Gran Canaria is deceptively large and deceptively vertical. The drive from Las Palmas in the north to Maspalomas in the south covers barely 50 kilometres as the crow flies, but the roads climb through a mountainous interior that can add real time to journeys a map suggests should be quick. Get the transport plan wrong and you'll spend a chunk of a short trip stuck in traffic on the GC-1 or waiting for a bus that runs once an hour.
Get it right, and the island opens up properly: a morning on a city beach, lunch in a mountain village, sunset over dunes in the south, all in one day if you've planned the logistics. Most travellers who fly into Gran Canaria default to renting a car without really weighing the alternatives, and for most itineraries that's still the right call — but it isn't the only option, and for some trips it isn't even the best one.
This guide breaks down every realistic way to move around the island — car rental, the Global bus network, taxis, airport transfers, the ferry to Tenerife, and cycling — with honest advice on what each one is actually good for, rather than a generic list of "transport options" that doesn't tell you which to pick.
Which Option Fits Your Trip?
- Staying in one resort area, beaches only: Bus or taxi covers it fine, no car needed
- Want to see the interior, the west coast, or multiple regions: Rent a car — nothing else covers this realistically
- Single airport transfer, no other driving: Private transfer or taxi, skip the rental paperwork
- Budget-conscious, flexible schedule: Global buses between main towns, supplemented by taxis when needed
- Adding Tenerife to the trip: The Agaete–Santa Cruz ferry beats flying for groups with luggage
- Serious road cyclist: The island's climbs are part of the draw — bring or rent a road bike
Every Way to Get Around Gran Canaria
Renting a Car
The GC-1 and GC-2 motorways connect the airport, Las Palmas and the south coast efficiently, and once you're off them the roads are generally well maintained, if narrow and switchback-heavy in the mountains. Comparing rental suppliers before you land usually beats walking up to a desk at LPA, where prices and availability fluctuate by the day in peak season.
The honest trade-off: driving in central Las Palmas is genuinely stressful, with one-way systems and scarce parking, and mountain roads like the GC-15 or GC-21 demand real attention — hairpin bends, occasional fog at altitude, and cyclists sharing the same narrow lanes. If your trip is entirely beach resort to beach resort, the case for a car weakens considerably.
Fuel up before heading inland: Petrol stations thin out fast once you leave the coastal towns. Fill the tank before a day trip into the mountains or the west coast rather than relying on finding one along the way.
The Global Bus Network
Global, the island's bus operator, runs a genuinely solid service between Las Palmas and the south coast resorts, with frequent departures and reasonable fares — a Tarjeta Insular discount card pays for itself within a few trips if you're not driving. Line 30 (Las Palmas–Puerto Rico, via the motorway) and Line 1 (the slower coastal route) cover the most-used corridor well.
Where it falls short: inland villages get a handful of buses a day rather than a real schedule, and the wild west coast beaches like Güi Güi have no bus access at all. If your itinerary stays close to the main towns, buses work well; if it includes the interior or the west, you'll need to combine buses with taxis or accept you can't reach those places this way.
Taxis & Private Transfers
Licensed taxis are plentiful in Las Palmas and the south coast resorts, with regulated, metered fares that make overcharging rare. They're the easiest option for a single trip — late-night transfers, a one-off journey somewhere buses don't reach, or simply not wanting to deal with parking. Uber and Bolt exist in theory but coverage is patchy enough that you shouldn't rely on them as a primary plan.
For a pre-arranged, fixed-price transfer rather than hailing on the spot — particularly useful straight off a flight — a booked private transfer removes the uncertainty of taxi rank queues during peak arrival times.
Airport Arrival
Gran Canaria Airport sits roughly midway down the east coast, making both Las Palmas and the south coast resorts quick to reach — genuinely one of the better-positioned airports in the Canary Islands. Rental car desks, taxi ranks and the Global bus stop are all within a short walk of arrivals.
The honest catch is timing: flights landing late at night mean thinner bus schedules and longer taxi waits. If you're arriving after about 10pm, either book a private transfer in advance or confirm your car rental desk's actual operating hours — some close earlier than the airport itself.
Inter-Island Ferries
If Tenerife is part of the trip, the fast ferry from Agaete in the island's northwest to Santa Cruz de Tenerife is usually more practical than flying — no airport check-in buffer, more luggage allowance, and the option to bring a rental car across rather than arranging two separate rentals. The crossing itself takes around an hour and runs multiple times daily.
Agaete is roughly 35–40 minutes from Las Palmas, so factor that drive into your timing rather than assuming the ferry terminal is central. Sailings fill up in peak summer weeks, so book your slot in advance rather than turning up on the day.
Cycling Gran Canaria
Several professional World Tour teams use Gran Canaria for winter training camps, and it's easy to see why once you've seen the climbs: smooth tarmac, mild year-round temperatures, and routes that gain real altitude in a short distance, topping out near 1,950 metres in the central highlands. This isn't a beach-cruiser island — the terrain rewards serious riders more than casual ones.
As day-to-day transport rather than sport, cycling is less practical: distances between towns are long, roads are narrow with fast-moving traffic in places, and there's minimal dedicated cycling infrastructure outside a few stretches near Las Palmas. If you'd rather ride with local knowledge of the safest routes than navigate the climbs solo, a guided cycling tour is worth considering. Treat cycling as an activity to plan around, not a way to get from your hotel to dinner.
Transport Options Compared
| Mode | Best For | Cost | Flexibility | Island Coverage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rental Car | Multi-region trips | €€ | ||
| Global Buses | Main towns, budget | € | ||
| Taxis | One-off trips | €€€ | ||
| Private Transfer | Airport arrival | €€€ | ||
| Ferry (to Tenerife) | Inter-island travel | €€ | N/A | |
| Bicycle | Training, sport | €€ |
€ = budget · €€ = moderate · €€€ = highest cost per trip. Flexibility and coverage reflect realistic day-to-day use, not best-case scenarios.
How to Get From LPA to Your Hotel
This is the one logistics decision every visitor has to make, usually while jet-lagged and queuing at arrivals — so it gets its own step-by-step.
Planning Your Arrival
Work out your transport plan in advance rather than deciding at the rental desk. Pre-booking a car or transfer is consistently cheaper than walking up on arrival, especially in peak season.
Some rental desks close earlier than the airport. Late-night arrivals should confirm the exact pickup window when booking, not assume 24-hour service.
Global's airport line connects to both Las Palmas and the south coast, but confirm the specific line and stop for your hotel before you land — schedules thin out late at night.
An eSIM activated before landing means you can pull up maps, confirm a transfer driver, or check bus times the moment you're off the plane.
Driving Rules & What to Pack in the Car
Spanish traffic law applies island-wide, with a few specifics worth knowing before you pick up the keys.
- Driving is on the right; an EU or international licence is required for non-EU visitors
- Blood alcohol limit is 0.05%, lower than in many countries — effectively one drink, not two
- A reflective vest and warning triangle are legally required in the car, usually provided by the rental company
- Speed limits: 120 km/h motorway (GC-1, GC-2), 90 km/h open road, 50 km/h urban unless signed otherwise
- Fixed and mobile speed cameras operate on the GC-1, particularly near Las Palmas
- Mountain roads (GC-15, GC-21, GC-200) are narrow with frequent hairpins — allow more time than GPS estimates suggest
- eSIM data plan — for offline maps where signal drops in the mountain interior
Rental insurance: Basic rental insurance often carries a high excess (sometimes €1,000+). Check whether your card or travel insurance already covers the gap before paying for the rental company's own excess waiver, which can roughly double the daily rate.
Essential Services for Getting Around
Kiwi.com
Flights to Gran Canaria
Find the best deals on flights to Gran Canaria (LPA). Kiwi's flexible search surfaces routes and combinations the major airline sites often don't show.
Search FlightsGetRentaCar
Car rental Gran Canaria
For most itineraries, a rental car is the single best transport decision you'll make. GetRentaCar compares 900+ suppliers for the best price and airport pickup.
Compare Car HireGetTransfer
Private transfers
Pre-book a fixed-price transfer from LPA straight to your hotel — particularly useful for late-night arrivals when taxi ranks and bus schedules thin out.
Book TransferSaily eSIM
Mobile data Spain
Stay connected for maps, bus schedules and ride bookings from the moment you land. Saily's Spain eSIM activates before you even take off.
Get eSIMYesim eSIM
Alternative data option
A solid alternative eSIM with competitive Spain data packages — useful for offline maps in the mountain interior where signal can drop out.
Get eSIMWeGoTrip
Guided tours & transport included
If you'd rather skip driving altogether for a specific day, guided tours with transport included cover the interior and west coast without renting a car.
Browse ToursFrequently Asked Questions
Do I need a car in Gran Canaria?
Not strictly, but it makes the island far easier to explore. If you're staying entirely within one resort area and don't plan to see the interior or other coasts, you can manage without one using buses and taxis.
How much does a taxi cost from the airport to Maspalomas?
Roughly €35–45 depending on traffic and time of day, for a journey of around 25-30 minutes. Always confirm whether the driver is using the meter or a fixed fare before setting off.
Is public transport reliable in Gran Canaria?
On the main routes between Las Palmas and the south, yes, with frequent and punctual Global buses. Coverage drops sharply in rural inland villages and is essentially nonexistent on the wild west coast.
Can I rent a car in Gran Canaria at 21?
Most companies rent from 21, often with a young-driver surcharge under 25. A small number of premium or specialty vehicle categories may require 25. Always check the specific company's policy when booking.
Are there Uber or Bolt in Gran Canaria?
Ride-hailing apps have limited or inconsistent availability across the island. Regular licensed taxis, which can be hailed at ranks or called by phone, remain the most reliable option.
How long does it take to drive around Gran Canaria?
A full lap of the coastal roads takes around 4-5 hours of driving without stops. Most visitors split the island into a south coast, north/capital, and west coast day rather than attempting a full circuit in one go.
Is parking free in Las Palmas?
Some residential streets have free parking, but most central areas use the blue-zone paid system or paid car parks. Hotels in the centre often charge separately for parking, so factor that into your budget.
Can I get a ferry from Gran Canaria to Tenerife?
Yes, fast ferries run from Agaete in the northwest to Santa Cruz de Tenerife, taking around an hour, operated by Fred Olsen Express. Booking ahead is recommended in peak summer weeks.
Ready to Explore the Whole Island?
From city beaches to mountain villages and wild west-coast coves — our Gran Canaria guides cover everything you need for a smooth 2026 trip.