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Top 7 airport-transfer services for Buenos Aires in 2026

Buenos Aires, Argentina

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Top 7 airport-transfer services for Buenos Aires in 2026

Tienda León still leads Buenos Aires airport transfers for its fixed pricing, bilingual staff, and decades of no-drama reliability on the Ezeiza-to-downtown run. The tie-breaker over Cabify comes down to surge protection — Tienda León's rates hold steady during holidays and red-eye arrivals when ride-hail fares tend to spike.

Scoring here weights three things roughly equally: reliability (does the driver actually show up, and on time?), price transparency (fixed rate vs. metered vs. surge-prone), and language support for non-Spanish speakers. That last one matters more than you might think in Buenos Aires — the city's taxi culture is warm but firmly Spanish-first, and at 2 AM after a fourteen-hour flight, fumbling through Google Translate with a remis driver who's already annoyed about the Ezeiza run isn't anyone's idea of a smooth arrival. We deducted heavily for surge pricing and documented missing-driver incidents, which is why Uber — despite being the cheapest baseline option — lands lower than you'd expect.

The biggest mistake visitors make with Buenos Aires airport transfers is assuming Ezeiza works like a North American or European airport. It doesn't. The terminal exit is a gauntlet of unofficial taxi touts who'll quote you double the going rate in confident English — which, ironically, makes them seem more legitimate to nervous arrivals. The second mistake: not realizing that Ezeiza is genuinely far from the city center. You're looking at 35 to 45 kilometers depending on your neighborhood, and the Autopista Riccheri can turn into a parking lot during weekday rush hours. A transfer that seems cheap per-kilometer can still hit 90 minutes and surprise you on the final bill if it's metered. Pre-booking a fixed-rate service eliminates both problems.

That said, Tienda León isn't the right call for everyone. If you're traveling solo on a tight budget, their remis service runs about 40 to 50 percent more than a no-surge Cabify ride. Their shared bus option is cheaper but only runs to their downtown terminal near Madero, which means you'll still need a taxi or subway to your actual hotel — adding time and hassle. And if you're landing at Aeroparque instead of Ezeiza, the whole calculus shifts. Aeroparque is practically in the city already, maybe fifteen minutes from Palermo by Cabify, and Tienda León's infrastructure advantage largely disappears when the ride is that short. For Aeroparque arrivals, just grab Cabify.

The full list

  1. Tienda León

    Fixed-price remis and bus combos from Ezeiza with bilingual counter staff, tracked fleet, and zero surge pricing. They've been running this route for decades and it shows — the operation is tight, drivers know the neighborhoods, and you'll get a receipt without asking.

  2. Cabify

    The ride-hail app that actually works well in Buenos Aires. Prices are transparent in-app before you confirm, driver cancellation rates on airport runs are notably lower than Uber's, and the app handles the language barrier. Slight surge during holidays but nothing dramatic.

  3. Transfer Ezeiza

    Pre-booked private car with a driver holding your name sign at arrivals. English-speaking drivers available on request, fixed rates locked at booking time. Slightly pricier than Tienda León but the door-to-door aspect saves the last-mile hassle.

  4. Official Ezeiza Taxi Stand

    Government-regulated fixed fares purchased at the counter inside the terminal before you step outside. Reliable and safe, but drivers rarely speak English and the flat rate tends to run higher than Cabify for the same distance. Still, no surprises.

  5. Uber Argentina

    Often the cheapest per-kilometer option when surge isn't active, but Buenos Aires Uber drivers have a reputation for canceling Ezeiza pickups — the long drive back empty doesn't appeal. Surge pricing during peak arrivals can double the fare without warning.

  6. Airport Remis Counters

    Several remis companies operate walk-up counters at Ezeiza with fixed rates. Quality varies — some are polished operations, others feel improvised. Limited English across the board. You might get a solid driver or a chain-smoker in a rattling Peugeot. Luck of the draw.

  7. Aerobus Shuttle

    Shared shuttle running between Ezeiza and downtown hotels. Very affordable — roughly a third of a taxi fare — but the route meanders through multiple hotel stops and can take well over an hour. Fine if you're patient and traveling light.

Last verified by automated review (v1.7.2) on May 26, 2026. What is automated review?

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