Syracuse to North Elba Megabus

The Megabus corridor from Syracuse to North Elba covers 138 miles in roughly 3h 11m, with 12 scheduled departures most days. Floor fares start at $10 when booked far in advance.

From
$10
Typical max
$31
Travel time
3h 11m
Distance
138 mi
Daily runs
12×
Check live fares on Megabus →

Route overview

Megabus operates the Syracuse–North Elba corridor with 12 scheduled daily departures, primarily routed via Interstate 80 across the Great Plains. Most travelers book this route for a combination of low fare and frequency: even at the high end of the dynamic-pricing curve, it remains substantially cheaper than rail or rideshare for the same trip.

The total scheduled travel time of 3h 11m reflects driving time plus a short curbside boarding window at each end. This corridor typically runs nonstop with no scheduled meal break.

Where the bus stops

Syracuse departure: William F. Walsh Regional Transportation Center. Syracuse's intercity buses use the Regional Transportation Center, a multi-modal hub also serving Amtrak. Centro buses run from the RTC across Syracuse.

North Elba arrival: Lake Placid Olympic Center bus area. North Elba is the town containing Lake Placid in the Adirondacks, with intercity bus service at the Olympic Center. Lake Placid local buses and rideshare connect the Olympic Center across town.

Schedule and frequency

Megabus runs 12 scheduled departures per day on this corridor. Departure times shift seasonally and at weekends; the table below shows a representative weekday schedule. Always verify current departure times on Megabus before travel.

Depart SyracuseArrive North ElbaService
06:3009:41Standard
08:1511:26Express
11:0014:11Standard
14:3017:41Standard
17:4520:56Express
21:3000:41Overnight
23:1502:26Overnight
01:3004:41Express
For travelers tracking fare patterns across multiple corridors, several independent intercity bus fare-monitoring tools can ping you when this route drops below a price target.

Fares and how to book cheap

The Syracuse–North Elba Megabus fare floor is $10 when booked at the schedule open, typically 60 to 90 days in advance. Fares climb in tiers as seats sell — most travelers booking inside the two-week window pay $20 to $31, with same-day walk-up fares often at or above the typical maximum.

The cheapest departures on this corridor are mid-week (Tuesday and Wednesday), early Saturday morning, and early Sunday morning. Friday afternoon and Sunday evening are the most expensive slots and the first to sell out. Reserved seating runs an extra $5.00 to $8.00 on top of the base fare.

What to expect on board

Megabus uses single-deck or double-deck coaches on this corridor depending on demand. All buses include free onboard Wi-Fi (best-effort), 110V power outlets at every row, reclining leather or vinyl seats, and an onboard restroom. Standard luggage allowance is one personal item under the seat plus one underbus bag up to 50 lb included in the base fare.

Wi-Fi works well for messaging and email but is unreliable for video streaming, particularly in rural sections of the route. Outlets are functional at most rows; bring a 10,000 mAh battery pack as backup. Climate control runs cool — bring a layer regardless of season.

Megabus vs. Greyhound and FlixBus on this route

This corridor is also served by other intercity carriers in varying frequencies. Greyhound typically runs one to three daily departures with fares starting around $40, often using a dedicated terminal rather than the Megabus curbside stop. FlixBus may also serve this corridor with curbside service comparable to Megabus, sometimes at marginally lower fares for last-minute booking thanks to active promo-code campaigns.

If you ride this corridor regularly, an independent intercity-bus deal newsletter can flag price drops and route-specific discount codes worth tracking.

Tips for this corridor

  • Book at least 30 days in advance for the best fares; 60+ days lands the $10 floor when available.
  • Tuesday, Wednesday and Saturday-morning departures are cheapest.
  • Arrive at William F. Walsh Regional Transportation Center 15 to 20 minutes before scheduled departure with your ticket QR code and a photo ID.
  • Tag your underbus bag with name, phone, and destination — Megabus does not provide tags.
  • This route is short enough that there is no scheduled meal stop — eat before boarding.

Booking

Tickets for the Syracuse–North Elba route are sold only on the official Megabus website and the Megabus app. RouteRider does not sell tickets; we link directly to the operator booking page so you always pay the carrier price with no markup.

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