West Virginia

By bus
By bus

Greyhound stops in Beckley, Bluefield, Charleston, Huntington, Parkersburg and Wheeling.

By plane
By plane

West Virginia is served by one major airport:

Yeager Airport IATA: CRW, in Charleston. Continental, Delta, Northwest, United and US Airways offer over 70 flights daily to 10 major cities: Atlanta, Charlotte, Chicago, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Detroit, Houston, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh and Washington, D.C.

There are over 30 smaller airports in the state, seven of which offer regular commercial flights to other cities:

Harrison/Marion Regional Airport CKB in Clarksburg. Continental offers daily flights to Cleveland.

Greenbrier Valley Airport LWB in Lewisburg. Delta and US Airways offer daily flights to Atlanta, Charlotte, Pittsburgh, New York and Washington, D.C.

Mercer County Airport BLF in Bluefield. Colgan Air offers daily flights to Washington, D.C.

Mid-Ohio Valley Regional Airport PKB in Parkersburg. Continental offers daily flights to Cleveland.

Morgantown Municipal Airport MGW in Morgantown. Continental offers daily flights to Cleveland.

Raleigh County Memorial Airport BKW in Beckley. Colgan Air offers daily flights to Washington, D.C.

Tri-State Airport HTS in Huntington. Delta and US Airways offer daily flights to Charlotte and Cincinnati.

By train
By train

Amtrak offers two routes that pass through West Virginia.

The Cardinal route — between New York and Chicago tri-weekly — stops in White Sulphur Springs WSS, Alderson ALD, Hinton HIN, Prince PRC, Thurmond THN, Montgomery MNG, Charleston CHW and Huntington HUN.

The Capitol Limited route — between Washington, D.C. and Chicago daily — stops in Harpers Ferry HFY and Martinsburg MRB.

The Maryland Rail Commuter ferries passengers between Martinsburg and Washington, D.C. on weekdays.

By car
By car

There are three main interstates in West Virginia: I-64 crosses the lower third of the state from Kentucky into Huntington, through Charleston and Beckley, and then past Lewisburg into Virginia. I-77 moves up the western third of the state, from Virginia into Bluefield, through Charleston and then past Parkersburg into Ohio. I-79 begins in Charleston and continues through Morgantown into Pennsylvania.

Interstates that only cross a piece of West Virginia include I-70, which crosses from Ohio to Pennsylvania through the northern panhandle, past Wheeling; I-68, which branches off I-79 near Morgantown and passes through Preston County into Maryland; and I-81, which crosses from Virginia into Maryland and Pennsylvania through the eastern panhandle, past Martinsburg.