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Madrid Hop-On Hop-Off Map: Stops, Lines, and Planning Guide

Read Madrid's HOHO map like a pro: every stop on the Red and Blue lines, interchange points, and a step-by-step planning guide.

2/5/2026
16 min read
Madrid hop-on hop-off sightseeing bus route map

The map is your most powerful planning tool. Spend five minutes with it before you board and you will save hours on the ground.

Madrid HOHO route map

Table of contents

How to read the map

The Madrid HOHO map shows two colour-coded loops overlaid on the city grid. Each numbered circle is a stop; arrows indicate direction of travel. Dashed lines connect stops that are shared by both lines.

  • Solid Red: Red line direction of travel.
  • Solid Blue: Blue line direction of travel.
  • Dashed connector: interchange or walking link between stops.

Key rule: the map shows sequence, not exact distance. Stops may be 200 m or 2 km apart depending on the segment.

Red Line stops

The Red line forms the historic core loop — covering the royal and Habsburg quarter, then sweeping through Gran Vía.

# Stop Name Walking Distance to Highlight
1 Puerta del Sol 0 m — you are here
2 Royal Palace / Almudena 150 m to palace gates
3 Plaza de España / Debod 300 m to Temple of Debod
4 Gran Vía West 0 m — street level
5 Cibeles 100 m to fountain
6 Atocha / Reina Sofía 250 m to museum entrance

Numbers are illustrative; confirm stop order on your operator's printed or digital map.

Blue Line stops

The Blue line arcs through the Paseo del Arte corridor and Retiro Park.

# Stop Name Walking Distance to Highlight
1 Cibeles 100 m to fountain
2 Prado Museum 80 m to main entrance
3 Retiro Park South 200 m to Crystal Palace
4 Thyssen Museum 50 m to entrance
5 Reina Sofía 150 m to Guernica hall
6 Atocha 300 m to station gardens

Interchange points

These stops appear on both lines and are where you swap without extra charge.

  • Cibeles: clearest interchange; shelters, signage, cafés adjacent.
  • Sol / Puerta del Sol: central but busy; allow extra time around midday.
  • Atocha area: useful if ending at Reina Sofía and rejoining either line.

Madrid HOHO detailed map

Distances and walking links

Some consecutive stops have short enough gaps to walk instead of waiting for the next bus.

Segment Bus Time Walk Time
Cibeles → Prado ~5 min ~10 min
Prado → Retiro ~4 min ~8 min
Royal Palace → Plaza España ~7 min ~15 min

Walking segments are useful when buses bunch or queues build at major stops.

Planning your day

Use the map as a three-step framework:

  1. Mark your must-see stops before you board — circle two or three per half-day.
  2. Identify your interchange — choose Cibeles if combining both lines.
  3. Note direction of travel — boards at the wrong stop face a full loop wait.
Morning:  Board Red line at Sol → hop off Palace (Stop 2)
          Return, continue to Debod area (Stop 3) — optional
Midday:   Swap to Blue at Cibeles (Stop 5 / Blue Stop 1)
          Hop off Prado (Blue Stop 2) → museum deep dive
Afternoon: Re-board → Retiro (Blue Stop 3) → relax
Evening:  Gran Vía neon loop on Red

Digital vs paper map

Format Pros Cons
Paper (at stop) Always visible, annotatable Can get wet/torn
Operator app Live headways, stop alerts Needs signal
Screenshot Works offline Static, no updates

Best practice: screenshot the stop list the night before; keep paper copy as backup.

Common map mistakes

  • Boarding in the wrong direction: check the arrow, not just the stop name.
  • Assuming stops are equidistant: the Retiro segment is longer than it looks.
  • Missing the interchange: Cibeles is the easiest crossing point — don't skip it.
  • Over-planning stops: two or three meaningful hop-offs per loop beats five rushed ones.

FAQ

  • Where do I get the official map? At your ticket collection point, major bus shelters, or the operator's website/app.
  • Is the map the same all year? Core stops are stable; special event routes may add or shift stops seasonally.
  • Can I use the map offline? Screenshot the digital version; paper copies are available at most stops.
  • Which line is longer? The Red line typically covers more distance; the Blue line is more concentrated around the art corridor.

About the Author

Madrid Travel Expert

Madrid Travel Expert

I built this guide to make your Madrid sightseeing effortless, insightful, and sprinkled with local tips you can actually use.

Tags

Map
Routes
Stops
Red Line
Blue Line
Madrid

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