The drive from Beirut and the airport up to the highest village in Lebanon — the route, the times, and how the winter road closes.
Bekaa Kafra sits at about 1,800 m — the highest village in Lebanon — up above Bsharri, across the Qadisha Valley. Almost everyone arrives by car or shared taxi (servees) up the same corridor from Beirut. There is no single through bus and no printed timetable: you travel up to Bsharri and arrange the last climb from there. This page lays out the route, roughly how long it takes, and the one thing that really changes the trip — in a winter storm the mountain road closes completely, so check the weather and 'Snow & the Road Up' on this page before you set out.
No through bus, and in winter the road can close
Getting here is a mountain drive, not a bus you can turn up for. The corridor is straightforward in good weather; the risk is winter — above about 1,500 m the roads shut in a storm, and Bekaa Kafra is well above that. Plan the drive for daylight and good weather, and if you can't drive, expect to change vehicles more than once.
Toward Beirut (by car): check the operator’s last departure.
Toward Beirut Airport (BEY): check the operator’s last departure.
Toward Beirut (without a car): check the operator’s last departure.
Routes in and out
Buses arrive at: Bekaa Kafra village
From Beirut (by car)
Operator
Own car or taxi
Booking
No reservation needed
Journey
about 2 to 2½ hours in good conditions (~100 km)
Last bus back
Toward Beirut (by car): check the operator’s last departure.
Good to know
Head north out of Beirut on the coastal Beirut–Tripoli motorway, turn inland around Chekka/Batroun, then climb through Amioun and Kousba to Bsharri. From Bsharri it is a short but steep last climb (roughly 15–20 minutes) up to Bekaa Kafra. The times are for good weather — the mountain section is slow, and slower still in rain or fog.
From Beirut Airport (BEY)
Operator
Booking
Connexion Transportation & Tourism
Coaches from Beirut (Charles Helou area) to Tripoli; ask about the onward shared minibus toward Bsharri.
Snow starts settling in the Bsharri district from around 700 m; by roughly 800 m you may need chains, and above about 1,500 m the roads close in a storm. Bekaa Kafra, at about 1,800 m, is well inside that zone, and the Bsharri–Cedars road is among the first to shut. Snow is cleared by the Public Works Ministry on the main roads and by the municipalities on the village roads, but a bad storm can cut the village off. Before a winter drive, check 'Snow & the Road Up' on this page and the forecast, and don't set out into a coming storm.
Summer: the village fills up
From June to September the diaspora comes home, and the feast of Saint Charbel (the third Sunday of July) draws pilgrims — so the roads and the village are at their busiest and rooms are scarce. See 'The Bekaa Kafra Year' on this page for the dates.
Check the operators
These are the routes and the usual patterns. For exact departure times, prices and to book, use the official pages — they are the authority:
Bsharri municipalityThe district's official site. Its most current storm, road and utility updates are posted on its Facebook page rather than the website.
These are the routes and the usual patterns. Exact departure times change with the season, so always confirm with the operator before you travel, and book the reserved routes ahead.
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Airport taxi or private transfer
Booking
No reservation needed
Journey
about 2¼ to 2¾ hours (~110 km)
Fare
a private taxi to the Bsharri area runs roughly $100–150, agreed before you set off (the official airport fare to Tripoli is about $80)
Last bus back
Toward Beirut Airport (BEY): check the operator’s last departure.
Good to know
The same corridor as from the city, plus the short hop from the airport on the south side of Beirut. Agree the fare in US dollars before you leave the airport, and carry small-denomination cash — cards are little use once you leave the city, and villages are effectively cash-only.
From Beirut (without a car)
Operator
Connexion coach to Tripoli, then a shared minibus
Booking
No reservation needed
Journey
the best part of a day, with a change in Tripoli
Last bus back
Toward Beirut (without a car): check the operator’s last departure.
Good to know
There is no direct bus. The reliable pattern is a Connexion coach from the Charles Helou area in Beirut up to Tripoli, then a shared minibus up to Bsharri, and finally a local servees or a lift for the last climb to Bekaa Kafra. Shared vans leave when they are full, not on a timetable, and run in daylight — don't count on getting all the way up late in the day. Older 'direct Dora–Bcharre van' details you may find online predate Lebanon's currency collapse; check on the spot before relying on them.