Bolivia flagTransportation & Infrastructure Guide · Bolivia

Transportation & Infrastructure Guide in Bolivia

Public transit, airports, and getting around

Bolivia's transportation infrastructure grapples with its landlocked status, Andean peaks, and lowland jungles, relying on a mix of roads (over 41,000 km, mostly unpaved), aging railways, river systems, and innovative cable cars. La Paz's Mi Teleférico—the world's longest urban cable car network—stands out, slashing commute times and boosting accessibility. Challenges include traffic congestion, poor road maintenance, and limited public transport capacity outside major cities, affecting its 11.7 million residents and visitors navigating this rugged terrain.
Public Transport
Moderate
Road Infrastructure
Below Average
Public Transport
5.2/10

Good urban options in La Paz with Mi Teleférico (10 lines, 36 stations, 3 BOB/ride) and buses like PumaKatari. Micros and trufis serve cities cheaply but overcrowding common. Only 12% of municipalities meet SDG 11.2 seat availability. Limited trains; poor rural integration.

Road Infrastructure
3.8/10

Over 41,000 km roads, but only 3% paved; 81% dirt tracks prone to landslides. Paved highways link major cities like La Paz-Santa Cruz, but mountain roads narrow/hazardous. Maintenance demands ongoing; traffic jams plague urban areas amid rapid urbanization.

Internet Speed
4.2/10

Average fixed broadband ~35 Mbps; mobile ~25 Mbps per 2025 Speedtest data. Urban fiber expanding in La Paz/Santa Cruz, but rural Andean/lowland gaps persist. Major providers Entel/Viva improving 4G/early 5G.

Avg: 35+ Mbps • Limited to urban centers; 20-30% national coverage, growing in cities

Airport Connectivity
6.8/10

205 airports total, 19 major; key hubs El Alto (LPB, world's highest), Viru Viru (VVI Santa Cruz). Good domestic coverage; international links to South America/Europe limited. Essential for rainy season when roads flood.

Hubs: El Alto-La Paz (LPB), Viru Viru-Santa Cruz (VVI), Jorge Wilstermann-Cochabamba (CBB)

Transportation Costs

Metro Pass
N/A (no monthly passes; pay per ride)
Bus Trip
2-3 BOB per ride (micros/trufis)
Taxi
5-10 BOB start + 2-5 BOB/km (trufis shared 2 BOB/person)
High-speed Train
N/A (no high-speed; regular train La Paz-Oruro ~20 BOB

Mobile Network

5G Coverage: Limited to La Paz, Santa Cruz, Cochabamba; Entel/Viva deploying 2024-2026
4G Coverage: 80-90% population coverage; strong urban, patchy rural/mountainous areas

Reliable Entel/Tigo/Viva networks; 4G dominant with good speeds in cities. Rural connectivity challenged by terrain; improving via satellite backhaul.

Driving License

IDP requiredConversion needed

Foreign licenses valid 90 days with IDP (required for non-Mercosur). Long-term residents must convert to Bolivian license via exam/translation. Drives on right; caution on unpaved roads.