galleries and an active small-business scene. Manitou Springs further west is a separate mountain town with its own character — mineral springs, art galleries, restaurants and a steady stream of visitors heading to the Cog Railway.

The Westside has the older residential streetscape between Old Colorado City and the central downtown. The North End and the Patty Jewett neighbourhoods have the leafy older residential streets. South Nevada and the Southside corridor have the more eclectic restaurant and shop scene. Each district reads quite differently and an afternoon's walk through Old Colorado City and Manitou Springs in the same day gives a strong sense of the western edge of the city.

Best time to visit Colorado Springs

Late spring through early autumn is the long, generous window. From late May into June the wildflowers come in, the high-country trails open up as the snow line retreats, and the temperature sits in a comfortable range for walking the Garden of the Gods and the central downtown. July and August are warm during the day — afternoons in the 80s and occasionally low 90s — but the elevation and the dry air keep evenings cool, and afternoon thunderstorms are part of the daily rhythm.

September is the connoisseur's month. Cooler air, golden aspen on the high country, thinner crowds and a few weeks of stable weather before the snow returns. Pikes Peak remains accessible by car or cog railway through October most years, weather depending. The fall colour through Glen Eyrie and the surrounding canyons is a real draw.

Winter is the second high season for travellers heading on to the surrounding ski mountains. From December through March the central downtown stays walkable, the Cog Railway runs a winter schedule (closed for sections of deep winter), and the Garden of the Gods covered in fresh snow is a striking landscape. Daytime temperatures sit around freezing — pack for it. Spring is the awkward shoulder month: snowmelt mud on trails, variable weather, but lower hotel rates and a quieter Old Colorado City if you don't mind unpredictable conditions.

Garden of the Gods after a fresh January snow, the red sandstone fins streaked with white and Pikes Peak rising clean against a hard blue sky, is when Colorado Springs looks the way most travellers picture the Front Range. The wildflowers of June and the aspens of September are obvious targets too, but the snow-on-red-rock contrast in winter is the one that doesn't show up in the postcards. Use the search bar on this page to check schedules and book bus tickets to Colorado Springs when your dates are firm.

Planning Your Greyhound Bus Trip to Colorado Springs?

You're in the right place! Get all the details you need to arrange your bus journey to Colorado Springs! There are 4 bus stops in Colorado Springs. You can board the Greyhound at Co Sprgs Mt Trans Ctr (E), Co Sprgs Woodmen P&R (E), Colorado Springs (7-Eleven), Colorado Springs Tejon Park-N-Ride. You can easily find the location of the stop(s) on the map available on this page. Traveling to or departing from Colorado Springs can cost you as little as $12.48. If you're on the hunt for a cheap ticket to Colorado Springs, 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! With 15 destinations linked to Colorado Springs, Greyhound provides you with multiple options for planning your bus trip.

Why travel to Colorado Springs with Greyhound

When you choose Greyhound, you're promised a comfy seat and free Wi-Fi throughout your journey. Stay connected and entertained while we safely drive you to your destination! Enjoy a comfy bus trip to Colorado Springs 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 Colorado Springs

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 Colorado Springs 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.