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 (April 2024).

Popular Posts

Category How to get there, Next Article

Everyone can learn Italian: an interview with a tutor
Italian language

Everyone can learn Italian: an interview with a tutor

Almost a year soon, my desire to learn Italian brought me to Vika, a language tutor on Skype. This acquaintance prompted the idea to write a review about her on BlogoItaliano, and later Vika repeatedly said that students used this review to contact her. With many of them, she took her first steps in learning Italian, and with some - like me - she became good friends.
Read More
How to learn Italian from scratch on your own?
Italian language

How to learn Italian from scratch on your own?

Say what you like, and learning from scratch a foreign language - what a job! Especially mental and, most often, emotional. This is exactly what happened for me. In school years, I, like many, began to learn English. He was primitive, at the level of knowledge of the alphabet, personal pronouns, standard phrases such as “My name is Natasha” and “I live in Moscow” or scanty poems that I have eyes and I can see the book and the pen in front of me, I see ceiling and floor, I see a window and a door. You know, many years have passed, but I still remember the poem.
Read More
How to say many thanks in Italian
Italian language

How to say many thanks in Italian

You do not know how to thank the Italian? Then this article is for you. Most tourists in Italy always thank the same, with the word “grace”, grazie is written in Italian. For example, it sounds like this: grazie per l'aiuto (thanks for the help). But in fact, there are quite a few variations of the word "thank you", which will not be difficult to learn.
Read More
Medici or Medici: who controlled the throne?
Italian language

Medici or Medici: who controlled the throne?

For several consecutive years, in mid-October, I have been leaving for a week in one of the European cities to relax and see how they live there. Brussels turned out to be a charming, fragrant chocolate and beer-foamy French-speaking city. From the words "bonjour" and "arevoir" sometimes dizzy, and in the throat began to tickle from the gressed French "r".
Read More