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Travel tips

Getting around Timor-Leste

Rentals, microlets, taxis, ferries — every mode of transport in one place, and how Stays of Timor knits them together.

A microlet pulling away from a shaded Dili street stop
  • Microlets US$0.25–0.50
  • No domestic flights
  • Ferries to Atauro
  • 4WD for highlands

Moving around a country with no domestic flights

  • 0 Domestic airports
  • 12 Mode options
  • $0.25 Cheapest fare (microlet)
  • ~9 hr Dili → Loré drive

Timor-Leste is small but slow. There are no domestic flights — every district is reached by road or sea — and "road" can mean anything from a brand-new sealed coast highway to a single-lane dirt switchback over a 2,000-metre pass. Within Dili you have plenty of cheap options: shared microlets buzz the main routes for a quarter, yellow shared taxis are everywhere, and ride-dispatch covers the rest. Outside the capital, your realistic choices narrow fast — an inter-city bus, a rented 4WD, a motorbike, or a charter with one of our local drivers.

Distances on the map are misleading. Dili to Baucau looks like 90 minutes; in practice it is three hours along a winding coast road. Dili to Maubisse is 70 km but climbs over a mountain pass that closes after heavy rain. Plan a buffer day, especially in the April–May shoulder when landslides are common.

One search, every option: Stays of Timor consolidates every transport option below into one searchable timetable + dispatch. Search transport →

Solo traveler — light, cheap, flexible

Mix-and-match each leg. Move with the locals.

  • Microlets across Dili for $0.25 a ride
  • Motorbike taxi (ojek) for short cross-town hops
  • Share taxi or inter-city bus to Baucau / Maubisse
  • Hostel-arranged van for the Atauro pier run

Family with kids — comfort & buffer

Door-to-door, child seats, a driver who knows the road.

  • Rental 4WD for the highland loop
  • Dedicated van + driver for full-day trips
  • Premium taxi for airport pickups, evenings
  • Private ferry cabin on the Berlin Nakroma
A Suzuki Jimny 4WD parked on a Maubisse ridge
A Suzuki Jimny on the Maubisse ridge road — sealed but narrow, with switchbacks that open onto Mt Ramelau. The classic rental for the highland loop.

Transport modes

Eight ways to get from A to B in Timor-Leste, with rough fares and the Stays of Timor page where you can book or look it up.

  • Microlets (mikrolet)

    Dili's shared mini-van system. Fixed routes by colour and number. Just flag one down on any main street, pay the conductor in coins when you get out, and tap the roof when you want off. Use Stays of Timor's transport finder for the latest route colours.

    $0.25–0.50 per ride · 06:00–20:00

    See microlet routes on Stays of Timor →

  • Inter-city buses

    Dili to Baucau, Liquica, Maubisse, Suai and a few other district capitals. Wooden bench style — slow and bumpy but very inexpensive. Most depart from the Tasi Tolu and Becora terminals between 06:00 and 09:00.

    $5–15 · Daily morning departures

    See bus schedules on Stays of Timor →

  • Rental car (4WD recommended)

    Essential for anywhere outside Dili. Most rental fleets are Toyota Hilux or Prado. Bring an International Driving Permit plus your home licence — both are checked at police stops.

    $40–80/day · IDP required

    Browse car rentals on Stays of Timor →

  • Motorbike rental

    The cheapest way to explore. Helmet usually included. Great for Atauro, the Dili–Liquica coast, or weekend trips when you don't need to carry much. Stick to 125–150 cc if you're heading into the hills.

    $10–20/day · Helmet included

    Browse motorbike rentals on Stays of Timor →

  • Taxis in Dili

    Yellow shared taxis cruise the main avenues, blue taxis are private hires. No meters anywhere — agree a fare before you sit down. Airport to central Dili is typically $7–10.

    $3–10 per trip · Negotiate first

    Book a Dili ride →

  • Ride dispatch

    Stays of Timor's ride dispatch connects you to vetted local drivers when no taxi is nearby — useful for airport pickups, evening rides home, or longer charters to Baucau. WhatsApp confirmation, cash or SOTcoin on arrival.

    $5–15 · Dili + Baucau

    Request a ride →

  • Ferries (Berlin Nakroma)

    The government-run Berlin Nakroma runs from Dili port to Atauro Island (3 hrs, typically Saturdays) and overnight to Oecusse (12 hrs, weekly). Foot passengers only on Atauro day-trips; vehicles for Oecusse. Check the timetable before you travel — sailings change with weather and maintenance.

    $5 (Atauro) · $10 (Oecusse)

    Ferry schedules →

  • Atauro speedboat

    Twenty-five minutes versus the three-hour ferry. Several private operators run daily morning departures from Dili pier; return runs usually leave Atauro in the late afternoon.

    $20 one-way · 25 min

    Speedboat times →

Inter-city distances from Dili

Realistic drive times in a 4WD outside the wet season. Add 30–60% for an old bus or a heavy-rain day.

From To Distance Drive time Road condition
Dili Liquica 35 km 1 hr Sealed coast road
Dili Maubisse 70 km 2 hrs Mountain pass, sealed
Dili Baucau 130 km 3 hrs Sealed, scenic coast
Dili Lospalos 250 km 5–6 hrs Sealed to Baucau, mixed after
Dili Suai (south coast) 175 km 5–6 hrs Mountain pass + sealed
Dili Maliana 150 km 3.5 hrs Sealed
Dili Oecusse (via Indonesia) 200 km 6 hrs incl. border Sealed
Dili Atauro 30 km (sea) 25 min speedboat / 3 hr ferry Sea — Wetar Strait
The Berlin Nakroma ferry crossing the Wetar Strait to Atauro
The government-run Berlin Nakroma crossing the Wetar Strait — three slow hours to Atauro on Saturday morning, twelve overnight to the Oecusse exclave.

Driving in Timor-Leste

If you're hiring a car or motorbike, a few realities to internalise before you turn the key.

Rules and licences

  • Drive on the LEFT — same as Indonesia, Australia, the UK.
  • An International Driving Permit (IDP) plus your home licence is required and is routinely checked at police stops.
  • Speed limits: 50 km/h in town, 80 km/h on highways — but the road condition rarely lets you reach either.
  • Seatbelts in front; helmets on motorbikes for both rider and passenger.

Fuel

  • Pertamina (Indonesian state oil) and BNCTL-branded stations are present in every district capital.
  • Fill up in Dili before long trips — rural stations may be cash-only and many close on Sunday.
  • Carry a 5-litre jerry can for routes east of Lospalos or south of Maubisse.

Hazards on the road

  • Buffalo, goats, dogs and children share the asphalt — especially around villages at dawn and dusk.
  • Motorbikes overtake on the inside without warning. Always check your left mirror.
  • Mountain roads see monsoon landslides through April and May — ask your stay or check Stays of Timor's road status board before setting off.
  • Avoid driving after dark outside Dili: very few roads have lighting and many have no centre line.
"You learn the rhythm fast — a microlet at dawn down to the port, three slow hours on the ferry, then a driver who knows every pothole between Baucau and Loré. Nothing in Timor moves quickly, and that is exactly the point." — Long-stay traveller, Dili to Lautém
A motorbike taxi rider waiting for a fare on a Dili street corner
Motorbike taxi at a Dili street corner. A dollar gets you across town, helmet included — the fastest way through morning traffic between the waterfront and Comoro.

Border crossings into Indonesia

Three official land borders connect Timor-Leste to Indonesian West Timor. All require a valid Timor-Leste exit stamp and a visa or visa-on-arrival for Indonesia.

  • Batugade (north-west)

    The main land border to Indonesian West Timor — also called Motaain on the Indonesian side. Direct buses Dili–Kupang pass through here daily.

    Daily 09:00–17:00 · Visa on arrival USD 30

  • Salele (south)

    Smaller, less reliable hours; mostly local cross-border traffic. Suitable for travelers heading to Kefamenanu but not recommended without local knowledge.

    Variable hours · Confirm locally first

  • Wini → Oecusse

    Land route into the Oecusse exclave. The drive from Dili crosses two Indonesian villages along the way — you exit Timor-Leste at Batugade, cross West Timor, and re-enter at Wini.

    Daily 09:00–17:00

Offline in the Stays Traveler app

Stays Traveler (iOS / Android): Bundles offline maps with all transport stops, schedules and microlet route colours — useful when signal drops between Dili and Baucau, or anywhere south of the mountains. Download the country pack before you leave Dili.

Practical tips before you set off

  • Always check the day's weather before booking inter-city travel — April/May mountain passes close after heavy rain.
  • Take a hat, water and snacks on long bus rides; two-hour roadside breakdowns are not unusual.
  • Negotiate taxi fares BEFORE getting in — there are no meters and "later" never goes well.
  • For airport pickup, ask your stay to arrange a driver — they can spot the right passenger faster than you can spot the right car.
  • Keep small USD notes ($1, $5, $10) for fares — drivers and conductors rarely have change for a $20.
  • Carry photocopies of your passport and driving permit; the originals stay in the hotel safe.