This is the harsh reality budget airlines don’t mention when they advertise €9.99 flights to “Paris.” The airport is incredibly cheap for airlines to operate from, which keeps your ticket price low. But getting you into the actual city at midnight? That is entirely your problem, and the budget airlines take no responsibility for it.

What makes it drastically worse is the geography. Unlike CDG where the RER B train runs until 00:15 and night buses take over, or Orly where you have the T7 tram and OrlyBus, Beauvais has no rail connection at all. The local taxi supply is strictly limited to the town’s small fleet. Rideshare drivers based in Paris will absolutely not make a 90-minute, 85 km round trip at 2 AM to pick you up. Your options narrow incredibly fast as the clock ticks past midnight.

The Official Aerobus: Know Your Golden Window

The Aerobus shuttle is your absolute best friend β€” provided your flight lands in time. It’s cheap, relatively comfortable, direct, and drops you at Porte Maillot in central Paris, just steps from the MΓ©tro Line 1.

Everything you need to know about the night shuttle:

  • Last departure from the airport: 23:30 (11:30 PM) β€” the shuttle officially waits 20 minutes after each flight lands, but 23:30 is the strict, absolute cutoff point.
  • Price: €17 one-way (€16.90 if booked online in advance, with discounts for the first few seats booked).
  • Journey time: 75–90 minutes, though late at night without traffic, it usually takes closer to 70 minutes.
  • Destination: Boulevard Pershing, near the Porte Maillot MΓ©tro station (Line 1).
  • Frequency: Every 15–30 minutes, dynamically timed to match flight arrivals.

The shuttle does genuinely wait for late flights. If your plane is scheduled to land at 22:45 but touches down at 23:10, the bus will still be there. But if your flight is severely delayed and lands at 23:45 or later, you’ve missed it. The drivers go home.

Updated: April 2026

We stood in the Beauvais terminal at 1:17 AM watching the last shuttle’s taillights vanish into the darkness. No taxis waiting. No rideshare drivers within 30 km. Just us, two overstuffed bags, and the very real feeling of being completely stranded 85 km from Paris.

Our Ryanair flight had landed 90 minutes late β€” just enough to miss the 23:30 Aerobus. The terminal was emptying fast. The information desk was already closed. One couple near us was crying in front of the locked car rental desks. Another guy was desperately refreshing Uber, watching the surge pricing multiply with zero cars actually available.

If you’re reading this because you’re landing at BVA late, or you’re planning a trip and saw a suspiciously cheap evening flight, here’s exactly what to do β€” and what absolutely not to do β€” so you don’t end up where we were that night.

Why Beauvais at Night Is a Different Problem Entirely

Most Paris airport guides treat Beauvais like a minor inconvenience. It’s not. It’s a completely different beast after dark, and treating it like Charles de Gaulle (CDG) or Orly is a massive mistake.

Beauvais Airport sits 85 km north of Paris in a semi-rural area of the Oise department. During the day, the official Aerobus shuttle runs every 15–30 minutes and the situation is perfectly manageable. You grab a coffee, hop on the bus, and enjoy the French countryside. But after 23:30, the entire transport infrastructure stops β€” and absolutely nothing replaces it.

The terminal itself starts shutting down the moment the last scheduled flights are processed. Shops roll down their metal grates. The information desk goes dark. Security staff thin out to a skeleton crew. There are no 24-hour restaurants, no lively airport bars, and no convenience stores within walking distance of the airport. It is just the airport road, vast agricultural fields, and total darkness.

Book online before you fly. It saves you a fraction of a euro, but more importantly, it means you’re not fumbling with credit cards, trying to connect to airport Wi-Fi, or queuing at the physical ticket machines when you’re racing against the clock. We’ve seen panicking passengers sprint through baggage claim at 11:22 PM just to catch the last bus. It’s worth every breathless second β€” because missing it costs you ten times more.

Important update for 2026: Line A01 (the main route to Porte Maillot) has faced temporary suspensions due to Paris traffic restructuring. Line A02 to Saint-Denis UniversitΓ© is often used as the primary replacement. Always check the official Beauvais Airport website the week before you fly.

⚠️ Heads up: This post contains affiliate links. If you book or buy through them, we may earn a small commission β€” at no extra cost to you. We only recommend stuff we’d actually use ourselves.

And if you’re still in the planning phase and haven’t booked yet, always search for the best flight deals on Aviasales to compare whether a €20 flight to Beauvais is actually cheaper than a €60 flight directly to CDG once you factor in the transfer stress.

Safety, Food & Comfort at BVA After Midnight

If you’ve missed the bus and are trying to figure out your next move, you might be wondering what the conditions are like inside the terminal at 1 AM. Here is what you need to expect.

Is it safe? Yes, Beauvais Airport is very safe. It’s heavily monitored by French security forces and airport police. You won’t encounter pickpockets or scammers lurking inside the terminal at night simply because it’s too remote for casual criminals to reach. However, “safe” does not mean “comfortable.”

What about food and water? Do not arrive hungry. Every single cafΓ©, bakery, and Relay store closes shortly after the last scheduled flight arrives. Your only option for sustenance will be a few scattered vending machines that accept contactless payments. By 1 AM, the machines stocking water and decent snacks are often completely empty, having been raided by other delayed passengers.

Can you sleep there? Officially, the terminal closes for a few hours in the middle of the night (usually between 1:00 AM and 4:30 AM) after all passengers from delayed flights have been cleared out. The security guards will ask you to leave the building. Even if they let you stay in the arrivals hall due to severe weather, the seating consists of hard, metal benches with armrests designed specifically to prevent lying down. It is cold, brightly lit, and utterly miserable.

Pre-Booked Private Transfer: The Only Guaranteed Option

When the shuttle stops running, a pre-booked private transfer is the single option that guarantees you actually get to Paris. This is exactly what we should have done that night at 1:17 AM instead of frantically refreshing our phones hoping for a miracle.

Here’s why it works when everything else completely fails: your driver monitors your flight number in real time. If you land 2 hours late, they are still there waiting for you. If your flight is diverted, they adapt to the schedule. The price is 100% fixed β€” there are no sudden night surcharges, no hidden luggage fees, and no awkward negotiations at 1 AM in a half-empty parking lot.

We finally wised up and used Welcome Pickups on a return trip through Beauvais a few months after our stranding disaster. Our driver β€” a local guy who had been doing airport runs for nine years β€” was waiting right at the arrivals gate holding a digital sign with our name before we even cleared passport control. He helped with our bags, knew a route that bypassed the worst of the A1 motorway bottleneck, and had us at our Marais apartment door in exactly 78 minutes.

When we mentioned our previous nightmare, he wasn’t surprised at all. “People call my company from the terminal at midnight every week,” he said. “It is always the exact same story β€” budget airline, huge delay, missed shuttle.”

Typical prices from Beauvais to Paris centre:

  • Standard car (1–3 passengers): €110–170
  • Executive car: €150–200
  • Van (4–7 passengers): €180–220

Yes, it’s significantly more expensive than the €17 shuttle. But if you split a €140 fare between two people, it becomes €70 each. For that price, you arrive directly at your hotel door safely, instead of being dumped at Porte Maillot at 2:00 AM trying to navigate the Parisian night bus network.

What a private transfer does that local taxis simply cannot:

  • Your driver is confirmed days before you land β€” no searching, no queuing, no hearing “sorry, no cars available.”
  • Fixed price set at the moment of booking β€” no taxi meter running wildly through Paris traffic at 2 AM.
  • Flight monitoring is included automatically β€” your delay becomes their delay, and they wait for free.
  • Professional, insured, licensed English-speaking drivers β€” not whoever happened to be desperate enough to sit in the taxi rank.

You must book at least 24 hours before your flight. Same-day bookings are sometimes possible, but driver availability drops incredibly sharply for late-night airport runs.

Local Taxi: The Expensive, Stressful Gamble

Let’s be brutally honest about grabbing a taxi from Beauvais at night: it is a massive gamble, not a reliable plan.

The standard taxi fare from Beauvais Airport to central Paris runs about €185 during the day. Night rates β€” which officially apply from 19:00 to 07:00 β€” push that base fare to €185–230. Add the mandatory airport pickup surcharge (€3), tolls on the A16 motorway (usually €10–15), and surcharges for extra luggage or a 4th passenger, and you’re easily looking at a €220–250 ride.

And that’s the price if you can actually find one.

Beauvais taxi companies operate with very limited fleets. At midnight, most drivers are at home sleeping, not sitting at the remote airport waiting for a delayed Ryanair flight. Calling the dispatch numbers works sometimes, but the response time is typically 20–30 minutes just for the car to arrive. We’ve spoken to travelers who called every single number on the airport’s official posted list and got absolutely no answer.

What to do if you are forced to try the taxi route:

  • Save these numbers in your phone before you fly, so you aren’t reliant on airport Wi-Fi: Radio Taxi Beauvais (+33 3 44 45 15 15) and Taxi G7 (+33 1 41 27 66 99).
  • Call immediately the second your plane touches down β€” do not wait until you’re through baggage claim, or someone else will book the only available car.
  • Ask other stranded passengers in the terminal if they are going to Paris and offer to share the ride. Splitting a €230 fare three ways makes it suddenly affordable.
  • Beware of “fake taxis.” If a random guy approaches you inside the terminal offering a ride for €150 cash, ignore him. Unlicensed taxis are illegal, uninsured, and dangerous.

If Your Flight Was Delayed: Claim What You’re Owed

Here is a massive piece of leverage that the airline gate agents will definitely not tell you about: if their delay caused you to miss the last shuttle and stranded you, you are likely entitled to substantial cash compensation.

Under strict EU261 passenger rights regulations, if your flight arrived 3+ hours late due to the airline’s fault (such as mechanical issues, crew shortages, or operational reasons β€” but not severe weather or air traffic control strikes), you can claim:

  • Flights under 1,500 km: €250 per passenger
  • EU internal flights over 1,500 km: €400 per passenger
  • All other flights over 3,500 km: €600 per passenger

That €170 private transfer suddenly looks very different if the airline legally owes you €250 in cash. In the best-case scenario, your delay compensation covers your expensive night transfer and still leaves you with pocket money for Paris.

Do not try to fight the airline’s legal team yourself. Compensair handles the entire complex process β€” they file the official claim, chase the airline’s lawyers, and handle all the bureaucratic paperwork. You only pay a fee if they actually win the case (they take a percentage of the final payout). If your budget flight landed late enough to strand you in Beauvais, it is worth spending 3 minutes to file a claim immediately while waiting in the terminal.

Staying Overnight: When It’s Actually the Smartest Move

Sometimes, the absolute smartest and most rational answer is: simply don’t go to Paris tonight.

If your flight lands after midnight, you are exhausted, and you have no pre-booked transfer waiting for you, paying €70–100 for a local hotel room near the airport and catching a fresh, cheap morning shuttle can be the sanest decision you make during your entire trip.

Ibis Budget Beauvais Airport is by far the closest and most reliable option. It is located exactly 1.1 km from the terminal, which equates to about a 10-minute walk along a well-lit path, or a quick €8 taxi ride if you have heavy bags. It is basic but spotlessly clean, offering rooms for 1–4 people, reliable free WiFi, and a buffet breakfast starting at 5:00 AM.

Rates typically run €60–80 per night, which is drastically cheaper than a €230 midnight taxi to Paris. When you split that room rate between two people and factor in the immense amount of stress you are avoiding, it becomes a no-brainer.

Staying overnight makes the most sense when:

  • You are traveling with young children or elderly relatives who physically cannot handle a stressful, uncertain midnight journey.
  • Multiple people can split the hotel cost, bringing the price per head way below any taxi fare.
  • You don’t have urgent morning plans in Paris the next day.
  • You are simply too exhausted to negotiate with French taxi dispatchers at 2 AM.

The morning Aerobus starts running right from the airport at 7:30 AM. You can be in central Paris by 9:00 AM feeling refreshed, rather than arriving at 2:30 AM completely wrung out and angry.

The Options Nobody Mentions (And Exactly Why They Don’t Work)

Every single time we write about Beauvais Airport, someone in the comments asks about taking the train, ordering an Uber, or renting a car. Let’s address them all properly right now β€” because when you’re stuck at midnight, you do not want to waste 20 precious minutes discovering these simply do not work.

Train to Paris: This sounds highly logical until you look closely at a map. There is absolutely no railway station at Beauvais Airport. The actual town of Beauvais has a station on the Paris-Amiens line, but reaching it requires taking a local city bus (which stops running completely at roughly 20:00) or a taxi. From the Beauvais station, trains to Paris Gare du Nord take about 80 minutes. The critical issue? The last train from Beauvais to Paris departs around 21:00. If you land at 23:00, the train option has been dead for hours.

Rideshare apps (Uber, Bolt, FreeNow): These are essentially fantasy at BVA after midnight. Open any of them and you will see the exact same depressing screen: “No cars available,” or surge pricing so extreme it vastly exceeds the cost of a private transfer. The reason is basic geography: any Paris-based driver accepting a Beauvais pickup commits to a 90-minute dead-leg drive north before earning a single euro. At 1 AM, no driver will do this. We rigorously tested this during our stranded night: six different apps, zero results within 45 minutes of searching.

Car rental: Every single rental counter (Hertz, Avis, Europcar) at Beauvais Airport closes firmly between 20:00 and 22:30 depending on the specific provider. There is no automated after-hours key drop system for outbound rentals β€” the cars are locked securely behind the counter grates. Furthermore, driving 85 km into central Paris at 2 AM while exhausted and jet-lagged is genuinely dangerous.

Travel Insurance: The €30 That Changes Everything

One massive lesson we learned the hard way from that 1:17 AM stranding: high-quality travel insurance that covers trip disruptions is worth its weight in gold.

If your budget flight delay directly causes additional transport costs, missed non-refundable accommodation bookings, or forces emergency overnight hotel stays, comprehensive travel insurance will reimburse those painful expenses. That €200 taxi fare hurts considerably less when you know your insurer is going to cover it.

We always recommend EKTA. They offer incredibly solid travel insurance starting from around €30, specifically covering trip delays, missed tight connections, and emergency transport costs. It is an absolute must-have for any budget airline trip where you are relying on late-night arrivals.

Your Exact Decision Tree: What to Do Tonight

  • If your flight lands before 23:10: Sprint to the Aerobus stop. Buy a ticket on your phone while walking. Get on the shuttle. You are safe.
  • If your flight lands between 23:10 and 23:30: You are in the danger zone. Ask airport staff immediately whether the shuttle is still holding for your specific flight. If yes, run. If no, move to the next option.
  • If your flight lands after 23:30: You have officially missed the shuttle. Call Radio Taxi Beauvais immediately β€” do not wait to get your bags first. Simultaneously check your email for your pre-booked Welcome Pickups confirmation. If you didn’t pre-book, you must decide right now between fighting for a taxi or walking to the Ibis hotel.
  • If it’s 2 AM and absolutely nothing is working: Stop stressing. Check availability at the Ibis Budget Beauvais Airport online and go sleep. It is not a failure β€” it is the most rational choice left.

FAQ

What exact time does the last shuttle leave Beauvais Airport for Paris?

The final Aerobus from Beauvais Airport to Paris departs at 23:30 (11:30 PM). While the shuttle officially waits 20 minutes after each flight lands, 23:30 is the strict, absolute cutoff point regardless of how many flights are delayed.

How much does a private transfer from Beauvais to Paris cost at night?

Pre-booked private transfers through reliable services like Welcome Pickups typically cost between €110 and €170 for a standard car accommodating 1–3 passengers. These prices are locked in at booking, meaning there are no night surcharges or hidden luggage fees.

Can I easily get a taxi from Beauvais Airport after midnight?

You can sometimes get one, but it is highly unreliable. Night taxis cost between €185 and €230, response times can easily stretch to 30 minutes, and driver availability is never guaranteed. Always have a backup plan.

Is there a hotel near Beauvais Airport for emergency overnight stays?

Yes. The Ibis Budget Beauvais Airport is located approximately 1.1 km from the terminal (a quick 10-minute walk or an €8 taxi ride). Rooms typically run €60–80 per night, and the morning Aerobus starts at 7:30 AM.

Can I claim compensation if a flight delay made me miss the last shuttle?

Yes. If your flight arrived 3+ hours late due to airline fault (such as technical issues, not weather), you may be entitled to €250–600 per passenger under EU regulations. You can file a no-win-no-fee claim through Compensair.

Does the Beauvais shuttle wait if my Ryanair or Wizz Air flight is delayed?

Yes, the Aerobus waits approximately 20 minutes after each flight lands. However, 23:30 is the final departure regardless of how late flights are running. If your plane lands after 23:10, catching the last shuttle becomes extremely difficult.

Conclusion

Beauvais Airport at night is undeniably one of Europe’s trickiest transport situations β€” not because it’s impossible to solve, but because budget airlines completely fail to prepare you for it.

The 23:30 Aerobus is your primary target. If you make it, you pay €17 and you’re safely in Paris in 90 minutes. Miss it, and you’re immediately forced to choose between a highly expensive taxi (if one even shows up), a pre-booked private transfer, or a sensible but frustrating night at the airport hotel.

The one single thing that makes all of this manageable is planning 24 hours before you fly. Pre-book your transfer with Welcome Pickups for late-night arrivals and completely forget about the stress. And if your flight is delayed enough to qualify for EU compensation, file immediately through Compensair β€” the cash payout almost always covers the extra transport costs entirely.

European city view

Don’t be us at 1:17 AM. Book the transfer in advance.

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