Trolleybuses in Sofia
The Sofia trolleybus system forms part of the public transport network of Sofia, the capital city of Bulgaria. Trolleybuses first began serving Sofia on 8 February 1941, on a route to the suburb of Gorna Banya, but that initial system closed on 9 September 1944. The current system opened only four years later, on 1 May 1948.
The system presently comprises ten routes with network build, of which are currently in use.
As of 2020, the average speed of the trolleybus system in Sofia is 15.7 km/h.
History
Trolleybus transport was the last form of surface public transport to develop in Sofia, after buses and trams. The first Sofia trolleybus line opened on 8 February 1941, in what was then the Kingdom of Bulgaria. It was more than long, and connected the city with the Gorna Banya quarter. The line was covered by 2 MAN trolleybuses, which were stored on the last stops during the night, due to the lack of depot. It closed on 9 September 1944.The city's second trolleybus system, the first part of the current system, opened on 1 May 1948, by which time the country had become the People's Republic of Bulgaria. In the 1950s and 1960s, massive development of the trolleybus transport in Sofia began. At that time, the construction of new trolleybus routes proceeded especially rapidly, and two depots were opened, with a total capacity of 160 trolleybuses. In 1951, the first Bulgarian made trolleybuses entered service.
In 1987, a new depot, "Iskar", was opened with a capacity of 130 trolleybuses. Levski depot was opened in 1994 with capacity of 60 trolleybuses. As of 2021 three depots are in operation: Nadezhda, Iskar and Levski. The latter also serves as a storage and overhaul facility.
Lines
As of October 2025, the following trolleybus lines in Sofia are in service:| Line | Route | Depot |
| 1 | Levski G Residential District – Fifth City Hospital | Levski |
| 2 | Hadzhi Dimitar Residential District – Buxton Residential District | Iskar |
| 3 | Levski G Residential District – St. Anna Hospital | Iskar |
| 4 | Druzhba 2 Residential District – Hadzhi Dimitar Residential District | Iskar |
| 5 | St. Anna Hospital – Nadezhda Overpass | Iskar |
| 6 | Lyulin 3 Residential District – Lozenets District | Nadezhda |
| 7 | Lyulin 3 Residential District – Gotse Delchev Residential District | Nadezhda |
| 8 | Stochna gara Square – Gotse Delchev Residential District | Iskar |
| 9 | Borovo Residential District – Stochna gara Square | Nadezhda |
| 11 | Druzhba 1 Residential District – Stochna gara Square | Iskar |
Fleet
Current fleet
As of January 2026, the Sofia trolleybus fleet consisted of 139 trolleybuses, of which around 115 are operational.The following models are currently part of the fleet:
| Quantity | In service | Model | Year built | Fleet numbers | Notes |
| 50 | 50 | Škoda 27Tr Solaris III | 2013–2014 | 1650–1674, 2675–2699 | Equipped with auxiliary diesel engine |
| 30 | 30 | Škoda 27Tr Solaris IV | 2020–2021 | 2801–2830 | Equipped with 30 kWh LTO battery |
| 30 | 30 | Škoda 26Tr Solaris III | 2010 | 1603–1632 | Equipped with auxiliary diesel engine |
| 15 | 5 | Ikarus 280.92 | 1985–1988 | 2054, 2115, 2117, 2123, 2614, 2623, 2702, 2703, 2711, 2712, 2715, 2723, 2913, 2915, 2922 | Ganz electrical equipment. Total of 151 units delivered. Operational units shown in bold. 2623 is heritage vehicle and 2702 is driving school vehicle. |
| 10 | 0 | Ikarus 280.92F | 1985–1988 | 2104–2109, 2608–2609, 2902–2903 | Facelift, modernized 2008–2015 |
| 3 | 0 | Cobra GD 272 | 2003–2005 | 2002–2004 | Güleryüz bodywork, ICPE SAERP electrical equipment, assembled by Tramkar |
| 1 | 0 | Gräf & Stift GЕ 152 M18 | 1988 | 1801 | The last remaining unit of eight vehicles acquired secondhand from Innsbruck in 2006, which were numbered 1801–1808 in Sofia. |
The heritage fleet consists of the following vehicles:
| Model | Year built | Status | Notes |
| Škoda 9TrHT28 | 1981 | Unrestored | Ex-Plovdiv. In private ownership. |
| Škoda 14Tr06 | 1985 | Unrestored | Ex-Stara Zagora, née Sofia |
| DAC-Chavdar 317 Etr | 1986 | Unrestored | Ex-Pernik. In private ownership. |
| ZiU-682 | 1987 | Restored, not operational | Ex-Stara Zagora |
| Ikarus 280.92 | 1988 | Restored, operational | 2623 |
Past fleet
| Quantity | Model | Years in service | Notes |
| 2 | MAN MPE I | 1941–1956 | Schumann body, BBC electrical equipment |
| 26 | MTB-82 | 1948–1960s | |
| 67 | TB-51 | 1951–1971 | Bulgarian-made version of the Soviet MTB-82 |
| 244 | Skoda 9Tr | 1964–1990 | |
| 12 | MAN/Kässbohrer/Kiepe 610 FEC 1 | 1967–1974 | ex-Dortmund, built in 1958 |
| 3 | Ikarus 280T | 1980–1984 | Rebuilt from diesel buses with Skoda 9Tr electrical equipment |
| 19 | Gräf & Stift GEO I, GEO II, GE 120 | 1984–1987 | Nos. 201–219, ex-Linz, which were built between 1960 and 1968 |
| 20 | Skoda 14Tr06 | 1985–1987 | Transferred to other Bulgarian towns |
| 70 | ZiU-682 | 1986–2004 | |
| 23 | DAC-Chavdar 317 Etr | 1987–1994 | |
| 1 | Tramkar-Chavdar 130 | 1994–2010 | Prototype |
| 8 | Gräf & Stift GE152 M18 | 2006–2018 | ex-Innsbruck, built in 1988 |
Depots
- Nadezhda - opened in 1962, located on podpolkovnik Kalitin street, operates lines 6, 7 and 9; houses trolleybuses with fleet numbers 2xxx
- Iskar - opened in 1987, located on Amsterdam street, operates lines 2, 3, 4, 5, 8 and 11; houses trolleybuses with fleet numbers 1xxx
- Levski - opened in 1994, located on Bessarabia street, serves as maintenance and overhaul facility and for storage and dismantling of decommissioned vehicles. Since November 2021 also operates line 1. Fleet numbering common with Nadezhda depot.