If Gdynia is your base on the Polish Baltic coast, the journey from the airport is straightforward, but it is worth a moment's planning. The city lies about 30 km north of Gdańsk Airport (GDN), reached along the S6 expressway and the Tri-City ring road. A direct car journey takes roughly 30 to 40 minutes, depending on the time of day and traffic around the conurbation. Gdynia is the northern end of the Tri-City, so it is a little further than Sopot or central Gdańsk — and that small extra distance is exactly why comparing your options pays off.

Gdynia sits on the same SKM commuter line as the rest of the Tri-City, so it is well served by rail, road and taxi. Below we break down the four genuine ways to get there, when each one makes sense, and where we are honest that another choice may save you money.

Your options at a glance

There are four realistic ways to travel from Gdańsk Airport to Gdynia. Each suits a different kind of traveller, depending on your budget, your group size and how much luggage you are carrying.

OptionTotal timeTypical costBest for
PKM + SKM train (one change)~1h – 1h 20min11–15 PLN per personSolo budget travellers
Taxi or ride-hailing app~30–40min, direct110–190 PLN, variableLate solo arrivals in light traffic
Rental car~30–40min driving120–250 PLN/day + fuel + parkingIndependent road-trippers
Private ShuttleHero transfer~30–40min, directfrom 160 PLN per car (1–3); 210 PLN up to 8Couples, families, groups, anyone with luggage

Option 1: Private transfer (door-to-door)

A private transfer is the most direct way to reach Gdynia. Your driver waits in the arrivals hall with a name sign, helps with your luggage, and drives you straight to your hotel, apartment or the marina — no changes, no waiting, no dragging suitcases between platforms.

With ShuttleHero the price is fixed from 160 PLN for 1 to 3 passengers and 210 PLN for a larger group of up to 8 — that is the price for the whole car, not per person. It covers everything: flight tracking (if your plane is late, the driver simply waits, with 60 minutes of free waiting time built in), child seats (30 PLN) in any size, and unlimited luggage in the boot. There is no night surcharge, so a 02:00 arrival costs the same as a midday one. We are a family business that has completed more than 5,000 transfers since 2018, and we operate 24/7.

  • Pros: fastest and most comfortable; fixed price for the whole car; door-to-door; flight tracking; child seats 30 PLN (~€8); no luggage limit; no night surcharge; available at any hour.
  • Cons: more expensive than the train for a solo traveller travelling light.

Option 2: Train (the honest budget pick)

We will be straight with you: for one person travelling light, the train is the cheapest option. Gdynia sits at the northern end of the busy SKM Tri-City line, but there is no direct service from the airport terminal, so the journey has two legs. First you take the PKM (Pomeranian Metropolitan Railway) train from the airport station to Gdańsk Wrzeszcz. From there you change onto a frequent SKM train heading north through Sopot and ride to the end of the line at Gdynia Główna, the city's main station.

All in, you are looking at roughly 11 to 15 PLN per person and a total journey of about 1 hour to 1 hour 20 minutes, including the change and any platform waiting time. Gdynia Główna sits a short walk from Kościuszki Square and the seafront, though if your hotel is up on Kamienna Góra or out in Orłowo you will still finish with a climb or a short local ride.

  • Pros: by far the cheapest for a single traveller; SKM trains run very frequently in the daytime; the station is central and well connected.
  • Cons: a change at Wrzeszcz with luggage; the ride is longer than to Sopot; services thin out late at night; the price advantage disappears the moment two or more people travel together, and you still finish with a walk to your hotel.

Option 3: Taxi or ride-hailing app

A licensed airport taxi or a ride-hailing app is a genuine option, especially for a solo traveller arriving in light traffic. Because Gdynia is the furthest of the Tri-City cities from the airport, expect to pay roughly 110 to 190 PLN, but the key word is roughly — the meter or app price depends on traffic, time of day and demand, and prices surge in the evening, at weekends and during festivals.

  • Pros: direct and door-to-door; no need to book ahead; convenient for a single traveller with one bag.
  • Cons: the price is not fixed and can climb sharply at busy times; the meter keeps running if you hit traffic on the ring road; no guarantee of a child seat; you queue for a car rather than being met.

Option 4: Rental car

Renting a car at the airport gives you total freedom and works well if Gdynia is one base on a wider trip around Pomerania. A small car costs roughly 120 to 250 PLN per day before fuel, plus parking. Bear in mind that central Gdynia is a paid-parking zone, spaces near the marina and the beaches are scarce in summer, and many hotels charge extra for parking.

  • Pros: full independence; good value if you are touring the region for several days; you keep the car for trips to the Hel Peninsula, Kashubia or the Kashubian lakes.
  • Cons: you drive after a flight, often tired; parking in the city is limited and paid; rental excess, fuel and parking add up; not worth it just to cover the 30 km from the airport.

Which option for whom?

Here is our honest verdict, traveller by traveller:

  • Solo backpacker on a tight budget: take the train. At 11 to 15 PLN it is unbeatable, the SKM runs every few minutes by day, and Gdynia Główna is central.
  • Couple or family: take a private transfer. Once you multiply train tickets by two, three or four people — and add the longer ride, a change at Wrzeszcz and a walk or local taxi to your hotel with luggage — the fixed 160 PLN car price becomes the smart choice, and you arrive relaxed.
  • Group of 4 or more: a private transfer at 210 PLN for up to 8 is comfortably the cheapest and easiest option per head.
  • Multi-day road-tripper: rent a car — you will use it for far more than the airport run.
  • Anyone arriving late at night, with children, or with a tight schedule: a private transfer is the only option that adapts to your flight, includes a child seat, and never carries a night surcharge.
The maths most people miss: the train looks cheapest until you count heads and luggage. Two adults pay around 22 to 30 PLN one-way plus the time and effort of a change at Wrzeszcz and a walk to the hotel — and Gdynia is a longer ride than Sopot. A fixed-price private transfer at 160 PLN for the whole car closes that gap fast, and for a family of four it is both faster and, all-in, often cheaper. See exact pricing on our Gdańsk Airport to Gdynia transfer page.

What to do once you reach Gdynia

Gdynia is unlike its older neighbours. Where Gdańsk is medieval and Sopot is a Belle Époque spa town, Gdynia is a child of the twentieth century: a fishing village that grew into a major port in barely two decades, leaving behind one of Europe's finest collections of modernist architecture. It is a city of clean lines, sea air and a genuine working waterfront.

  • Walk the South Pier and Kościuszki Square: the wide square runs down to the marina and the pier, where two museum ships — the tall ship Dar Pomorza and the warship ORP Błyskawica — are moored and open to visitors.
  • Visit the Gdynia Aquarium: set right on the pier, it is a long-standing favourite with families and an easy stop in any weather.
  • Climb Kamienna Góra: a short funicular or a steep walk takes you to a hilltop viewpoint with a sweeping panorama over the bay, the port and the Tri-City coastline.
  • Explore the modernist trail: the streets around 10 Lutego and Świętojańska are lined with white, ship-like buildings from the 1930s — Gdynia is one of the best places in Europe to see interwar modernism in everyday use.
  • Head to Orłowo: on the southern edge of the city, the Orłowo cliff, its small wooden pier and a quiet beach make a calm contrast to the busy centre.

Gdynia also makes a fine base for exploring the rest of the region. From here it is a short hop south to Sopot and on to Gdańsk's Old Town, and the Hel Peninsula is within easy reach. If you would rather see all three Tri-City centres in one relaxed day with a driver, our private Tri-City tour links Gdańsk, Sopot and Gdynia door to door. And if you are still mapping out your trip, our roundup of the best day trips from Gdańsk puts Gdynia in context alongside Malbork, Hel and Toruń. For the neighbouring resort, see our guide to getting from the airport to Sopot.

Frequently asked questions

How far is Gdynia from Gdańsk Airport?

Gdynia is about 30 km north of Gdańsk Airport, via the S6 expressway and the Tri-City ring road. By car the journey takes roughly 30 to 40 minutes, so you can be at your hotel near Kościuszki Square within about three quarters of an hour of clearing arrivals.

What is the cheapest way to get from Gdańsk Airport to Gdynia?

For a solo traveller, the SKM/PKM train is cheapest: take the PKM train from the airport to Gdańsk Wrzeszcz, then change to an SKM Tri-City train heading north to Gdynia Główna. Tickets total roughly 11 to 15 PLN, but you change once and the trip takes about 1 hour to 1 hour 20 minutes.

How much is a private transfer from Gdańsk Airport to Gdynia?

A private ShuttleHero transfer costs from 160 PLN for the whole car (1 to 3 passengers) and 210 PLN for up to 8. It is a fixed door-to-door price with flight tracking, child seats (30 PLN) and a driver waiting in arrivals — no night surcharge and no extra charge for luggage or a delayed flight.

How long does the transfer from Gdańsk Airport to Gdynia take?

In normal traffic a direct transfer takes 30 to 40 minutes. On summer Saturday afternoons between June and August, and during big events like the Open'er Festival, add 15 to 20 minutes. Your driver knows backup routes if the main road is busy, and the price stays fixed regardless.

Is there a direct train from Gdańsk Airport to Gdynia?

No. There is no direct rail link from the terminal. You first take the PKM local train to Gdańsk Wrzeszcz, then change onto the SKM Tri-City line toward Gdynia and ride to the end of the line at Gdynia Główna. The connection is reliable but involves one change with your luggage.

Ready to skip the changes? Book a fixed-price Gdańsk Airport to Gdynia transfer in 3 minutes. Door-to-door, flight tracking, child seats 30 PLN (~€8), 24/7, no night surcharge. Book your transfer.