New England

By car
By car

New England is served by several interstate highways. I-95 enters from the New York City area and links five of the six states together. I-90 and I-84 both come in from the west out of Albany and southern New York, respectively. I-91 links New Haven with Hartford, Springfield and eastern Vermont. I-89 connects Burlington, VT with Concord, NH. I-93 runs through New Hampshire, connecting St. Johnsbury, VT with Boston.

By train
By train

Amtrak (http://amtrak.com/) operates several routes into New England, most notably the Northeast Corridor, which connects New York City to Boston via New Haven and Providence. As well, the Vermonter goes from New York City and Washington, D.C. to Connecticut, western Massachusetts and Vermont. New York City's Metropolitan Transit Authority's MetroNorth (http://mta.info/) trains run between Grand Central Station in midtown Manhattan and New Haven, stopping in many Connecticut towns en route.

The Amtrack DownEaster (http://www.amtrakdowneast...) offers fares from Boston up through southern Maine.

By plane
By plane

New England is served by several airports: Logan International (http://massport.com/logan/) in Boston, TF Green Airport (http://pvdairport.com/) Warwick, RI, Bradley International (http://bradleyairport.com/) Windsor Locks between Hartford, CT, and Springfield, MA, Tweed New Haven (http://tweednewhavenairpo...) in New Haven, Burlington International (http://burlingtonintlairp...) Burlington, VT, Portland (http://portlandjetport.org), Bangor (http://flybangor.com/), and Manchester (http://flymanchester.com/) Airport, to name a few. Logan is by far the largest. Amongst discount airlines, JetBlue (http://jetblue.com/) serves Boston, Nantucket,Hartford/Springfield, Burlington, and Portland; while Southwest Airlines (http://southwest.com/) serves Hartford/Springfield, Providence, and Manchester; and Air Tran Airways (http://www.airtran.com/) serves Portland and Boston.

By bus
By bus

The Chinatown Bus (http://fungwahbus.com/) goes from New York to Boston for about $30 round trip. Greyhound (http://greyhound.com/) also offers slightly more expensive bus service to and from other areas of the country, as does Peter Pan (http://peterpanbus.com/). From Port Authority Bus Terminal in New York City buses serve western New England. Vermont Transit (http://vermonttransit.com/) offers service from Montréal. Boston's South Station is a hub for bus travel to and from New York and to and from all other areas of New England.