Durham, North Carolina, might not be the first place you think of when planning a Southern getawayâbut once youâre here, youâll wonder why you didnât come sooner. Iâve spent months exploring this city as both a visitor and a travel writer, and one question I often get asked is deceptively simple:
“How do people get around in Durham?”
To the untrained eye, Durham seems like a drive-everywhere kind of town. But after living here and talking to localsâriders, walkers, students, chefs, professorsâIâve learned thereâs more nuance to how people navigate this beautiful, art-filled, food-obsessed community.
So this guide is for the first-timers: the foodies looking to eat their way through downtown, the Duke fans heading to a game, and the travelers just hoping not to get lost at the bus stop. Below are ten practical, honest, and experience-tested transportation options in Durham that locals actually useâplus some insights to help you choose what works best for you.
1. đ Car Is KingâBut Only If You Know Where to Park
Letâs start with the obvious: Durham is largely car-dependent. The Triangle area (Durham-Raleigh-Chapel Hill) was built for drivers, and while thatâs changing, youâll still find most locals hopping in their own vehicles to get around.
I rented a compact from RDU airport the first time I visited Durham. It was cheap, convenient, and made everythingâfrom trips to Eno River State Park to late-night food runsâeasier. Most residents I met have a car, or at least access to one.
Butâand this is a big butâparking downtown can be hit or miss. Some spots are free, some are time-limited, and many are part of the dreaded âpay-by-appâ system. So my advice?
- Download the ParkDurham app before you go.
- Always read the signage (Durham meters are strict).
- Many downtown restaurants offer validated parkingâask your host or server.
đĄ Booking Tip: For car rentals, Iâve had the best luck using Kayak or Expedia for last-minute deals. Pro tip: pick up and return at the airport. Itâs usually cheaper than downtown.
2. đ GoDurham Buses: Yes, Locals Use Themâand So Can You
Public transportation in Durham might surprise you. The GoDurham bus system, run by the city, is one of the most accessible and well-connected systems Iâve used in a mid-sized American city.
These arenât grey, grimy relics of the pastâtheyâre clean, mostly on-time, and completely free to ride as of my last visit. Iâve chatted with nurses, students, and retirees riding Route 5 down Chapel Hill Road or Route 10 across downtown.
If you’re staying near downtown, East Durham, Duke, or South Square, you’re golden.
đ Traveler Tips:
- Use Google Maps or the Transit App to plan routes.
- Avoid early mornings and late nights unless youâre comfortable waiting.
- Most routes run every 30 minutes.
This is one of Durhamâs best-kept secrets for budget travelers.

3. đ´ââď¸ Cycling Is Growingâand Scenic
Durham is no Copenhagen, but itâs making big strides in becoming more bike-friendly. The American Tobacco Trail, which runs through Durham and beyond, is a local treasure. I rented a bike and pedaled all the way from downtown to Southpoint Mallâshaded trees, art installations, and zero car traffic.
Youâll also find many locals using bikes for short commutes around the Duke campus or between neighborhoods like Trinity Park and Golden Belt.
There are bike lanes, though theyâre still spotty. That said, if youâre confident on two wheels, Durham rewards you with beauty and quiet.
đ´ââď¸ Pro Tip: Rent from Bullseye Bicycle or Durham Cycles. Or book in advance using Spinlister, a peer-to-peer bike rental platform.
4. đśââď¸ Downtown Is Delightfully Walkable
If you’re staying in downtown Durham, you honestly wonât need a car for most of your exploring. The core is incredibly walkable, with wide sidewalks, good lighting, and a real sense of community.
From the Durham Performing Arts Center (DPAC) to the food mecca of Main Street, everythingâs about a 10-minute stroll. And the walking experience is immersiveâevery mural, every local coffee shop, every small park adds to the city’s personality.
đ My Walking Loop: Start at Durham Central Park, grab coffee from Cocoa Cinnamon, head south past the Mural Alley, and end at American Tobacco Campus for lunch.
5. đ Rideshares: Uber & Lyft Are Alive and Well
Like most American cities, Durham leans on rideshare apps for convenience. Iâve used Uber dozens of timesâespecially when heading back late from a show at Motorco or a nightcap at Alley Twenty Six.
Lyft also operates here, and Iâve found drivers to be friendly, quick, and familiar with the town. Prices are reasonable, especially outside peak hours.
đ¸ Money-Saving Tip: Consider downloading Hopper or Freebird, which sometimes offer cash back on ride bookings when linked to your credit card.
6. đ Duke Transit: The Campus Bus Locals Actually Use
Before I ever stepped foot in Durham, I had no idea that Duke University offered a full-fledged, free-to-ride campus transit system. While itâs primarily built for students and faculty, it also serves large parts of central Durhamâand many locals know how to take advantage of it.
The Duke buses are clean, fast, and reliable. I used them often when staying near Ninth Street. If you’re near the Duke East or West Campus, these shuttles are an easy, quiet way to get aroundâespecially if you’re visiting the Sarah P. Duke Gardens, Nasher Museum, or going to a Blue Devils game.
đ§ Tip for Visitors:
- Download the TransLoc app to track Duke buses in real-time.
- The âC1â and âLLâ lines are great for seeing large parts of the city for free.
I met a local who works downtown and takes Duke Transit to her job daily. âItâs faster than GoDurham during rush hour,â she told me. âAnd warmer in the winter.â
7. đ´ Electric Scooters: Fast, Fun, and Everywhere
Durhamâs streets are full of Bird and Lime scooters, especially downtown and around Duke. I was skeptical at first, but one spontaneous ride along Blackwell Street changed my mindâitâs like teleportation with a breeze.
Locals use them for short tripsâto the bar, to class, to the gym. Iâve ridden them from American Tobacco Campus to Durham Bulls Athletic Park more times than I can count.
đ´ Insider Tips:
- Download the Bird or Lime apps before you arrive.
- Helmets arenât enforced but strongly recommended.
- Always check for âno ride zonesâ around university areas.
Theyâre especially fun at nightâjust ride responsibly, and remember that sidewalks are off-limits.
8. đ Zipcar and Turo: For When You Just Need a Car for a Few Hours
When I lived in a studio near downtown, owning a car didnât make sense. But when I needed to get to Raleigh-Durham International Airport (RDU) or hit the trails in Orange County, I used Zipcar or Turo.
- Zipcar lets you borrow cars by the hour, and there are locations across Durham, including Duke University.
- Turo is like Airbnb for cars. I rented a hybrid for \$35/day to explore the countryside.
đĄ Tip: Book early on Turo.com or Zipcar.com and filter for âfree deliveryâ to your hotel or Airbnb. Itâs far cheaper than traditional rental companies for short trips.
9. 𼞠Trails & Greenways: A Transportation Mode for the Soul
You wouldnât normally think of hiking as âtransportation,â but Durhamâs trails are so interconnected that walking or biking them can actually replace a carâespecially if you’re staying a few days.
My favorite? The Ellerbe Creek Trail, which runs through neighborhoods and parks, giving a peaceful, car-free route from downtown to North Durham. Locals use it to walk to yoga, commute to work, or even just grab a coffee.
đż Donât Miss:
- American Tobacco Trail (for long bike rides)
- Third Fork Creek Trail (near South Durham)
For many Durhamites, these trails are more than recreationâtheyâre the commute.
10. đ GoTriangle: The Regional Lifeline
When you need to get beyond Durhamâto Raleigh, Chapel Hill, or even the airportâGoTriangle buses are your best friend. I used Route 400 to get to downtown Raleigh and Route 700 for trips to UNC.
These buses are clean, relatively fast, and shockingly cheap (less than \$3 for most routes).
đ Best Use Cases:
- Getting to RDU Airport cheaply
- Traveling between Duke and UNC
- Accessing regional festivals or sporting events
GoTriangle even has Wi-Fi on board, so I caught up on emails while watching the pine trees fly by.

đ§ł Bonus: 5 Travel Platforms I Recommend for Getting to & Around Durham
Planning your Durham adventure? These are the tools I rely on again and again:
- Hopper: Predicts flight price drops and alerts you.
- Expedia: Great for bundling hotel + flight + car rental.
- Rome2Rio: Helps you map out multiple transport modes across cities.
- Uber and Lyft: For point-to-point in Durham.
- OpenTable: Reserve seats at busy Durham restaurantsâespecially helpful on game weekends.
These platforms are traveler-tested and local-approved. Iâve booked hotel stays through Expedia for less than \$100/night near Duke, and scored sub-\$200 roundtrip flights through Hopper.
đŚMoving Like a Local, Feeling Like One Too
If youâre a first-time visitor to Durham, let me say this: donât obsess over renting a car. Take a chance. Ride the bus. Borrow a bike. Hop on that oddly parked scooter and explore a side street youâve never heard of. Sit next to a Duke student and ask where they get late-night snacks. Walk instead of driveâDurham gives back when you take your time.
Because here in Durham, getting around isnât just about movement. Itâs about connection.
So pack light. Download a few apps. And remember: the way you move through Durham might just change the way you see it. It did for me.
And thatâs why I keep coming back.