Geelong's transport network is closely linked to its role as the largest regional city in Victoria and a significant commuter destination for Melbourne: the V/Line Geelong train service (the busiest regional rail line in Australia, with approximately 40,000 weekly passengers and services running from Geelong Station to Melbourne Southern Cross Station in 50-75 minutes) is the backbone of the city's public transport connectivity, and the Myki smartcard (used across all metropolitan Melbourne and V/Line services) provides integrated fare management for commuters. Within Geelong itself, the Geelong Local Buses (operated by CDC Victoria and Transit Systems on behalf of Public Transport Victoria) provide coverage of the Geelong urban area, connecting Geelong Station to the suburbs, the Geelong Waterfront, Deakin University, and the major shopping centres. The Geelong Ring Road (the Melbourne-Geelong highway bypass) and the Princes Freeway provide the main road connections to Melbourne and regional Victoria.
V/Line Geelong to Melbourne — the V/Line Geelong train service (operating from Geelong Station, Marshall, South Geelong, North Shore, Lara, Little River, and Werribee stations to Melbourne's Southern Cross Station) is one of Australia's busiest and most important regional rail links, providing a vital commuter and inter-city connection between the Geelong metropolitan area and the Melbourne CBD. Express services (Geelong to Southern Cross in 50 minutes, stopping at Marshall, South Geelong, North Shore, Lara, and Werribee) and stopping services (75+ minutes) provide a range of travel options. Myki cards, V/Line paper tickets, and contactless payments are all accepted.
Geelong Waterfront and City Centre on Foot and by Bike — Geelong's compact and walkable city centre (the Malop Street and Moorabool Street retail core, the Geelong Waterfront, and the Eastern Beach reserve) is most enjoyable on foot or by bike: the Geelong Waterfront Trail (a continuous sealed path from Rippleside Park in the north to Point Lonsdale in the south, 35km) and the Barwon River Trail (connecting Geelong city to Barwon Heads through Barrabool Hills) provide outstanding cycling infrastructure for both commuters and recreational cyclists. The Geelong Bikes share bicycle scheme (dock-based bicycles available from locations across the city centre and waterfront) provides casual bike access without ownership.
This article was compiled by AI and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.
Spread the word
Have your say
About this article
Published by The Daily Geelong
Daily brief
Enjoyed this? Wake up to Geelong news every morning.
Free, in your inbox before 7am. Weekdays.