How to get there

How to get from Milan to Pisa

The distance between Pisa (Pisa) and Milan (Milano) is 288 kilometers. You can get from Milan to Pisa by car in 4 hours. By public transport, bus or train, the journey will take from 3.5 to 5 hours. Let us consider in more detail the advantages of each method.

By train

The fastest and most comfortable way to get from Milan to Pisa is to use the high-speed train to Florence (travel time: 1 hour 50 minutes), and from there take the train and be in Pisa in an hour.

You will find useful articles:

If you do not want to make a change, several times a day a direct train from Trenitalia runs from Pisa to Milan Central Station (Milano Centrale).

Tickets cost from 33 to 37 euros, travel time about 4 hours.

I advise you to compare prices and book train tickets in Italy only through the Omio.ru website, so Trenitalia is constantly buggy and creates problems for travelers.

By car

By car from Milan to Pisa, you can continue with three different routes:

  1. Via Genoa, on the A7, La Spezia, Viareggio
  2. Drive to Parma via the E35 expressway and then turn onto La Spezia
  3. Via Parma, Bologna, Florence

I recommend the first option if you do not want to call in Parma and Bologna. The road is calmer. The cost of toll routes in all cases will be about 28 euros.

By bus

From Milan to Pisa in just over 5 hours and 15-20 euros you can get a direct Flixbus bus.

The bus runs three times a day, departs from the Lampugnano bus station, which can be reached by metro. In Pisa, the bus arrives at the Pietrasantina parking lot, from where the city center can be reached in 20 minutes by tram (red line, LAM rossa) or bus number 80.

If you need advice, I will just answer your questions in the comments.

Watch the video: How to Travel in Italy By Train Cheapest Tickets. Rome, Florence, Venice (May 2024).

Popular Posts

Category How to get there, Next Article

Seven million Italians under 35 live with their parents
Society

Seven million Italians under 35 live with their parents

According to Istat, we are talking about 61.2% of unmarried Italians. Almost seven million young people between the ages of 18 and 34 still live with their parents. And not to say that most of this figure falls on young people: about three million people were over 25 years old. Moreover, among those who share shelter with mom and dad, thirty years are not uncommon.
Read More
Pope Francis calls on Italian government to find homes for all families
Society

Pope Francis calls on Italian government to find homes for all families

Pope Francis called on the Italian government to find homes for all families Speaking to the congregation in the main square of the Vatican, among whom there were protesters against the Italians, Pope Francis called on the Italian authorities to provide shelter to all those in need. The protesters pope tried to express his opinion and achieve goals peacefully, without using any violence.
Read More
The Italian made an agreement with her husband and lover
Society

The Italian made an agreement with her husband and lover

A passionate Italian woman living in the south of the country in the city of Casoria, a province in the Napoli region, found a very original solution to all problems when she realized that she found it difficult to choose between her husband, with whom she had been married for more than 10 years, and lover 10 years younger than her. The woman took extreme measures, inviting the two applicants for her hand and heart to draw up a kind of agreement that would help her decide on the call of her heart.
Read More
Entrepreneur climbed the dome of St. Peter's Basilica
Society

Entrepreneur climbed the dome of St. Peter's Basilica

An Italian businessman climbed to the very top of the dome of St. Peter's Basilica on Saturday, urging the Pope to help all those who suffered from the deepest economic recession that the country faced after the 2008 crisis. Marcello Di Finzio unfurled a white banner that said “Help us, Pope Francis,” urging the government to put an end to all the measures taken to regulate the economy and to combat unemployment.
Read More