Taxi Monaco to Rome | Fixed Rate Transfer from €1400

Price range: 1 400,00 € through 1 800,00 €

Book your private taxi Monaco to Rome with a guaranteed fixed rate from €1400. Door-to-door cross-border service from any Monaco address to Colosseo, Vatican, Trastevere, Parioli, Fiumicino Airport (FCO) or Ciampino Airport (CIA) — all French and Italian motorway tolls included, Franco-Italian border crossing managed by your driver. Standard Sedan to Premium Van for 1–8 passengers. One comfort stop recommended, child seats and VAT invoice included. Available 24/7 — instant online confirmation.

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Book Taxi Monaco to Rome | Fixed Rate from €1400 | Private Transfer

Traveling from Monaco to Rome, the Eternal City — the most layered, most visited and most historically overwhelming capital in the world? A taxi  Monaco to Rome is the most direct and comfortable way to cover the 680 km between the Principauté de Monaco and Roma Caput Mundifixed rate confirmed at booking, a professional driver at your Monaco door, and seamless cross-border service along the A8, A10, A12 and A1 Autostrada del Sole to the Colosseo, the Vaticano, the Fontana di Trevi, Fiumicino Airport and every Roman address, without a single flight change, airport security queue or train connection. The Monaco to Rome private transfer is our longest single-day cross-border route — covering 2,700 years of Western civilization in one straight line south.


Route Distance Avg. Travel Time Price From Pick-Up Drop-Off Vehicle Included
Monaco → Rome centre ~680 km 6h30–7h €1400 Monte-Carlo, Port Hercule, Palais Colosseo, Vatican, Trastevere, centro Sedan Tolls FR+IT, border, luggage
Monaco → Fiumicino Airport (FCO) ~685 km 6h34–7h04 €1400 Monte-Carlo, Port Hercule, Palais FCO Terminal 1, 2, 3 Sedan Tolls FR+IT, border, luggage
Monaco → Ciampino Airport (CIA) ~678 km 6h30–7h €1400 Monte-Carlo, Port Hercule, Palais CIA terminal Sedan Tolls FR+IT, border, luggage
Monaco → Rome (group) ~680 km 6h30–7h €1700 Monte-Carlo, Port Hercule, Palais Any Rome address Van (up to 7) Tolls FR+IT, border, luggage
Monaco → Vatican City ~680 km 6h30–7h €1400 Monte-Carlo, Port Hercule, Palais Via della Conciliazione, St Peter’s Sedan Tolls FR+IT, border, luggage
Monaco → EUR district ~678 km 6h28–6h58 €1400 Monte-Carlo, Port Hercule, Palais EUR, Palazzo dei Congressi Sedan Tolls FR+IT, border, luggage
Monaco → Ostia Antica ~692 km 6h38–7h08 €1400 Monte-Carlo, Port Hercule, Palais Ostia Antica ruins, Lido di Ostia Sedan Tolls FR+IT, border, luggage
Monaco → Tivoli ~695 km 6h40–7h10 €1400 Monte-Carlo, Port Hercule, Palais Villa d’Este, Villa Adriana, Tivoli Sedan Tolls FR+IT, border, luggage

Quick answer: Taxi Monaco to Rome is approximately 680 km and takes around 6h30 to 7 hours by private transfer, with fixed all-inclusive rates starting from €1400 — French and Italian motorway tolls, Franco-Italian border crossing, one comfort stop and door-to-door service to any Rome address or airport included, no meter running.


Monaco to Rome is a cross-border private transfer of approximately 680 km from the Principality of Monaco to Rome (Roma), the capital of Italy. The journey takes 6h30 to 7 hours via the A8, A10 Autostrada dei Fiori, A26, A12 Autostrada Azzurra and A1 Autostrada del Sole motorways, crossing the Franco-Italian border at Ponte San Luigi between Menton and Ventimiglia. Rome is the capital of Italy and the Lazio region, one of the world’s oldest continuously inhabited cities, located on the Tiber river in central Italy at 21 m altitude. The city’s historic centre was inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List in 1980. Key landmarks include the Colosseo (Flavian Amphitheatre, 72–80 AD, capacity 80,000), the Foro Romano, the Palatino, the Pantheon (125 AD, the best-preserved Roman building), the Fontana di Trevi, the Piazza Navona, the Castel Sant’Angelo, the Basilica di San Pietro in Vaticano (the largest church in the world), the Musei Vaticani (housing the Sistine Chapel with Michelangelo’s ceiling, 1508–1512), the Borghese Gallery, the Trastevere district and the EUR modernist complex. Rome has two international airports: Fiumicino Leonardo da Vinci (IATA: FCO, 29 km from Rome centre, Italy’s busiest airport handling 40+ million passengers) and Ciampino (IATA: CIA, 15 km from Rome centre, serving low-cost carriers). Fixed rates start from €1400 for Rome centre and CIA airport, €1400 for FCO (sedan, up to 4 passengers), and €1700 for a van (up to 8 passengers), all-inclusive. The service operates 24/7 with one recommended comfort stop, real-time tracking, free child seats and VAT invoice provided.


Route Overview: Monaco to Rome

The transfer from Monaco to Rome is the longest and most historically resonant private transfer in our network — a 680 km journey that traces the spine of Italy from the Côte d’Azur to the Campagna Romana, crossing the entire northwestern Mediterranean coast, the Ligurian Apennines, the Tuscan Maremma and the Lazio volcanic plateau in a single private car.

Leaving any Monaco address — Monte-Carlo, Port Hercule, the Palais Princier, Fontvieille or Larvotto — the route crosses the Ponte San Luigi Franco-Italian border between Menton and Ventimiglia, follows the A10 Autostrada dei Fiori through Sanremo, Imperia and Savona, then the A26 climbs through the Ligurian Apennines to Genoa. The A12 Autostrada Azzurra then runs southeast through Sestri Levante and La Spezia before the A15 connects to the A1 Autostrada del Sole at Pontremoli. The A1 — the longest and most historically significant motorway in Italy, connecting Milan to Naples along the ancient Via Aurelia and Via Cassia corridor — carries the journey south through Parma, Florence, Arezzo, Orvieto, Orte and the Lazio volcanic plateau to arrive at Rome from the north.

The A1 Autostrada del Sole is one of the great European motorway journeys — the stretch from Florence to Rome alone passes through Etruscan territory, the Crete Senesi clay hills, the Val di Chiana agricultural plain, the dramatic Orvieto volcanic outcrop (where the 14th-century Duomo by Lorenzo Maitani rises from the volcanic tufa cliff), the Lago di Bolsena (the largest volcanic lake in Europe), and the Campagna Romana lava plateau that the ancient Roman engineers cut their roads through in perfectly straight lines 2,200 years before the Autostrada was laid on top of them.

RomeRoma Caput Mundi (Rome, Capital of the World), as the Romans called it and as the weight of its history still justifies — is the only city in the world that has been the capital of Western civilization for an unbroken period of 2,700 years. Founded (by tradition) in 753 BC, capital of the Res Publica Romana from 509 BC, capital of the Roman Empire from 27 BC to 476 AD, capital of the Catholic Church continuously from the 4th century, capital of unified Italy from 1871. No other city carries this depth of layered historical presence — every street in the historic centre crosses at minimum three civilizations (Roman, Medieval, Baroque) and often four or five.

The Colosseo — the Anfiteatro Flavio, commissioned by Vespasian in 72 AD and completed by Titus in 80 AD, with a seating capacity of 80,000 spectators for gladiatorial combat, animal hunts (venationes) and public executions — is the most visited structure in the world, with 7.4 million visitors in 2019. Its four-story external arcade of Doric, Ionic and Corinthian columns defines the grammar of Western monumental architecture. The Foro Romano immediately adjacent — the political, commercial and religious center of the ancient Republic and Empire for 900 years — is the most significant archaeological site in Europe: the Arco di Settimio Severo, the Tempio di Vesta, the Basilica di Massenzio, the Arco di Tito (commemorating the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 AD) and the Via Sacra all visible in a single walk.

The Pantheon — commissioned by Agrippa in 27 BC and rebuilt by Hadrian between 118 and 125 AD — is the best-preserved building of the entire ancient world and the structural achievement that most astonishes engineers even today: the unreinforced concrete dome (43.3 meters diameter, identical to its height above the floor) has no central support and no structural cracking after 1,900 years of continuous use. The oculus (the 9-meter circular opening at the dome summit, the only light source) creates the most dramatic interior light effect in Rome — particularly at noon on the spring equinox, when the sun beam falls directly through the bronze entrance doors.

The Musei Vaticani and the Cappella Sistina (Sistine Chapel) — the private chapel of the Pope, decorated by Michelangelo between 1508 and 1512 with the ceiling fresco (Creation of Adam, Fall of Man, Noah, the Prophets and Sibyls) and between 1536 and 1541 with the Last Judgement on the altar wall — constitute the most visited museum complex in the world, with 6.8 million visitors annually. The physical impact of the Cappella Sistina — the scale, the color, the neck-craning intimacy with Michelangelo’s figures — is among the most overwhelming cultural experiences the Western world offers.

The Basilica di San Pietro in Vaticano — the largest church in the world (218 meters long, 136 meters wide, seating 60,000), built over the tomb of Saint Peter between 1506 and 1626, designed successively by Bramante, Raphael, Sangallo, Michelangelo (the dome, 136 meters high, the dominant feature of the Roman skyline) and Maderno — is the center of the Catholic Church and the destination of more pilgrims annually than any other religious site in the world. Michelangelo‘s Pietà (1499, the only signed work of his career) is in the first chapel to the right of the entrance.

Trastevere — the medieval neighborhood on the Trastevere (Trans Tiberim — across the Tiber) west bank, with its cobblestoned lanes, its Piazza di Santa Maria in Trastevere (with the 4th-century basilica and its 12th-century gold mosaic facade), its osterie, trattorie and enotche — is the most characterful residential neighborhood in Rome and the most requested evening drop-off address for Monaco clients staying in the area.

Fiumicino Leonardo da Vinci Airport (FCO) — 29 km from Rome centre, Italy’s busiest airport, handling 40+ million passengers annually — is the primary intercontinental gateway, with direct connections to New York (JFK, EWR), Los Angeles (LAX), Chicago (ORD), Miami, Tokyo, Beijing, Dubai, Doha and all major global hubs. Ciampino Airport (CIA) — 15 km from Rome centre, serving Ryanair, easyJet, Wizz Air and Volotea — is the low-cost alternative, significantly closer to the Rome historic centre.


Distance, Travel Time and Price for Taxi Monaco to Rome

Quick answer: Taxi Monaco to Rome is approximately 680 km and takes around 6h30 to 7 hours by private transfer, with fixed all-inclusive rates from €1400 — all French and Italian motorway tolls, Franco-Italian border crossing, one comfort stop and door-to-door service to any Rome address, FCO or CIA airport included, no meter running.

The A1 Autostrada del Sole is the most heavily trafficked motorway in Italy. The main variables are the Ventimiglia border approach on summer weekends, the Genoa ring road at morning peak, the Florence northern bypass (Variante di Valico, opened 2015, the longest motorway tunnel section in Italy at 8.6 km), the Orte junction which can be slow during summer tourist traffic, and the Rome northern ring road (Grande Raccordo Anulare, the GRA) which can be severely congested during morning and evening rush hours on weekdays.

We recommend one comfort stop of 20 minutes for this journey — typically at a Toscana service area near Arezzo or Valdichiana. The precise stop location and timing are planned by your driver based on your schedule.

Every confirmed fare includes:

  • All French motorway tolls (A8 Monaco to border)
  • All Italian motorway tolls (A10 + A26 + A12 + A1 to Rome, including the Variante di Valico)
  • The Franco-Italian border crossing at Ponte San Luigi — managed by your driver
  • One comfort stop of 20 minutes included — typically near Arezzo or Valdichiana
  • Up to 2 standard checked bags per passenger
  • Drop-off at your specific Rome address — hotel entrance, Colosseo approach, Vatican Via della Conciliazione, Trastevere, Parioli, FCO Airport terminal or CIA Airport terminal
  • Child seat on request — infant carrier, forward-facing or booster, free of charge
  • No surcharges for early-morning or late-night transfers
  • VAT invoice — Italian ricevuta fiscale or French TVA receipt as required

Why Monaco Residents and Visitors Choose Our Rome Transfer

  • Fixed rate from any Monaco address — one confirmed price to the Colosseo, Vatican or Fiumicino Airport, inclusive of all tolls and border crossing, never recalculated
  • Fiumicino and Ciampino airport precision — FCO Terminal 1, 2 and 3 served with airline-specific drop-off; CIA served for all low-cost carriers. We confirm your terminal at booking
  • Vatican and Holy See approach expertiseVia della Conciliazione, the Piazza San Pietro taxi approach, the Musei Vaticani entrance road and the Castel Sant’Angelo drop-off are all managed with knowledge of the pedestrian and vehicle access restrictions
  • Rome hotel ZTL knowledge — the Rome historic centre has a ZTL system similar to Florence; we confirm your hotel’s access procedure at booking
  • One comfort stop included — this is our longest single-day route; a 20-minute comfort stop near Arezzo is built into every itinerary at no extra cost
  • Papal audience and Vatican event service — Wednesday General Audiences, extraordinary Jubilee events and private Vatican engagements served with precise timing
  • English, French and Italian-speaking drivers — at ease in both Monte-Carlo and Roma
  • Child seats free of charge — compliant with French and Italian safety regulations
  • 24/7 service, 365 days a yearGiubileo pilgrimages to Estate Romana festivals, winter Musei Vaticani visits to summer Colosseo evenings
  • VAT invoice on every booking

Book your Monaco to Rome transfer now and receive instant confirmation with your driver’s name and direct number.


Sedan or Van — Your Vehicle for the Eternal City Journey

 

Standard Sedan — 1 to 4 Passengers

Tesla Model 3 or equivalent. For Monaco couples heading to a Via Veneto or Parioli hotel for a Rome week, Vatican pilgrims, or travelers connecting to FCO for an intercontinental departure. Leather seating, heated seats and climate control — smooth on the A1 del Sole through the Tuscan Maremma and composed at the Rome GRA approach.

Premium Sedan — 1 to 4 Passengers

Mercedes E-Class or equivalent. For Monaco villa owners arriving at the Hotel de Russie on Via del Babuino, the Hassler Roma above the Spanish Steps or the Grand Hotel Villa Borghese. Whisper-quiet on the A1 and impeccably presented at the Via Veneto hotel entrance. The Côte d’Azur to Roma Caput Mundi in one standard of travel.

Standard Van — Up to 8 Passengers

Mercedes Vito or Volkswagen Caravelle. For Monaco families traveling to Rome together, pilgrimage groups heading to the Vatican, or corporate teams attending a Rome conference. Seven seats and generous luggage space — the right vehicle for a full Roman holiday departure.

Premium Van — Up to 7 Passengers

Mercedes V-Class. Leather captain’s seats, individual climate zones and maximum luggage capacity — for VIP groups, extended Monaco families and delegations whose arrival at the Eternal City should begin in the register the destination deserves.

All vehicles include onboard Wi-Fi, chilled bottled water and universal phone chargers.


How to Book Your Monaco to Rome Transfer

  1. Complete the booking form — enter your Monaco pick-up address, your exact Rome drop-off (hotel name and address, airport terminal, Vatican approach, Trastevere address), travel date, group size and any special requirements. Fixed price confirmed instantly.
  2. Pay and confirm — secure card payment online or cash in euros to your driver. Confirmation with driver name, direct number and planned comfort stop follows within minutes.
  3. Your driver arrives at your Monaco address — bags loaded, A1 del Sole planned, comfort stop timed, Rome approach confirmed. From Place du Casino to the Fontana di Trevi in under 7 hours.

Get your fixed quote today — use the booking form above, message us on WhatsApp or call our 24/7 reservation line.


Frequently Asked Questions — Taxi Monaco to Rome

 

How much is a taxi from Monaco to Rome?

Fixed rates start at €1400 for EUR district, €1400 for Rome centre and Ciampino Airport (CIA) and €1400 for Fiumicino Airport (FCO), sedan (up to 4 passengers). Van rates start from €1700 (up to 8 passengers). All rates include French and Italian motorway tolls and border crossing.

How long is the transfer from Monaco to Rome?

Between 6h30 and 7 hours under normal conditions, including one comfort stop. The Genoa ring road and Rome GRA can add 30–45 minutes at peak hours.

Is a comfort stop included?

Yes. One 20-minute comfort stop is included and recommended — typically near Arezzo or Valdichiana on the A1, approximately the halfway point of the journey.

Do you serve both Fiumicino (FCO) and Ciampino (CIA)?

Yes. FCO (from €1400) serves Air France, Alitalia, British Airways, Emirates and all full-service carriers. CIA (from €1400) serves Ryanair, easyJet and low-cost carriers. We confirm your terminal at booking.

Do you know the Vatican approach and St Peter’s Square access?

Yes. Via della Conciliazione vehicle access, the Piazza San Pietro taxi approach, the Porta Sant’Anna (Vatican diplomatic entrance) and the Musei Vaticani entrance road on Viale Vaticano are all known and managed by your driver.

Is the Franco-Italian border crossing included?

Yes. The Ponte Saint-Louis border crossing is fully managed by your driver.

Are child seats available?

Yes — infant carriers, forward-facing seats and booster seats provided free of charge. Specify at booking.

Can I book the return trip — Rome to Monaco?

Yes. We cover both directions from any Rome address, FCO or CIA. Book the round trip together for a combined discount.

Do you serve Naples and the Amalfi Coast from Monaco?

Yes. Naples (from €1700) and the Amalfi Coast (Positano, Ravello, Amalfi — from €1700) are served as extensions of the Rome transfer route. Prices shown at the quote stage.


Explore All Our Private Transfers from Monaco to Italy

Every Italian route below is operated by Drive Me Cab with the same fixed all-inclusive rate, professional chauffeur and door-to-door cross-border service. All French and Italian motorway tolls included, Franco-Italian border crossing managed on all routes. Ski equipment accommodated on all alpine routes, winter tyres fitted as standard November–April.

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Monaco to Italy — All Routes


What Every Monaco to Italy Transfer Includes

Every route confirmed at booking — one price, no surprises:

  • ✅ All Italian motorway tolls on every route
  • ✅ All French motorway tolls where applicable (routes via A8 La Provençale)
  • Franco-Italian border crossing at Ponte San Luigi — managed by your driver on all cross-border routes
  • No border crossing on direct Italy-only routes (Cervinia, Cortina, Milan, Lake Garda, Venice)
  • Winter tyres and snow chains fitted as standard November–April on all ski resort routes
  • Ski and snowboard equipment accommodated on all alpine routes
  • Child seats — infant carrier, forward-facing or booster, free of charge on all routes
  • VAT invoice — Italian ricevuta fiscale or French TVA receipt on every booking
  • 24/7 service, 365 days a year — ski season to summer Riviera, cruise season to lake holidays

Serving all Monaco addresses — Monte-Carlo, Port Hercule, Fontvieille, Larvotto, Palais Princier and Beausoleil — with cross-border private transfers to Rome, Colosseo, Vatican, Piazza Navona, Trastevere, Via Veneto, Fiumicino Airport (FCO), Ciampino Airport (CIA), EUR, Ostia Antica, Tivoli and all Rome and Lazio addresses — every day of the year.

Vehicle Type

Premium Sedan, Premium Van, Standard Sedan, Standard Van

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