Ground transport from Amílcar Cabral International Airport
Amílcar Cabral International Airport (SID) sits inside the Amilcar Cabral, Cape Verde metropolitan area at roughly 177 feet of elevation. Ground transport into the city follows the standard pattern for a regional airport: licensed taxis, ride-hail apps, public transit (bus, metro or rail where it exists), and a rental-car centre. Pickup and drop-off rules differ by mode and by terminal, so glance at the published signage before you walk out of arrivals.
Licensed taxis
Licensed taxis are the most predictable option from SID into central Amilcar Cabral. They queue at a marked rank just outside arrivals, with published fares, surcharges and (where applicable) zone-based flat rates posted at the head of the rank. Always take the official cars rather than touts inside the terminal. Official drivers carry visible permits and use marked vehicles. Cash is accepted everywhere, but card readers are increasingly standard at major airports. Tipping practice follows local custom in Cape Verde.
Ride-hail apps
Ride-hail apps (Uber, Bolt, Grab, Didi, Lyft, Yandex, inDrive and the local equivalents, depending on the market) operate at most major airports. At Amílcar Cabral International Airport they generally use a dedicated pickup zone, sometimes one floor up at departures, sometimes in a separate lot reached by a short walk or shuttle. Prices move with demand and weather, so a quoted fare can change while you wait. Ride-hail tends to be cheaper than a metered taxi off-peak and roughly comparable at peak.
Public transit into Amilcar Cabral
Public transport from SID varies by city. At a regional gateway like Amílcar Cabral International Airport, expect at least an express bus into the city centre, often supplemented by a metro or commuter-rail link with frequent departures from early morning to late evening. Tickets are usually sold from kiosks, transit apps or contactless tap-to-pay readers at the gate, and some cities offer a discounted airport pass. Allow extra time for transit if you are travelling with heavy luggage. Many airport stations have stairs, escalators or transfers between modes.
Rental cars and driving
Rental car desks for the major brands cluster in a consolidated facility, either inside the terminal complex or a short shuttle ride from arrivals. Pre-booking online almost always beats walk-up rates, and reading the fuel and insurance policy at pickup avoids billing surprises at return. Driving in Cape Verde requires a valid licence. Some travellers will need an International Driving Permit alongside the home licence. Toll, fuel and parking norms vary widely by region.
Parking and drop-off
If you are arriving at Amílcar Cabral International Airport by car or being dropped off, the airport publishes a tiered parking menu: short-stay covered parking close to the terminals, long-stay value lots a longer walk or shuttle away, and dedicated drop-and-go lanes that limit you to a few minutes at the curb. Reserve long-stay parking online to lock in the discounted rate, and photograph your parking bay number before you walk into the terminal. Finding a car after a long trip is harder than it sounds.
Practical transport tips for SID
A few practical ground-transport tips for SID. Download the local transit and ride-hail apps before you land so you can request a ride on airport Wi-Fi. Carry small local currency for taxis that prefer cash. Double-check the terminal you actually need (a wrong-terminal drop-off can cost you 20 minutes). And book a pre-arranged transfer for a long-haul late-night arrival, when the last thing you want to do is negotiate prices after a 12-hour flight.
Continue planning your trip through SID
This is one of four planning guides for Amílcar Cabral International Airport. Browse the others or jump back to the full overview: