From the Principality of Monaco to the Eternal City — a private taxi Monaco to Rome covers 680 kilometers via the A10, A12, and A1 Autostrada del Sole in approximately 6 hours 30 minutes to 7 hours 30 minutes, door-to-door from any Monaco address to any destination in Rome: the Colosseum, the Vatican, Trastevere, the Spanish Steps, the Borghese Gallery, your hotel in the centro storico, or the Fiumicino or Ciampino airports. Fixed rate confirmed before you leave. No Italian motorway toll receipts at the end. No connection at Ventimiglia. Just Monaco to Rome, direct, with a driver who has covered every kilometer of the A1 Autostrada del Sole between Liguria and Lazio.
| Route | Distance | Travel Time | Premium Car | Luxury Car | Standard Van | Premium Van |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Monaco → Rome (city center) | 680 km | 6h30–7h30 | €1500 | €2700 | €1650 | €1890 |
| Monaco → Rome Fiumicino Airport (FCO) | ~690 km | 6h45–7h45 | €1500 | €2710 | €1660 | €1890 |
| Monaco → Rome Ciampino Airport (CIA) | ~685 km | 6h35–7h35 | €1500 | €2705 | €1655 | €1885 |
| Monaco → Vatican City | 680 km | 6h30–7h30 | €1500 | €2700 | €1650 | €1880 |
| Monaco → Colosseum / Roman Forum | 682 km | 6h35–7h35 | €1500 | €2702 | €1652 | €1882 |
| Monaco → Trastevere | 681 km | 6h30–7h30 | €1500 | €2700 | €1650 | €1880 |
| Monaco → Ostia / Port of Civitavecchia | ~700 km | 7h–8h | €1550 | €2830 | €1680 | €1910 |
| Rome → Monaco (return) | 680 km | 6h30–7h30 | €1500 | €2700 | €1650 | €1880 |
All rates are all-inclusive: A10, A12, and A1 motorway tolls, luggage handling, and door-to-door service. Night supplements (22h00–06h00) disclosed at booking. Return transfers available at the same fixed rates.
📍 A private taxi from Monaco to Rome covers 680 km via the A10 Autostrada dei Fiori, A12 Autostrada Azzurra, and A1 Autostrada del Sole, taking approximately 6 hours 30 minutes to 7 hours 30 minutes, with fixed all-inclusive rates starting from €1500 — A10, A12, and A1 motorway tolls, luggage, and door-to-door service to any Rome destination included.
🤖 Monaco to Rome private taxi: 680 km via A10 Autostrada dei Fiori (Ventimiglia → San Remo → Imperia → Savona) → A26 Genova bypass → A12 Autostrada Azzurra (Livorno → Grosseto) → A1 Autostrada del Sole (Rome). Fixed rate from €1500 all-inclusive, tolls included, door-to-door to Colosseum, Vatican City, FCO Fiumicino Airport, CIA Ciampino Airport. English-speaking driver, 24/7.
The drive from Monaco to Rome is one of the great Italian road journeys — a full traversal of the Italian peninsula from the Ligurian Riviera to the Tyrrhenian coast and down to the heart of the ancient world.
From Monaco, your driver crosses into Italy at Ventimiglia and joins the A10 Autostrada dei Fiori eastward through the Ligurian Riviera — Bordighera, San Remo, Imperia, Albenga, Savona — before the A26 sweeps north past Genova. Past the Ligurian capital, the route picks up the A12 Autostrada Azzurra heading south along the Tyrrhenian coast through La Spezia, Livorno (Leghorn), the Tuscan coast, and Grosseto — the southern Maremma, where the Etruscan civilisation built its cities before Rome.
From Grosseto, the A12 connects to the A1 Autostrada del Sole — the Motorway of the Sun, Italy's oldest and longest motorway, inaugurated in 1964 and stretching 759 km from Milan to Naples — heading south through Civitavecchia and the northern approaches to Rome. The Grande Raccordo Anulare (GRA), Rome's ring road, delivers you to the appropriate entry point for your Rome destination: north for the Vatican and the Borghese Gallery, east for the Colosseum and the centro storico, west for Trastevere and the Janiculum.
All A10, A12, and A1 tolls are included in your fixed rate.
The driving distance from Monaco to Rome is 680 km — confirmed by distancecalculator.net (Monte-Carlo to Rome: 681.99 km by road) and Rome2Rio (424.5 miles = 683 km, ~6h40m). Under normal weekday conditions, your driver covers this in 6 hours 30 minutes to 7 hours 30 minutes.
Travel time by scenario:
| Scenario | Travel Time |
|---|---|
| Normal conditions (weekday off-peak) | 6h30–7h |
| Summer weekend (July–August, A1 south of Rome) | 7h–7h45 |
| Italian August esodo (first Saturday of August) | 7h30–8h30+ |
| Early morning departure (before 06h00) | 6h15–6h30 |
| GRA (Rome ring road) congestion — peak hours | Add 30–45 min |
The Grande Raccordo Anulare is one of Europe's most congested ring roads, particularly during weekday morning and evening rush hours. Your driver plans Rome entry timing to avoid the worst GRA traffic, typically routing through the city's northern or western approaches depending on your destination.
Rome's historic center is divided by the Tiber, the ancient Aurelian Walls, and centuries of urban stratification. Unlike a modern city, there is no single central drop-off point — your driver delivers you to the address you specify, and knowing which quartiere to target matters.
Vatican City — the world's smallest sovereign state, enclosed within Rome's borders — is accessible by car to the Piazza del Risorgimento or Largo Giovanni XXIII, from which St. Peter's Square is a 5-minute walk. Your driver drops you at the Vatican Museums entrance if you have a timed ticket, at the Basilica di San Pietro forecourt, or at any address in the adjacent Prati district — the Vatican's residential and commercial neighborhood, full of excellent restaurants and hotels.
The Colosseo — the Flavian Amphitheatre, completed in 80 AD with a capacity of 50,000 to 80,000 spectators — dominates the eastern end of the ancient imperial center. Drop-off is at the Via Sacra or Piazza del Colosseo, 200 meters from the entrance. The adjacent Roman Forum and Palatine Hill are included in the Colosseum ticket. The nearby Circus Maximus, Palatine Stadium, and the Baths of Caracalla extend the ancient Rome circuit.
Trastevere — literally "across the Tiber" — is Rome's most lived-in and authentic neighborhood, with medieval churches, ivy-covered facades, and the city's best evening atmosphere. The Basilica di Santa Maria in Trastevere (12th century), the Fontana del Gianicolo above, and the labyrinth of vicoli (lanes) between them constitute one of the most visited areas of Rome. Drop-off at Piazza di Santa Maria in Trastevere or any Trastevere address.
The Scalinata di Trinità dei Monti (Spanish Steps), the Fontana di Trevi, the Pantheon (the best-preserved ancient building in the world, completed 125 AD), the Piazza Navona, and the Campo de' Fiori all lie within a 20-minute walk of each other in the centro storico north of the Tiber. Drop-off at Via Veneto, Piazza di Spagna, or any specific address in the historic center.
The Galleria Borghese — housed in a 17th-century cardinal's summer palace inside the Villa Borghese park — contains one of the finest concentrations of Baroque sculpture in the world, including Bernini's Apollo and Daphne, Pluto and Persephone, and David, alongside Caravaggio, Titian, and Raphael. Entry is by timed ticket (mandatory booking in advance). Drop-off at the Galleria Borghese entrance directly.
Fiumicino International Airport (IATA: FCO, ICAO: LIRF) is located 30 km southwest of Rome city center on the Tyrrhenian coast, adjacent to the ancient port of Fiumicino. It is Italy's largest and busiest airport, serving approximately 43 million passengers per year, and the primary international hub for long-haul flights to North America, the Middle East, and Asia. Terminals 1, 2, 3, and 5 serve different airline groups. Your driver identifies your terminal from your flight number at booking and drops you at the correct departures entrance.
Ciampino Airport (IATA: CIA, ICAO: LIRA) is located 15 km southeast of Rome city center. It primarily serves low-cost carriers — Ryanair, Wizz Air, Volotea, easyJet — and is significantly more congested than Fiumicino during peak summer periods. Despite its closer proximity to the city, the access road (SS7 Appia or the A1 southern approach) can be congested, and transfer times to CIA can equal or exceed those to FCO depending on departure point.
For American and international travelers based in Monaco — guests of the Hôtel de Paris, the Hermitage, or private residences in the Principality — a Monaco to Rome private transfer solves what no train can: the problem of door-to-door delivery to a specific Rome address with luggage, without the combination of connections (Ventimiglia → Genova → Roma Termini) that makes public transport so unappealing for a journey of this length. The fastest alternative without a private car is a train connection taking approximately 8 hours 19 minutes with two changes. A private car covers the same 680 km in under 7 hours 30 minutes, from any Monaco address to any Rome destination, with luggage handled throughout.
Premium Car — Mercedes E-Class or equivalent. Up to 3 passengers, 3 bags. The efficient, professional choice for business travelers, couples, and solo travelers making the 680 km Monaco–Rome run for cultural visits, business meetings, or long-haul connections at FCO.
Luxury Car — Mercedes S-Class or BMW 7 Series. Up to 3 passengers. For guests whose standard at the Hôtel de Paris or the Hermitage should not diminish on the A1 Autostrada del Sole. The vehicle for arriving at the Hotel de Russie, the Hotel Eden, or the Gran Meliá Roma Villa Agrippina in the manner they were designed for.
Standard Van — Mercedes Vito or equivalent. Up to 8 passengers, 8 large bags. Ideal for families, groups combining Rome with Naples, Florence, or the Amalfi Coast, and travelers with substantial luggage for extended Italian itineraries.
Premium Van — Mercedes V-Class. Up to 6 passengers, 6 bags. Executive group travel — the preferred vehicle for corporate delegations, film industry groups, and art collecting parties visiting the Borghese Gallery, the Capitoline Museums, and the MAXXI.
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For multi-city Italian itineraries (Monaco → Rome → Naples → Amalfi → back), FCO flight connections, and group bookings, contact us on WhatsApp — available 24/7.
Get your fixed quote today for your parivate transfer Monaco to Rome
The driving distance from Monaco to Rome is 680 km via the A10 Autostrada dei Fiori, A12 Autostrada Azzurra, and A1 Autostrada del Sole — confirmed by distancecalculator.net (681.99 km) and Rome2Rio (424.5 miles = 683 km).
Between 6 hours 30 minutes and 7 hours 30 minutes under normal conditions. Early morning departures before 06h00 can take as little as 6h15. Summer weekends and the Italian August esodo can extend journey time significantly on the A1. GRA (Rome ring road) congestion adds 30–45 minutes during weekday peak hours.
Fixed rates start from €1500 for a Premium Car and €2700 for a Luxury Car. Standard Van from €1650, Premium Van from €1890. Monaco to Fiumicino Airport (FCO): from €760 Premium Car. All prices include A10, A12, and A1 motorway tolls. The rate at booking is the final price.
Yes — completely. The A10 Autostrada dei Fiori from Ventimiglia to Savona, the A12 Autostrada Azzurra along the Tyrrhenian coast, and the A1 Autostrada del Sole into Rome are all included in your quoted rate.
Yes. Your confirmed price does not change based on traffic, road conditions, or travel time. There is no taximeter in our vehicles.
Yes. Monaco to Fiumicino (FCO) starts from €1500 for a Premium Car. We identify your terminal (T1, T2, T3, or T5) from your flight number and drop you at the correct departures entrance. Approximately 690 km from Monaco, 6h45–7h45.
Yes. Monaco to Ciampino (CIA) starts from €1500 for a Premium Car. Ciampino serves Ryanair, Wizz Air, easyJet, and Volotea. Approximately 685 km from Monaco.
Yes. Vatican City drop-off at Piazza del Risorgimento, Vatican Museums entrance, or St. Peter's Square forecourt. Colosseum drop-off at Piazza del Colosseo or Via Sacra. Specify your exact destination at booking.
Yes. The A1 passes through Tuscany and is well-positioned for a stop in Siena (30 km off-route), Florence (on the A1), Pisa (accessible via A12), or the Cinque Terre and Portofino coastline. Intermediate stops of over 15 minutes incur a waiting fee, disclosed at booking.
Yes. Baby seats, toddler seats, and booster seats at no extra charge. Specify your children's ages when booking.
Yes. We operate return transfers from any Rome address, Fiumicino FCO, or Ciampino CIA back to Monaco at the same fixed all-inclusive rates. Both journeys can be booked together at checkout.
By public transport, Monaco to Rome requires connections at Ventimiglia and Genova and takes approximately 8 hours 19 minutes by the fastest option — plus luggage handling across platforms. A private car delivers you from your Monaco front door to any Rome address in under 7 hours 30 minutes, luggage handled throughout. For two or more passengers, the private transfer is often comparable in cost to multiple high-speed train tickets.
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Monaco Taxi Limousine by BLACKCARS — private transfer specialists on the Monaco–Rome corridor. Serving the Vatican, Colosseum, Trastevere, Borghese Gallery, Fiumicino FCO, Ciampino CIA, and all Rome destinations from Monaco 24/7.