Taxi Monaco to Venise | Fixed Rate Transfer from €1100

Price range: 1 100,00 € through 1 400,00 €

Book your private taxi Monaco to Venise with a guaranteed fixed rate from €1100. Door-to-door cross-border service from any Monaco address to Piazzale Roma, Tronchetto, Marco Polo Airport (VCE), Mestre or any Venezia address — all French and Italian motorway tolls included, Franco-Italian border crossing managed by your driver. Standard Sedan to Premium Van for 1–8 passengers. Water taxi coordination from Piazzale Roma to your Venice hotel available on request. Child seats and VAT invoice included. Available 24/7 — instant online confirmation.

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Book Taxi Monaco to Venise | Fixed Rate from €1100 | Private transfer

Traveling from Monaco to Venise, the most impossible and most beautiful city ever built — the island city that has been floating on its lagoon for 1,500 years without touching the Italian mainland? A taxi  Monaco to Venise is the most direct and comfortable way to cover the 570 km between the Principauté de Monaco and Serenissimafixed rate confirmed at booking, a professional driver at your Monaco door, and seamless cross-border service along the A8, A10, A26, A7, A4 and A57 Tangenziale di Mestre to Piazzale Roma — the last point at which any wheeled vehicle can go in Venice, beyond which the city belongs entirely to feet, boats and the extraordinary physics of water. Your Monaco to Venise private transfer connects the Mediterranean’s most glamorous sovereign state to the Adriatic’s most extraordinary republic in one confirmed all-inclusive price.


Route Distance Avg. Travel Time Price From Pick-Up Drop-Off Vehicle Included
Monaco → Venice Piazzale Roma ~570 km 5h28–5h58 €1100 Monte-Carlo, Port Hercule, Palais Piazzale Roma, Venice mainland entry Sedan Tolls FR+IT, border, luggage
Monaco → Tronchetto (parking island) ~572 km 5h30–6h €1100 Monte-Carlo, Port Hercule, Palais Tronchetto island parking Sedan Tolls FR+IT, border, luggage
Monaco → Venice (group) ~570 km 5h28–5h58 €1300 Monte-Carlo, Port Hercule, Palais Piazzale Roma or Tronchetto Van (up to 7) Tolls FR+IT, border, luggage
Monaco → Marco Polo Airport (VCE) ~568 km 5h26–5h56 €1100 Monte-Carlo, Port Hercule, Palais VCE Airport terminal Sedan Tolls FR+IT, border, luggage
Monaco → Mestre ~565 km 5h22–5h52 €1100 Monte-Carlo, Port Hercule, Palais Mestre centre, hotels, station Sedan Tolls FR+IT, border, luggage
Monaco → Padua ~545 km 5h12–5h42 €1000 Monte-Carlo, Port Hercule, Palais Padova centre, Basilica, university Sedan Tolls FR+IT, border, luggage
Monaco → Verona ~508 km 4h52–5h22 €1000 Monte-Carlo, Port Hercule, Palais Verona, Arena, centro storico Sedan Tolls FR+IT, border, luggage
Monaco → Vicenza ~528 km 5h04–5h34 €1000 Monte-Carlo, Port Hercule, Palais Vicenza, Palladio, centro storico Sedan Tolls FR+IT, border, luggage

Quick answer: Taxi Monaco to Venise is approximately 570 km and takes around 5h28 to 5h58 by private transfer, with fixed all-inclusive rates starting from €1100 — French and Italian motorway tolls, Franco-Italian border crossing and Piazzale Roma drop-off included, no meter running.


Monaco to Venice is a cross-border private transfer of approximately 570 km from the Principality of Monaco to Venice (Venezia), the capital of the Veneto region, Italy. The journey takes 5h28 to 5h58 via the A8, A10 Autostrada dei Fiori, A26, A7, A4 and A57 Tangenziale di Mestre motorways, crossing the Franco-Italian border at Ponte San Luigi between Menton and Ventimiglia. Venice is a city of approximately 250,000 residents (50,000 in the historic island city, 200,000 in the Mestre mainland municipality), built on 118 small islands separated by 177 canals and connected by 391 bridges in the Venice Lagoon (Laguna di Venezia). The historic centre was inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List in 1987. Key landmarks include the Piazza San Marco (the Basilica di San Marco, the Palazzo Ducale, the Torre dell’Orologio, the Campanile), the Rialto Bridge (Ponte di Rialto, 1588), the Grand Canal (Canal Grande, 3.8 km, lined with 170 Gothic, Renaissance and Baroque palaces), the Gallerie dell’Accademia (the finest Venetian painting collection), the Peggy Guggenheim Collection (Palazzo Venier dei Leoni), the Basilica di Santa Maria della Salute, the Scuola Grande di San Rocco (Tintoretto cycle), the Arsenale, and the islands of Murano (glass), Burano (lace, coloured houses) and Torcello (the oldest settlement in the lagoon). Venice Marco Polo Airport (IATA: VCE) is 13 km north of Venice on the mainland shore. The only road access to the island city is via the Ponte della Libertà (Liberty Bridge, 4 km) ending at Piazzale Roma. Fixed rates start from €1100 for VCE Airport and €1100 for Piazzale Roma (sedan, up to 4 passengers) and €1300 for a van, all-inclusive. The service operates 24/7 with real-time tracking, water taxi coordination, free child seats and VAT invoice provided.


Route Overview: Monaco to Venice

The transfer from Monaco to Venice traces the entire northern Mediterranean arc — from the Ligurian coast through the Po valley and across the Veneto plain to the edge of the Adriatic, where the world’s most improbable city rises from its lagoon in the precise geometry that Marco Polo left, that Canaletto painted and that UNESCO inscribed in its entirety.

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 through Sanremo and Savona, then the A26 climbs through the Ligurian Apennines to Genoa. The A7 carries the journey north to Milan, where the A4 Autostrada Serenissima branches northeast across the Pianura Padana through Bergamo, Brescia, Verona, Vicenza, Padua and Mestre before the A57 Tangenziale di Mestre delivers the final approach to the Ponte della Libertà — the 4 km causeway across the lagoon that ends at Piazzale Roma, the last point at which any road vehicle can go in the city of Venice.

Venice is the most visited city in the world relative to its surface area and population — and the most under-understood. Most visitors spend time in Piazza San Marco and the Rialto area and leave believing they have seen Venice. They have seen perhaps 5% of it. The city covers 118 islands, 177 canals and 391 bridges — every sestiere (district) has a different character, a different palette, a different relationship to water and light.

The Grand CanalCanal Grande, 3.8 km long, between 30 and 90 meters wide, lined on both banks by approximately 170 palazzi in Gothic, Renaissance, Byzantine and Baroque styles — is the central axis of the city and the most photographed waterway in the world. The four bridges crossing it — Ponte di Rialto (1588, by Antonio da Ponte, the most audacious single-arch stone bridge of the Renaissance), Ponte dell’Accademia (1933, wooden), Ponte degli Scalzi (1934) and Ponte della Costituzione (2008, by Santiago Calatrava, the most controversial bridge in modern Venice) — each offers a different register of the same canal panorama.

Piazza San Marco — the only piazza (main square) in Venice (all others are called campo) — is the civic and ceremonial centre of the Serenissima: the Basilica di San Marco (begun 829 AD, rebuilt 1063–1094, its five domes, golden mosaics and cavallo di bronzo looted from Constantinople in 1204 creating the most Byzantine building outside the Eastern Empire), the Palazzo Ducale (the Doge’s Palace, 1340–1424, Venetian Gothic at its most elaborate, housing the Sala del Maggior Consiglio — the largest hall in Europe at the time of its completion, 53 × 25 meters, its ceiling painted by Tintoretto and Veronese), the Campanile di San Marco (99 meters, collapsed in 1902 and rebuilt exactly identical by 1912) and the Torre dell’Orologio (the astronomical clock tower of 1499).

The Gallerie dell’Accademia — housed in the former Scuola Grande della Carità on the Campo della Carità in the Dorsoduro sestiere — is the finest collection of Venetian painting in the world: Bellini, Carpaccio, Giorgione (La Tempesta, 1508, the most discussed painting in Italian art history), Titian, Tintoretto, Veronese (Feast in the House of Levi, 1573, originally titled Last Supper but renamed after the Inquisition objected to its festive atmosphere) and Tiepolo.

The Peggy Guggenheim Collection — housed in the Palazzo Venier dei Leoni, the unfinished palace on the Grand Canal in Dorsoduro that Peggy Guggenheim purchased in 1949 and inhabited until her death in 1979 — is the finest collection of European and American 20th-century art in Italy: Picasso, Braque, Léger, Mondrian, Kandinsky, Ernst (Guggenheim’s second husband), Dalí, Miró, Pollock, de Kooning, Rothko and the extraordinary Marino Marini equestrian bronze on the terrace gesturing toward the Grand Canal.

The Scuola Grande di San Rocco — the 16th-century confraternity building adjacent to Santa Maria Gloriosa dei Frari in San Polo — contains the largest single collection of works by a single artist in any one building: 56 paintings by Tintoretto, executed between 1564 and 1588, covering the Sala dell’Albergo (the Crucifixion, 7 × 22 meters, described by Ruskin as the greatest painting in the world), the Sala Superiore (the Old Testament cycle ceiling) and the Sala Inferiore.

The island of Murano — 1.5 km north of Venice, a 45-minute vaporetto ride from San Marco or 15 minutes from Fondamente Nove — has been the center of Venetian glass production since 1291, when the glassblowers were exiled from the main island as a fire precaution and given their own island. The Museo del Vetro di Murano and the working furnaces of Venini, Barovier & Toso and the smaller independent maestri are all accessible. Burano — 40 minutes further north, the most photographed village in the Veneto for its intensely colored house facades — is famous for its bobbin lace (merletto di Burano) and its risotto di go (a local fish risotto). Torcello — the first settlement in the lagoon (5th century AD), now virtually uninhabited — contains the extraordinary Basilica di Santa Maria Assunta (639 AD, with its 9th-century mosaic Last Judgement and the freestanding Santa Fosca martyrium) and the Trono di Attila (Attila’s Throne — a stone seat of Roman origin).

Important Venice access note: Piazzale Roma is the terminal point for all road vehicles. Our drivers drop off directly at Piazzale Roma with full luggage assistance to the vaporetto water bus stops, the Alilaguna water bus (airport connection) or the taxi acqueo (private water taxi) ranks. For clients arriving at Marco Polo Airport (VCE), the Alilaguna Blue Line and the private taxi acqueo connect directly to the island — we coordinate both at booking if required.


Distance, Travel Time and Price for Taxi Monaco to Venice

Quick answer: Taxi Monaco to Venise is approximately 570 km and takes around 5h28 to 5h58 by private transfer, with fixed all-inclusive rates from €1100 — French and Italian motorway tolls, Franco-Italian border crossing and Piazzale Roma or VCE Airport drop-off included, no meter running.

The A10/A26/A7/A4/A57 corridor is entirely motorway. The main variables are the Ventimiglia border approach on summer weekends, the Genoa ring road at morning peak, the Milan eastern ring approach (Tangenziale Est, A51) at weekday rush hours and the Mestre/Piazzale Roma approach which can be congested on summer Saturday mornings when weekly Venice apartment rentals change over.

We recommend one comfort stop of 15–20 minutes for this journey — typically at a Veneto service area near Verona or Padua.

Every confirmed fare includes:

  • All French motorway tolls (A8 Monaco to border)
  • All Italian motorway tolls (A10 + A26 + A7 + A4 + A57 to Venice)
  • The Franco-Italian border crossing at Ponte San Luigi — managed by your driver
  • One comfort stop of 15–20 minutes included
  • Up to 2 standard checked bags per passenger
  • Drop-off at Piazzale Roma (Venice mainland entry) with luggage assistance, Tronchetto island parking, Marco Polo Airport (VCE) or Mestre addresses
  • Water taxi coordination from Piazzale Roma to your Venice island hotel — specify at booking
  • 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 Choose Our Venice Transfer

  • Fixed rate from any Monaco address — one confirmed price to Piazzale Roma or Marco Polo Airport, inclusive of all tolls and border crossing
  • Piazzale Roma drop-off expertise — the most complex urban drop-off in Italy; our drivers know the exact approach lanes, the luggage transfer area, the vaporetto line stops and the taxi acqueo rank at Piazzale Roma
  • Water taxi coordination — for clients wanting private water taxi transfer from Piazzale Roma to their Grand Canal hotel, we coordinate the pickup with Taxi Venezia at booking
  • Marco Polo Airport specialist — VCE served at €585 from Monaco with terminal drop-off and Alilaguna water bus coordination for island-bound arrivals
  • Murano, Burano and Torcello excursion service — day trips from Monaco to the lagoon islands coordinated with vaporetto and private water taxi schedules
  • Carnival season expertiseCarnevale di Venezia (February) is Venice’s most congested period; our drivers know every alternative approach and the optimal Mestre parking for carnival visitors
  • English, French and Italian-speaking drivers — at ease across the full cross-border corridor
  • Child seats free of charge — compliant with French and Italian safety regulations
  • 24/7 service year-round — winter Carnevale to summer Biennale, Regata Storica September to quiet November acqua alta season
  • VAT invoice on every booking

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


Sedan or Van — Your Vehicle for the Serenissima Journey

 

Standard Sedan — 1 to 4 Passengers

Tesla Model 3 or equivalent. For Monaco couples heading to a Grand Canal palace hotel for a Venice week, art collectors attending the Biennale Arte or Biennale Architettura, or solo travelers connecting to Marco Polo Airport. Leather seating, climate control and a proper trunk — smooth on the A4 Serenissima and precise at the Piazzale Roma drop-off lane.

Premium Sedan — 1 to 4 Passengers

Mercedes E-Class or equivalent. For Monaco villa owners arriving at the Aman Venice (Palazzo Papadopoli), the Belmond Hotel Cipriani on Giudecca or the Gritti Palace on the Grand Canal. Whisper-quiet on the A4 and impeccably presented at the Piazzale Roma private water taxi rank. The Côte d’Azur to the Serenissima in one standard of travel.

Standard Van — Up to 8 Passengers

Mercedes Vito or Volkswagen Caravelle. For Monaco families visiting Venice together, Biennale group delegations, or groups sharing the cross-border transfer. Seven seats and generous luggage space — the right vehicle for a full Venice arrival with multiple suitcases that need to transfer to vaporetti.

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 luxury travel parties whose arrival at the Serenissima should begin in Piazzale Roma at the standard the destination deserves.

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


How to Book Your Monaco to Venice Transfer

  1. Complete the booking form — enter your Monaco pick-up address, your Venice drop-off (Piazzale Roma, Tronchetto, VCE Airport or Mestre), whether you require water taxi coordination to your island hotel, travel date and group size. 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, A4 Serenissima planned, Piazzale Roma approach confirmed. From Port Hercule to the edge of the lagoon in under 6 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 Venice

 

How much is a taxi from Monaco to Venice?

Fixed rates start at €1100 for Mestre, €1100 for Marco Polo Airport (VCE) and €1100 for Piazzale Roma (sedan, up to 4 passengers). Van rates start from €1300 (up to 8 passengers). All rates include French and Italian motorway tolls and border crossing.

How long is the transfer from Monaco to Venice?

Between 5h28 and 5h58 under normal conditions, including one comfort stop. The Genoa ring road and Mestre summer Saturday congestion can add 30–45 minutes.

Where does the car drop me off in Venise?

At Piazzale Roma — the terminal point for all road vehicles, the last point before Venice becomes a city of water. Our driver assists with luggage transfer to the vaporetto (water bus) stops, the Alilaguna airport water bus or the private taxi acqueo (water taxi) rank.

Can you coordinate a water taxi from Piazzale Roma to my hotel?

Yes. If you specify your Venice hotel name at booking, we coordinate the private taxi acqueo pickup at Piazzale Roma for your arrival — the most comfortable and direct way to reach a Grand Canal hotel.

Do you serve Marco Polo Airport (VCE)?

Yes. Venice Marco Polo Airport (VCE) is served at €1100 from Monaco — including terminal drop-off with luggage assistance.

Is a comfort stop included?

Yes. One 15–20 minute comfort stop is recommended and included — typically near Verona or Padua on the A4.

Is the border crossing included?

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

Do you serve Verona, Padua and Vicenza from Monaco?

Yes. Verona (€1000), Padua (€1000) and Vicenza (€1000) are served from Monaco at individual fixed rates.

Can I book the return trip — Venice to Monaco?

Yes. We cover both directions from Piazzale Roma, VCE Airport or Mestre. Book the round trip together for a combined discount.


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 Venice Piazzale Roma, Tronchetto, Marco Polo Airport (VCE), Mestre, Murano ferry, Verona, Padua, Vicenza and all Veneto addresses — every day of the year.

Vehicle Type

Premium Sedan, Premium Van, Standard Sedan, Standard Van

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