Today I crossed the border by bus in the way from Lviv to Krakow. It was an ordeal. It took 7h to pass the customs control in the Ukraininan side and 2h in the Polish side because of a queue … of 10 buses. I’m exhausted.
There is new Przemysl – Lviv – Kyiv intercity train (since December 2016). Also there is Helm – Kovel – Rivne – Zdolbuniv. Both Helm and Przemysl are Polish border towns, so there is no need to change gauge. These trains are fast and must be the best way to cross the border in predictable amount of time.
From personal experience, crossing Shehyni – Medyka border (near Przemysl) on foot took me around 1.5 hours from Ukraine to Poland in very crowded conditions. So next time I’m going to try the train. OTOH, if you’re going opposite way, maybe it’s easier and faster (most of people who cross there are Ukrainians).
I’ve heard from another backpackers in my hostel that you can’t take
the train directly because there’s a difference in rail gauges, so you
have to do a train switch on the Polish border in the town of
Przemysl.
There are indeed direct trains from Poland to Ukraine. Different gauge is “fixed” by changing the wheels on the train cars at the border. This is quite fast operation (1.5-2 hours for the whole train), which is integrated with the border control, and you don’t have to leave the train cart (in fact as Jan noted below, you are not even allowed to). You can see this train at http://www.intercity.pl – departs at 22:24 and arrives at 7:15 in Lviv. I’d certainly recommend it over the bus, unless you’re tight on budget (bus is likely to be cheaper).
As a Ukrainian citizen I was taking the Ecolines bus once from Rzeszow to Lviv (it actually goes from Krakow) in August and had no problem at all. Passengers even didn’t have to leave the bus for the passport control. Just passing the passports to the border guards.
Actually, this border is pretty painless to cross (especially for residents of ‘rich’ countries). You can find estimated waiting times here. If anything, the return could take more time (never happened to me, crossed it twice as a Polish citizen) as inbound control to Schengen tends to be stricter. If you can, I’d highly recommend taking the train, as some buses are held for stricter control (and the waiting times tend to be longer).
Credit:stackoverflow.com‘
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