Transportation in Vatican City
Your complete guide to getting around Vatican City - from airport transfers to local transport
Airport Transfer
How to get from the airport to city center. Compare trains, buses, taxis, and private transfers.
Learn more →Taxis & Rideshare
Using Grab, Uber, and local taxis. Fares, safety tips, and common scams to avoid.
Learn more →Car Rental
Driving guide and car rental tips. International licenses, road rules, and insurance.
Learn more →Getting Around Vatican City
Quick Transportation Tips
Take Metro Line A to Ottaviano station, it's the closest stop to St. Peter's Square, roughly a 10-minute walk through the Borgo neighborhood.
Bus routes 40 and 64 run from Termini station directly to the Vatican area, making them a practical option if you're coming from the main rail hub with luggage.
Vatican City itself is entirely pedestrian once you're inside, so consolidate your belongings before arrival, there's no vehicle access beyond designated service areas.
Use Rome's ATAC app or Moovit for live bus and metro schedules when planning your route to the Vatican from anywhere in the city.
Book Transportation
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Transportation Tours & Tickets
Skip-the-line tickets, airport transfers, and transport tours
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See All Vatican City Tours on ViatorFrequently Asked Questions
What are the transportation options for getting to Vatican City?
Vatican City has no airport, train station, or internal transit of its own — it covers just 0.44 square kilometers and everything inside is walked. From Rome, the fastest option is Metro Line A to Ottaviano–San Pietro, which puts you about 10 minutes on foot from St. Peter's Square. Taxis from central Rome typically run €10–20 depending on your starting point; from Fiumicino airport, expect roughly €50 by official metered cab.
What public transportation in Rome goes to Vatican City?
Rome's ATAC network has several solid options. Metro Line A (Ottaviano–San Pietro stop) is the quickest from Termini and most of the historic center. Buses 23, 40, and 64 all serve the Vatican area — the 40 Express from Termini is fast and less crowded than the 64, which has a long reputation for pickpockets. A single ATAC ticket costs €1.50 and covers 100 minutes of unlimited transfers.
Which Rome Metro stop is closest to the Vatican?
Ottaviano–San Pietro on Metro Line A is the standard answer — about 600 meters, or a 10-minute walk, from St. Peter's Square. If you're heading to the Vatican Museums entrance on Viale Vaticano rather than the square itself, Cipro (one stop west on the same line) shaves off a few minutes. Both stops are well-signed and easy to navigate.
How long does it take to get from Rome Termini to the Vatican?
By Metro Line A (direction Battistini), the ride from Termini to Ottaviano takes about 15–18 minutes, plus a 10-minute walk to St. Peter's Square — budget 35–45 minutes door to door including platform waits. By taxi, the same trip is 20–30 minutes but can stretch longer when traffic backs up on Via della Conciliazione, on Sunday mornings.
Can you walk to Vatican City from central Rome?
Easily, depending on where you're starting. From Piazza Navona it's about 20 minutes on foot; from the Pantheon, roughly 25 minutes; from Trastevere, cross the Tiber at Ponte Sisto and you're 15 minutes away. The final stretch along Via della Conciliazione — the broad avenue built by Mussolini leading straight to the square — is well-marked and walkable in mild weather, though it's exposed and bleak in July heat.
Is the 64 bus to Vatican City safe to take?
It's convenient — a direct run from Termini to Piazza San Pietro — but it's been one of Rome's most pickpocket-prone routes for decades. Tourists standing in crowded aisles with cameras out make easy targets. The 40 Express covers essentially the same corridor, runs faster, and tends to be less chaotic. If you do take the 64, keep bags zipped against your chest and avoid rear doors in heavy crowds.
Is there parking near Vatican City?
Street parking near the Vatican is scarce and strictly enforced in the ZTL (restricted traffic zones). The nearest practical option is the underground garage at Lungotevere in Sassia, about a 5-minute walk from the Museums entrance. Many visitors driving in from outside Rome find it easier to park at a terminus Metro Line A station — Anagnina or Battistini — and take the train the rest of the way.
Do hop-on hop-off sightseeing buses stop at the Vatican?
Several operators, including City Sightseeing Roma with its red double-deckers, include a Vatican stop on their routes. Day passes run roughly €20–25 per adult, compared to €1.50 for a standard ATAC ride. They make sense if you're combining the Vatican with three or four other major sites in a single day and want to skip metro connections; for just Vatican access, the regular bus or metro is cheaper and often faster.