Valencia: 24 or 48-Hour Hop-on Hop-off Bus Ticket

REVIEW · VALENCIA

Valencia: 24 or 48-Hour Hop-on Hop-off Bus Ticket

  • 3.95,611 reviews
  • 1 - 2 days
  • From $31
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Operated by VIAJES TRANSVIA TOURS, S.L. · Bookable on GetYourGuide

Valencia is easier when you stop fighting the map. This hop-on hop-off bus ticket gives you 17 stops plus an audio guide, so you can ride, get off, and explore on your schedule. It’s a practical way to connect Valencia’s big modern sights with the working city around it.

I love that you can build your own day: do one full loop for orientation, then return the next day to the places you actually care about. I also like the multilingual audio guide (a lot of language options), which keeps the experience moving even when you’re doing short stops.

The main thing to consider is that audio and boarding flow can be a bit uneven depending on where you sit and when you arrive. Give yourself a small time buffer at busy stops and be ready to adjust your seat or earphone choice.

Key Things I’d Focus On Before You Ride

Valencia: 24 or 48-Hour Hop-on Hop-off Bus Ticket - Key Things I’d Focus On Before You Ride

  • 17 hop-on stops across Valencia, from Poeta Querol through IVAM
  • 24- or 48-hour flexibility, ideal for mixing riding time and walking time
  • Audio guide included with many languages, letting you learn as you pass landmarks
  • No admissions included, so you’ll still pay entry for museums/aquariums/zoos you choose
  • Wheelchair accessible, and the route is designed for getting around the main areas

Why This Bus Ticket Works So Well for Valencia

Valencia: 24 or 48-Hour Hop-on Hop-off Bus Ticket - Why This Bus Ticket Works So Well for Valencia
Valencia is one of those cities where things spread out. You’ve got a major modern complex (the City of Arts and Sciences), a big zoo option (Bioparc), the port and beachfront areas, and plenty of museums scattered through the neighborhoods. Walking everything can be exhausting fast. This bus solves that problem with simple hop-on hop-off freedom.

The route also helps you understand Valencia’s layout. Even if you only stay on the bus for part of the day, you start to see which sights cluster together and which ones require a real walk from stop to stop. That matters because it lets you plan smarter the moment you get off.

Two practical wins:

  • You can do a first pass to get oriented quickly.
  • You can return later to the exact stops that match your interests—beach time, architecture, art museums, or animal encounters.

Just remember: this is transportation + audio, not a museum pass. If a stop includes an attraction with a ticket booth, you’ll still need to pay admission separately.

A few more Valencia tours and experiences worth a look

24 Hours vs 48 Hours: Pick the Right Tempo

Valencia: 24 or 48-Hour Hop-on Hop-off Bus Ticket - 24 Hours vs 48 Hours: Pick the Right Tempo
The big decision is time. Both options work, but they fit different travel styles.

24-hour ticket: best for a focused highlights day

A 24-hour pass is great if you want:

  • one loop to see the layout,
  • then a few strategic get-offs.

If you’re short on time, I’d treat your day like this: ride the full route once, then spend your remaining hours only where you really want to walk around. Valencia’s top sights are spread out enough that you’ll appreciate the redundancy.

48-hour ticket: best for a two-day Valencia rhythm

I usually recommend 48 hours if you like breathing room. With two days, you can:

  • do a full ride on Day 1 to learn and orient,
  • then build a more relaxed Day 2 around the stops that felt worth it.

This is especially helpful for attractions that take more time (for example, if you plan to enter Oceanogràfic or Bioparc). It’s also nice for art museums, because you can wander longer without feeling like you’re racing the bus schedule.

Getting On at Pintor Sorolla: Start Smart, Avoid Stress

Valencia: 24 or 48-Hour Hop-on Hop-off Bus Ticket - Getting On at Pintor Sorolla: Start Smart, Avoid Stress
Your start point is C. del Pintor Sorolla, 2, near stop 1. The system also works like this: your voucher needs to be exchanged for the actual ticket inside the bus, and you can do that at any stop.

That small detail saves trouble. Instead of hunting down a separate pickup office, you can exchange when you board. Still, I’d do one thing to reduce friction: arrive at your first boarding stop with a little extra time and double-check you’re at Pintor Sorolla before the first ride you want.

Also note the basic onboard rules: pets aren’t allowed, and you shouldn’t smoke or eat on the vehicle. If you’re traveling with kids or want to snack, plan that walk-and-museum routine after you get off.

The Route in Plain English: 17 Stops You Can Actually Use

Valencia: 24 or 48-Hour Hop-on Hop-off Bus Ticket - The Route in Plain English: 17 Stops You Can Actually Use
The route covers 17 stops. Here’s how I’d think about each one so you can decide what to ride past and what to exit for.

Stop 1: Poeta Querol

This is your anchor stop for starting the ride. Use it to get your bearings. If you’re new to Valencia, stay on at first so the audio guide can set the scene before you start hopping off.

Potential drawback: if you rush to hop off immediately, you might miss the context the audio provides.

Stop 2: Plaza de Toros de Valencia

This stop is your connection to Valencia’s bullring area. Even if you don’t plan to go inside, it’s useful as a landmark and a reference point for the older, more traditional side of the city.

Stop 3: Fallas Museum (Museo Fallero)

This is where Valencia’s famous Fallas tradition lives year-round. If you’re curious about the city’s culture beyond the architecture, this stop gives you a clear entry point into what drives local pride.

Good use of your time: if you’ve only got a day, prioritize this over a second museum stop unless art/paintings are your main goal.

Stop 4: City of Arts and Sciences

This is the headline modern complex—big shapes, futuristic design, and an easy “wow” moment from the bus. Even if you don’t buy entry, the outside views help you understand why this area is so photographed.

Why it’s worth exiting: walking a bit here makes the design feel more human-scale than it does from the seats.

Stop 5: Oceanogràfic

If your goal is marine life, this is the stop you’ll care about. It’s one of the most time-consuming get-offs on the route, so don’t treat it like a quick photo stop.

Planning tip: if you’re doing Oceanogràfic, consider pairing it with the nearby modern sights on the same day, since everything is already in the same general zone.

Stop 6: C.C. Aqua (Aqua Multiespacio)

This stop adds practical value: it’s a shopping and services kind of stop. It can be useful if you need a break, a bathroom, or an easy regroup point between bigger attractions.

Stop 7: Veles e Vents / sailing area

This stop gives you a view toward the port-side energy—more open space, waterfront atmosphere, and a different Valencia vibe than the City of Arts and Sciences.

When to get off: if you want a calmer stroll after a long museum day, this is a good candidate.

Stop 8: Las Arenas (Les Arenes / Les Arenes area)

This is a beach-adjacent stop. Getting off here is one of the easiest ways to add a relaxing break without changing your whole plan.

I like it for this simple reason: it turns the bus ride into a full “Valencia experience,” not just a list of sights.

Stop 9: Port of Valencia

The port stop is good for perspective. You’ll see the working side of the city—ships, activity, and the sense that Valencia is connected to trade, not just tourism.

If you hate long walks: don’t overcommit here. A short look and a photo is enough for many people.

Stop 10: Av. de les Balears, 1 (Baleares area)

This stop is another reference point along the coastal/port corridor. It’s helpful for crossing areas without guessing which direction to walk.

Stop 11: Museu Històric Militar (Military History Museum)

If you’re into uniforms, equipment, or military history displays, this stop is your cultural wildcard. It’s not the kind of thing you stumble into by accident—so if you’re interested, hop off and check it out.

Time note: museum stops add time even if you move through quickly, so protect at least part of your day for them.

Stop 12: Museo de Belles Arts de València

Art lovers will recognize this as a major painting/art stop. This is the kind of place where getting off at the right time matters, because you’ll want a slower pace inside.

Best strategy: pair this with another art stop nearby if you’re on a 48-hour ticket.

Stop 13: Nuevo Centro

This functions like a “reset stop” (easy access to transit-like convenience and errands). It can be useful if you’re tired, need a break, or want an easy way to reposition yourself.

Stop 14: Dama Ibérica

This stop is tied to Valencia’s iconic public-art / sculpture presence. It’s an easy get-off because it’s memorable even if you don’t spend ages there.

Good for: quick exits between larger attractions.

Stop 15: Bioparc Valencia

This is Valencia’s animal-focused stop. Think: more time on your feet, more layers of exhibits, and a strong payoff if you like seeing habitats done well.

If you’re deciding between art and animals on a single day, I’d base it on your energy level. Bioparc tends to win when you want variety and don’t want museum-only afternoons.

Stop 16: Museu de la Història de València

This museum stop is for understanding the city beyond the headlines. It’s a strong choice when you want to connect the modern architecture to the people and history that shaped the place.

Stop 17: Institut Valencià d’Art Modern (IVAM)

IVAM is your modern art anchor on the route. If modern art is your thing, this is one of the best “endcap” stops because it helps balance the more traditional culture stops earlier in the day.

Audio Guide + Onboard Reality: How to Make It Sound Good

Valencia: 24 or 48-Hour Hop-on Hop-off Bus Ticket - Audio Guide + Onboard Reality: How to Make It Sound Good
You get an audio guide included with the bus ticket, with multiple language choices such as English, French, German, Spanish, Italian, Chinese, Portuguese, Japanese, Valencian, and Russian.

Most of the value here is practical:

  • You learn what you’re seeing without needing Wi-Fi.
  • You get quick context for each landmark as the bus passes.
  • You can decide whether it’s worth getting off at the next stop.

One thing I’d plan for: audio volume can vary. Some seats can be quieter depending on traffic and where you’re sitting, and earphones can sometimes not work as well from one spot to another. My advice is simple:

  • test the audio as soon as you sit down,
  • if it’s weak, switch seats or ask for help.

Also, since there’s no special “tour control” beyond the hop-on concept, treat boarding like normal city transport. If you care about a specific seat location for audio, arrive a bit early at your favorite stops.

Value Check: Is $31 a Good Deal?

Valencia: 24 or 48-Hour Hop-on Hop-off Bus Ticket - Value Check: Is $31 a Good Deal?
At about $31 per person for a 1–2 day option, you’re paying for three things:

1) transportation on the route,

2) multilingual audio,

3) insurance.

Admissions to sights are not included, so your real cost depends on whether you enter big-ticket attractions like Oceanogràfic or other museums at your chosen stops.

That said, this ticket often looks like good value because it prevents wasted time. Valencia can be manageable on foot, but only if you already know where you’re going. This pass gives you a map-like experience with the ability to adjust on the fly.

If you plan to enter at least a couple of paid attractions, you’re turning the bus into the connector between them. If you plan to mostly ride and do light exploring outside, you’ll still get a solid orientation and coastal views without paying entry fees.

Who This Bus Ticket Is Best For

Valencia: 24 or 48-Hour Hop-on Hop-off Bus Ticket - Who This Bus Ticket Is Best For
I’d especially recommend this ticket if:

  • you’re on a short trip and want to cover major areas without planning every route segment,
  • you like museums but also want beach/port time,
  • you travel with mixed interests (one person wants art, another wants animals),
  • you want a low-stress city overview that works even if your schedule shifts.

It can be less ideal if you hate timed rides or prefer walking only. Also, if you’re picky about audio quality, be ready to switch seats if your first try is too quiet.

Quick Decision Guide: Should You Book This?

Valencia: 24 or 48-Hour Hop-on Hop-off Bus Ticket - Quick Decision Guide: Should You Book This?
Book it if you want a smart Valencia starter. Do the first loop to learn the city from the included audio, then spend your time on the stops that match your energy.

Skip or reconsider if:

  • you already know you’ll only do one area deeply and won’t need the route,
  • you’re planning lots of paid admissions and you want to keep every hour completely self-directed without any bus time.

Overall, this is one of the simplest ways to see Valencia’s main highlights—modern architecture, the coast, and the museum-side of the city—without committing to a rigid plan.

FAQ

How long is the Valencia hop-on hop-off bus ticket valid?

It’s valid for 1 to 2 days, depending on whether you choose the 24-hour or 48-hour option.

How many stops are on the Valencia route?

The audio route includes 17 stops across the city.

Is the audio guide included, and what languages are available?

Yes, the audio guide is included, with languages listed as Spanish, Catalan, Chinese, English, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Portuguese, Russian (and Valencian is also part of the language set).

Do I need to pay admission at the stops?

Admission to sights is not included, so you’ll pay separately if you enter a museum, aquarium, or other paid attraction.

Where do I start, and what if I have a voucher?

You start at C. del Pintor Sorolla, 2. Your voucher must be exchanged for the bus ticket inside the bus at any stop.

Is the bus wheelchair accessible?

Yes, the experience is listed as wheelchair accessible.

Are pets allowed on the bus?

No, pets are not allowed on the vehicle.

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