Compare Prices from All US Cities
| From | Airport | Est. Price | Flight Time | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
BESTBoston | BOS | $268 | ~7h | View → |
New York | LGA | $282 | ~8h | View → |
New York | JFK | $282 | ~8h | View → |
Newark | EWR | $284 | ~8h | View → |
Philadelphia | PHL | $290 | ~8h | View → |
Baltimore | BWI | $297 | ~8h | View → |
Washington D.C. | DCA | $300 | ~8h | View → |
San Juan | SJU | $308 | ~8h | View → |
Detroit | DTW | $318 | ~9h | View → |
Charlotte | CLT | $325 | ~9h | View → |
Chicago | ORD | $336 | ~9h | View → |
Atlanta | ATL | $344 | ~9h | View → |
Orlando | MCO | $345 | ~9h | View → |
Fort Lauderdale | FLL | $347 | ~9h | View → |
Nashville | BNA | $347 | ~9h | View → |
Miami | MIA | $349 | ~9h | View → |
Minneapolis | MSP | $349 | ~9h | View → |
Tampa | TPA | $352 | ~9h | View → |
St. Louis | STL | $354 | ~9h | View → |
Dallas | DFW | $399 | ~10h | View → |
Houston | IAH | $401 | ~11h | View → |
Denver | DEN | $406 | ~11h | View → |
Austin | AUS | $410 | ~11h | View → |
Salt Lake City | SLC | $429 | ~11h | View → |
Seattle | SEA | $437 | ~11h | View → |
Portland | PDX | $446 | ~12h | View → |
Phoenix | PHX | $456 | ~12h | View → |
Las Vegas | LAS | $457 | ~12h | View → |
San Francisco | SFO | $476 | ~12h | View → |
Los Angeles | LAX | $477 | ~12h | View → |
San Diego | SAN | $477 | ~12h | View → |
About Lisbon
Lisbon is the city Europeans have been quietly obsessed with for a decade while Americans were still fixated on Paris and Rome — and now the secret is fully out. Built across seven hills above the Tagus River, it has the architectural bones of a great imperial capital (which it was), the weathered beauty of a city that took centuries to rebuild after a catastrophic 1755 earthquake, and a food scene that punches far above its weight class. The light here is genuinely different — softer, more golden than anywhere else in Europe — and the city's famous miradouros (hilltop viewpoints) make that light impossible to ignore. Flights from the US East Coast land you here in 6-7 hours nonstop, making it one of the most time-efficient European capitals you can reach.
For Americans, Lisbon hits a sweet spot that few European cities match: English is spoken almost universally, prices are still meaningfully cheaper than London, Paris, or Amsterdam, and the locals have a warm, unpretentious relationship with tourists — they just don't want you showing up in Alfama at midnight playing loud music. The city runs on a combination of ancient trams, modern metro, and the sheer stubbornness of walking up and down hills. The food culture rewards curiosity: a 4-euro pastel de nata from the right bakery is one of the most genuinely pleasurable things you can put in your mouth in Europe, and the wine-to-price ratio for Portuguese vinho verde and Alentejo reds is absurd by American standards.
The biggest practical issue for Americans in 2025-2026 is that Lisbon has gotten expensive for what it is. Accommodation in Alfama and Bairro Alto now approaches Barcelona prices during summer, Airbnbs have been squeezed by new short-term rental regulations, and the city is actively grappling with overtourism in its most photogenic neighborhoods. The smart play is visiting in shoulder season (April-May or September-October), staying in Mouraria, Intendente, or Campo de Ourique rather than tourist-saturated Alfama, and treating day trips to Sintra and Cascais as mandatory rather than optional.
Lisbon is also the best base for exploring one of Europe's most underrated wine and food regions. The Alentejo is two hours by train, the Douro Valley where port wine originates is three hours north to Porto, and the entire Atlantic coast of Cascais and Estoril is 40 minutes by commuter rail. The city rewards repeat visits — most Americans who come once book a return trip before they leave. The flight prices have climbed since TAP's pandemic discounts, but deals from JFK, BOS, ORD, and IAD still drop into the $450-650 round-trip range if you set price alerts and move fast.
Best Time to Fly to Lisbon
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Track Lisbon flights →Airport to City: How to Get There
The Humberto Delgado Airport (LIS) is just 4 miles from the city center, which makes transit options genuinely excellent. Metro (Red Line): The fastest and cheapest option at €1.85 per trip with a reloadable Viva Viagem card (€0.50 for the card itself) — buy it at the airport station kiosk, ride directly to Baixa-Chiado or Marquês de Pombal in about 20 minutes. This is the move 90% of the time. Taxi/Rideshare: Uber and Bolt both operate reliably from arrivals; expect €8-14 to central Lisbon in normal traffic, €15-20 during rush hour — dramatically cheaper than most European capitals. Official taxis (green and black) are metered and also reasonable but slightly pricier than Uber. Aerobus (Bus 1): An express shuttle that runs two lines covering major hotel areas including Marquês de Pombal, Restauradores, and Praça do Comércio for €4 one-way; slower than metro during traffic but drops you closer to many hotel front doors.
Neighborhoods & Where to Stay
The oldest and most photographed neighborhood in Lisbon, draped in azulejo tiles and fado music spilling from restaurant windows. Staying here is atmospheric but increasingly expensive and chaotic — narrow streets mean no Uber access and heavy tourist traffic. Best specific hotel: the Santiago de Alfama boutique hotel for mid-range splurge. Eat at A Cevicheria's Alfama outpost or the no-name tasca at the corner of Rua dos Remédios and Rua do Vigário.
Lisbon's traditional bohemian quarter and nightlife epicenter — restaurants and wine bars in the day, packed bars and clubs at night. The neighborhood has gentrified but still has more grit and authenticity than Chiado. Stay here if you want to walk out your door and immediately start bar-hopping. Book at the Bairro Alto Hotel if budget allows — the rooftop bar has the best views in this price range.
Lisbon's most polished neighborhood, home to the city's best shopping, historic bookshops like Livraria Bertrand (world's oldest operating bookshop), and Michelin-starred restaurants. The Bairro Alto Hotel and Bettina & Niccolò Corallo chocolate café are both on the must-visit list. Expensive but central and walkable to almost everything — this is where you stay if you're doing Lisbon properly and budget is secondary.
The multicultural, genuinely local neighborhood adjacent to Alfama that most tourists skip entirely — and that's exactly why it's worth considering. Authentic Indian and Mozambican restaurants alongside Portuguese tascas, lower accommodation prices, and real neighborhood energy. The Intendente square nearby has been renovated beautifully. Stay at the Largo do Intendente guesthouse for €60-80/night when Alfama equivalents cost €120+.
Lisbon's most upscale residential neighborhood, filled with concept stores, antique shops, a Saturday organic market, and the city's best cocktail bars. The Embaixada shopping gallery (in a Moorish revival palace) and Pavilhão Chinês bar are landmarks. Short walk from Chiado and Bairro Alto — this is the best place to stay if you want a quieter, more residential feel with easy access to the action.
The historic western waterfront where Vasco da Gama departed and the original Pastéis de Belém bakery (open since 1837) still operates with a queue out the door. Not practical as a base for nightlife but excellent if you're heritage-focused — the Jerónimos Monastery and Monument to the Discoveries are walkable. Get here early to beat tour groups; the tram from Praça do Comércio takes 25 minutes and costs €3.
Daily Budget: What to Expect
$18 hostel dorm in Mouraria or Intendente, $20 food (€2 coffee and pastel de nata for breakfast, €8-10 lunch menu do dia with wine included at a tasca, €5 evening meal of prego sandwich and cerveja), $7 metro day pass, $10 free miradouros and one paid museum like MAAT (€7)
$80 3-star hotel or guesthouse in Chiado or Bairro Alto, $45 food (€5 breakfast at Mercado da Ribeira, €20 lunch with wine, €20 dinner at a proper restaurant), $10 Uber or metro for the day, $25 combination of paid attractions (Jerónimos €10, fado show entry fee €15)
$200-250 boutique hotel like Bairro Alto Hotel or Memmo Alfama, $80 food (€25 breakfast at hotel, €55 dinner at Belcanto or Alma with wine pairing), $25 private driver or taxis, $45 private Sintra tour or premium fado dinner show at Casa de Linhares
What to Eat in Lisbon
Pastel de nata at Pastéis de Belém (Rua de Belém 84) — the original recipe has been kept secret since 1837. The custard tart is served warm, dusted with cinnamon, and costs €1.35. Everything else calling itself a pastel de nata is a copy. Go on a Tuesday morning to avoid weekend queues.
Bacalhau à brás at any serious tasca — salted cod scrambled with thin-fried potatoes and eggs is Portugal's most beloved hangover cure and comfort food. The version at Solar dos Presuntos (Rua das Portas de Santo Antão 150) in Rossio is the benchmark: salty, eggy, deeply satisfying for about €18.
Prego sandwich at Café de São Bento (Rua de São Bento 212) — a thin-seared beef steak in a crusty roll with garlic butter and optional fried egg, eaten standing at the counter with a Sagres beer at 1pm. This is the working Lisbon lunch that no tourist food guide covers adequately. Under €8 total.
Grilled sardines during June-September at any miradouro food stall or at O Corvo (Rua Damasceno Monteiro 118) — Portuguese sardines are nothing like the tinned fish you know. Grilled whole over charcoal and eaten with coarse salt and crusty bread, they're the definitive taste of a Lisbon summer. Peak season sardines in June cost €6-9 for a full plate.
Arroz de lingueirão (razor clam rice) at Taberna da Rua das Flores (Rua das Flores 103) — soupy, intensely oceanic rice cooked to order in a clay pot with white wine and cilantro. One of Lisbon's best restaurants without a Michelin star, priced like a neighborhood joint (€16 per person). Reserve at least three days ahead.
Flying from the US to Lisbon
Airlines & Routes
- →TAP Air Portugal nonstop from JFK, BOS, EWR, MIA, ORD, SFO, and YYZ
- →United Airlines nonstop from EWR (Newark)
- →Delta nonstop from JFK (seasonal, summer)
- →American Airlines nonstop from JFK and PHL
- →Iberia via Madrid from multiple US cities
- →British Airways via London Heathrow from multiple US cities
- →Air France via Paris CDG from multiple US cities
- →Lufthansa via Frankfurt from multiple US cities
Flight Duration
Safety Tips
Lisbon is genuinely safe by European capital standards, but petty theft has escalated sharply with tourism volume — particularly on Tram 28 (the iconic yellow tram through Alfama), at Miradouro da Graça at night, and around Rossio station. Keep your phone in your front pocket or a crossbody bag when on crowded trams and in Alfama alleyways at night. The Tram 28 pickpocket problem is so well-documented that locals often avoid it entirely — take the metro to Alfama's base and walk up. Avoid the few blocks around Intendente late at night (it's improving but still sketchy post-midnight). Drug dealers operate openly near Cais do Sodré station late at night — just walk past and ignore them, they're not dangerous but can be aggressive. ATMs: use bank-branded ATMs inside branches rather than standalone street machines. The 'Multibanco' network (operated by Portuguese banks) charges no foreign fees with most US travel cards (Charles Schwab, Capital One). Never take the 'currency conversion in your home currency' option at ATMs — always pay in euros.
Buy a Viva Viagem reloadable transit card at the airport Metro station on arrival (€0.50 for the card) and load it with €10-15 — it covers all Metro, bus, and tram rides at €1.85 flat, and critically, you can use it to ride the commuter rail to Cascais (€2.35 each way) and Sintra (€2.45 each way). Most tourists don't realize this and either pay cash per ride at a premium or buy separate tickets. The same card also covers the cross-Tagus ferry to Cacilhas (€1.30) — a 10-minute boat ride that gives you the best possible skyline view of Lisbon for basically free, plus access to one of the city's best seafood restaurants, A Tasca do Chico, which only locals seem to visit.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the cheapest way to fly to Lisbon?
The cheapest route to Lisbon from the US is typically from Boston (BOS), with estimated round-trip prices around $268. Prices vary significantly by season and booking timing.
What is the best time to visit Lisbon?
The best time to visit Lisbon is April, May, September, October. Spring and fall are perfect — warm, sunny, not the summer inferno. July-August hits 95°F and every tourist in Europe is here. Shoulder season is ideal.
Do US citizens need a visa to visit Lisbon?
Visa-free for US passport holders for up to 90 days within any 180-day period (Schengen Area).
How long is the flight from the US to Lisbon?
Flight time from the US to Lisbon (LIS) is approximately 7 hours from Boston. Flight times vary by departure city — eastern US cities are typically shorter to Europe.
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