Bolt vs public transport in Vilnius: which to use

By LUSH.lt editorialLast verified June 2026

For getting around Vilnius day to day, public transport is far cheaper and Bolt is far more convenient — most students use both. Buses and trolleybuses cover the city well for around a euro a ride; Bolt is for late nights, heavy bags, or splitting a fare with friends.

The short answer

  • Commuting and everyday trips → public transport (JUDU buses and trolleybuses). With the student discount it's almost free per ride.
  • Late at night, bad weather, airport runs with luggage, or 3–4 people sharing → Bolt often makes sense.

This is the same regardless of whether you're an EU, non-EU or Erasmus student — the prices and the student discount work the same way for everyone.

What each one costs

Public transport prices are fixed and published by JUDU (the city operator). Bolt prices are dynamic — they change with demand, time of day and traffic — so always check the upfront price in the app.

OptionTypical costNotes
Single ride, 30 min (standard)€1.00One vehicle, transfers allowed within the time window
Single ride, 60 min (standard)€1.25Longer window for transfers
Single ride with 80% student discount€0.20 (30 min) / €0.25 (60 min)Requires an ISIC card
30-day ticket (standard)€38.0080% discounted version is much cheaper
Short Bolt across the centrea few euros, variesPrice shown before you confirm

Figures from JUDU — ticket types and prices (confirm current rates there, as prices change). For a wider picture of monthly spending, see €350–€700unverified.

The student discount is huge

An ISIC card cuts public transport fares by 80%. A 30-minute ride drops to about 20 cents. If you'll be in Vilnius a while, this is the single biggest transport saving available — get the ISIC sorted early.

Public transport: how to pay

You have three ways to ride, and none of them requires a Lithuanian SIM except the app:

  1. Contactless bank card — tap your debit/credit card (or phone) on the validator when you board. Simplest for short stays and visitors.
  2. JUDU / Vilniečio card — a reusable plastic card costing €1.50 (JUDU card). Buy it at Maxima, Rimi, Narvesen or a JUDU customer centre, then load tickets onto it. This is how you use discounted student tickets.
  3. m.Ticket app — handy, but it needs a Lithuanian phone number to register.

Getting the student discount

  • You must have an ISIC card — physical or the virtual version on your phone both count.
  • A foreign university's student certificate and the EURO26 card are not accepted for the discount in Vilnius (JUDU — students).
  • Load the discounted ticket onto your JUDU card and validate every time you board.

Always validate, every ride

Tap your card or ticket on the validator each time you board — including transfers. Inspectors do check, and an unvalidated ride counts as fare-dodging with a fine. The few seconds it takes is worth it.

Bolt: when it's worth it

Bolt is the dominant ride app in Lithuania. You see the price upfront, pay by card in the app, and pick a category (Basic, Comfort, XL and more). It also runs e-scooters and e-bikes in Vilnius, plus food delivery — handy, but a separate cost.

Bolt earns its keep when:

  • it's late and buses are rare or stopped;
  • you're carrying luggage or shopping, or coming from the airport;
  • you're splitting with friends — a €6 ride between four people beats four separate tickets;
  • the weather is miserable and you want a door-to-door trip.

For a solo daytime trip across town, though, it's usually several times the price of a bus.

Getting to and from the airport

Vilnius Airport is well served by buses — routes 88, 1, 2 and the express 3G reach the centre in about 20 minutes, and the 88N night bus runs roughly 22:30–05:30. A normal single ticket covers it. With heavy bags, a late flight, or several people, a Bolt straight to your door can be the better call.

Mix and match

Most students settle into a pattern: a monthly or discounted JUDU ticket for the daily commute, and Bolt saved for nights out, airport trips and the occasional rainy morning. You don't have to choose one.

Frequently asked

Is Bolt cheaper than public transport in Vilnius?+

Almost never for a solo trip. A single bus or trolleybus ride is around €1–1.25, while even a short Bolt is usually several euros. Bolt only wins on cost when you split it between three or four people or when no bus is running.

Do I need a Lithuanian SIM to use either?+

Bolt needs a working phone number and a card, but a foreign number is fine. For public transport you can tap a contactless bank card on the vehicle, or buy a JUDU card with cash — no Lithuanian SIM required (the m.Ticket app does need a Lithuanian number).

How do I get the student discount on public transport?+

You need an ISIC card (physical or in the app). Load discounted tickets onto your JUDU/Vilniečio card. A regular student certificate or a EURO26 card does not qualify in Vilnius.

Does Bolt take cash?+

Pay by card in the app for the smoothest experience. Some drivers accept cash, but the app shows the price upfront and handles payment automatically, so card is simplest.

Is public transport in Vilnius safe at night?+

Yes, generally. Night buses run on key routes but far less often. If it's very late or you're alone, a Bolt is often worth the extra few euros for the door-to-door convenience.

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