Cycling & bike rental in Vilnius: a student guide

By LUSH.lt editorialLast verified June 2026

Vilnius is flat, compact and increasingly bike-friendly, so cycling is one of the cheapest and fastest ways to get around. The easiest start for international students is the city's shared-bike scheme, Cyclocity Vilnius — unlock a bike from your phone, ride, and drop it at any station.

Renting a bike with Cyclocity

Cyclocity is the public bike-share system run by JCDecaux. You register once in the Cyclocity Vilnius app (iOS/Android), pick a subscription, and unlock bikes from any of its docking stations — around 300 bikes across roughly 37–39 stations in the city centre.

  • First 30 minutes of every trip are free with a valid subscription. After that, time-based charges apply, so dock the bike within 30 minutes and grab another if you have further to go.
  • The app shows live bike and free-dock availability, so you can check before you walk to a station.
  • A refundable deposit is pre-authorised on your card (reported to be sizeable — around €159 for a short-term ticket). It is held, not charged, and released after you return the bike.
  • The season runs early April to late October — there are no shared bikes in winter.

What it costs

Prices change each season, so treat the figures below as a guide and confirm the current rates in the app or on the official prices page before paying.

OptionRoughly what to expectGood for
Short-term ticket (e.g. 3-day)from ~€2.90 + refundable depositvisitors, a few trips
Monthly subscriptionlow monthly feea busy term
Annual subscriptionbest value per ridestaying a full year

Keep each ride under 30 minutes

Almost everywhere in central Vilnius is reachable in under half an hour. Dock, wait a moment, then take a new bike to keep riding for free.

Other options

Electric scooters (Bolt, others) and private bike shops also rent by the day or week — handy off-season or for longer countryside trips where a dock-based bike won't reach.

The rules you must follow

Lithuania's traffic rules (KET) apply to everyone, including students on shared bikes. The essentials:

  • Where to ride: use cycle paths, cycle lanes or pedestrian-and-cycle paths where they exist. Otherwise ride on the roadside or the far-right lane of the carriageway.
  • Pavements: allowed only at walking pace (about 3–7 km/h). Motorways and express roads are off-limits.
  • Helmets: compulsory for under-18s on the road; recommended for everyone.
  • Lights & visibility: at night or in poor visibility you must have a white front light, a red rear light, and wear a reflective (bright) vest.
  • Age: you must be at least 14 to ride on the carriageway (12 with a training certificate).

Rules and fines change — check before you rely on this

Traffic rules are updated regularly (Lithuania has been adding cycle-priority streets and giving cyclists more space). For the current legal detail and any fines, verify on the official JUDU rules page.

Where to ride: routes worth knowing

You don't need to leave the city for good cycling. The riverside paths are the easy wins:

  • Along the Neris river — scenic, mostly traffic-free loops of roughly 11–17 km connecting Žvėrynas, Bernardinai Garden and Vingis Park (the big green space next to VU's campus).
  • Vingis Park itself — wide paths, popular with students between lectures.
  • EuroVelo 11 passes through Vilnius if you fancy a longer day trip; it links the capital towards Kernavė and Trakai.

Mixing bikes with public transport

Going further than your legs (or the season) allow? You can combine cycling with JUDU buses, with limits:

  • Only buses marked with a bicycle sticker on the second door carry bikes.
  • One bike per person, board last, and secure it in the designated space.
  • You must give up the space to a wheelchair user and get off if asked.

EU vs non-EU? No difference here

Cycling and bike rental don't depend on your residence status. Any student — EU, non-EU degree-seeker or Erasmus/exchange — can register for Cyclocity with a foreign card and ride on the same terms.

Frequently asked

Do I need a Lithuanian bank card to rent a Cyclocity bike?+

No. You register in the Cyclocity Vilnius app with any debit or credit card — a foreign card is fine. The app pre-authorises a deposit that is released after you return the bike.

Is cycling on the pavement allowed?+

Only at walking speed (roughly 3–7 km/h). If you want to ride at normal speed, use a cycle path, cycle lane or the road.

Do I have to wear a helmet?+

It is mandatory only for riders under 18 on the road. Adults are strongly advised to wear one but are not legally required to.

Can I cycle in winter?+

You can ride your own bike year-round, but Cyclocity runs only from early April to late October, so it is not an option in winter.

Can I bring a bike on the bus?+

Only on buses marked with a bicycle sticker on the second door, one bike at a time, boarding last, and you must give up the space to a wheelchair user.

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