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Monaco & the Full Côte d'Azur in 7 Days

Monaco plus Èze, Menton, Antibes, Nice, Cannes, and the hill villages — a complete Riviera week

Monaco 7-Day Itinerary — Quick Answer

As of 2026
Trip length
7 days
Est. cost / person (mid, ex-flights)
$825
Budget–luxury
$400–$1,910

As of 2026, the recommended Monaco 7-day route runs Day1 All of Monaco — casino, palace, Oceanographic Museum · Day2 Èze hilltop village + Menton on the Italian border · Day3 Nice — the Riviera capital · Day4 Antibes & Cap d'Antibes · Day5 Nice markets + a hilltop finale (Saint-Paul-de-Vence) · Day6 Cannes & the Lérins Islands · Day7 Slow finish in Nice, grouping the must-see sights with minimal backtracking. Estimated cost per person (excluding flights) is around $825 on a mid-range budget. A full week from a Nice base covers Monaco and the entire eastern Côte d'Azur at a relaxed pace. Day 1 is all of Monaco; Day 2 is Èze and Menton; Day 3 is Nice; Day 4 is Antibes and Cap d'Antibes; Day 5 is the hill villages (Saint-Paul-de-Vence); Day 6 is Cannes and the Lérins Islands; Day 7 is a slow finish in Nice. Monaco is the glamorous one-day anchor, but the surrounding Riviera — villages, markets, coastal walks, and art — is what fills a memorable week, all reachable on cheap coastal trains and buses without a car.

7-Day Total Budget at a Glance

Budget

$400

Per person, flights excl.

Recommended

Mid-Range

$825

Per person, flights excl.

Luxury

$1,910

Per person, flights excl.

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Day-by-Day Detailed Schedule

DAY 1

All of Monaco — casino, palace, Oceanographic Museum

Train from Nice · Monte-Carlo casino square · Prince's Palace & guard · Monaco-Ville · Oceanographic Museum · F1 circuit walk

Activities

  1. 08:30 Train Nice → Monaco-Monte-Carlo 45min

    Take the TER coastal train from Nice-Ville to Monaco-Monte-Carlo — about 20-25 minutes for roughly €4-5 each way, several departures an hour. The station is built into the cliff and exits into the city via lifts and tunnels.

    Cost: €4-5 each way TIP: Buy at the machine or the SNCF Connect app. Sit on the right (seaward) side for coastal views. Start early to beat the cruise-ship day crowds that arrive late morning.
  2. 09:30 Place du Casino & Monte-Carlo exterior 1h

    Walk up to the Place du Casino — the Belle Époque Casino de Monte-Carlo (1863), the Hôtel de Paris, the Café de Paris, and the supercar parade. Free to admire from outside; the gaming rooms open at 2pm.

    Cost: Free (exterior) TIP: Mornings (10am-1pm) you can tour the casino rooms without playing in relaxed dress; from 2pm there's a strict dress code and a €19 entry. A coffee on the Café de Paris terrace (€6-10) is the cheapest way to soak up the square.
  3. 11:00 Walk to Monaco-Ville (the Rock) for the changing of the guard 1h30

    Cross the harbour to Monaco-Ville, the old town on the Rock, in time for the daily changing of the guard at the Prince's Palace (11:55, about 10 minutes). The Palace Square also has sweeping views over the port and Fontvieille.

    Cost: Free (ceremony) TIP: Arrive by 11:40 to get a good spot — it's free and popular. Use Monaco's free public lifts and escalators to climb to the Rock rather than the stairs.
  4. 13:00 Lunch — barbagiuan & socca at the Condamine market 1h

    Drop down to the Marché de la Condamine on Place d'Armes — its covered food hall has around 20 stalls serving barbagiuan (Monaco's national dish), socca, and fresh pasta for €4-15. The one genuinely affordable hot meal in Monaco.

    Cost: €8-18 per person TIP: Go before the market quiets in mid-afternoon. Barbagiuan (chard-and-ricotta pastry, €4-7) and socca (chickpea pancake, €4-6) are the local must-tries. For a sit-down Monégasque meal instead, U Cavagnetu in the old town does stocafi salt-cod stew.
  5. 14:30 Oceanographic Museum of Monaco 2h

    The cliff-top Musée Océanographique (founded 1910 by Prince Albert I, once directed by Jacques Cousteau) — a grand aquarium with a shark lagoon and touch pool, marine-science exhibits, and a rooftop terrace with huge sea views. Adults €22.50, children/students €14.

    Cost: €22.50 adult TIP: The most substantial indoor sight in Monaco — allow 1.5-2 hours. It's in Monaco-Ville near the palace, so it pairs with the morning. Note it closes on Grand Prix weekend and Christmas Day. Book online to skip the queue in summer.
  6. 16:30 Prince's Palace state apartments (seasonal) + old-town lanes 1h

    If open (roughly April-October), tour the Prince's Palace state apartments (about €10), then wander the medieval lanes of Monaco-Ville — the cathedral (where Grace Kelly is buried), tiny squares, and viewpoints.

    Cost: €10 palace tour TIP: The palace tour runs only in season and closes when the royal family is in residence — check ahead. The old town is the most genuinely characterful part of Monaco and free to explore.
  7. 17:45 Port Hercule & the F1 circuit walk 1h15

    Stroll Port Hercule among the superyachts, then walk part of the free F1 Grand Prix circuit on the public roads — the Fairmont hairpin (F1's slowest corner), the tunnel, and the swimming-pool section.

    Cost: Free TIP: Walking the circuit is one of Monaco's best free things to do. Outside Grand Prix week it's ordinary traffic. End with a harbour-side drink at the Brasserie de Monaco microbrewery (beers €8-12) before training back to Nice.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Café in Nice before the train

Nice · €4-10

Coffee and a pastry in Nice — far cheaper than Monaco's casino square.

Lunch

Marché de la Condamine food hall

La Condamine · €8-18

Barbagiuan and socca at the market — the only cheap hot food in Monaco.

Dinner

Brasserie de Monaco or back in Nice

Port Hercule / Nice · €20-45

Harbour-side house-brewed beer and a bistro plate, or save money with dinner in Nice.

Transit:

Nice → Monaco TER coastal train ~20-25 min (€4-5 each way). Within Monaco, walk and use the free public lifts/escalators between districts. No car — parking is a nightmare.

DAY 1 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $70 Mid $160 Luxury $450
DAY 2

Èze hilltop village + Menton on the Italian border

Bus to Èze · medieval village & exotic garden · Menton old town · Riviera coast

Activities

  1. 09:00 Bus from Nice to Èze village 45min

    Take bus line 82 (or the 100 along the coast) up to Èze, a medieval village perched on a 400m crag between Nice and Monaco — one of the most spectacular spots on the Riviera.

    Cost: ~€2-3 TIP: Èze has two parts: the clifftop medieval village and Èze-sur-Mer by the sea. Aim for the village. The bus winds up the Moyenne Corniche with dramatic views.
  2. 10:00 Èze village & Jardin Exotique 2h

    Wander the car-free stone lanes, then climb to the Jardin Exotique d'Èze (about €6) at the summit — a cactus garden with one of the most jaw-dropping panoramas on the whole coast, out over Cap Ferrat and the Mediterranean.

    Cost: ~€6 garden TIP: Go early before tour groups. The Fragonard and Galimard perfume workshops in the village offer free tours. Wear comfortable shoes — it's all steps and cobbles.
  3. 12:30 Lunch in Èze or onward to Menton 1h30

    Grab a light lunch in Èze, then take the train along the coast to Menton, the last French town before the Italian border — famous for its lemons, pastel old town, and gardens.

    Cost: €15-30 lunch TIP: Menton is reached by the coastal train (change at Monaco or Nice). It's noticeably warmer and quieter than Monaco, with a strong Italian flavour.
  4. 14:30 Menton old town & seafront 2h30

    Explore Menton's stacked pastel old town, the Basilica of Saint-Michel, the covered market, and the long pebble seafront promenade. Pure, relaxed Riviera with far fewer crowds than Monaco.

    Cost: Free TIP: Climb the steps to the cemetery above the old town for the classic view back over the rooftops. Try anything lemon — Menton's lemons are a protected speciality. The Lemon Festival runs mid-February to early March.
  5. 17:30 Train back to Nice 1h

    Return along the coast to Nice (about 35-40 minutes), watching the Riviera slide by, and have dinner in Nice's Vieux Ville.

    Cost: ~€5 TIP: Dinner in Nice's old town is a fraction of Monaco prices — try socca, pissaladière, and daube niçoise. Cours Saleya market square is the lively spot.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Nice café

Nice · €4-10

Quick coffee and pastry before the bus.

Lunch

Light lunch in Èze village

Èze · €15-30

A terrace bite with the cliff view; keep it simple before Menton.

Dinner

Niçoise dinner in Vieux Nice

Nice old town · €20-40

Socca, pissaladière, and daube — affordable, genuine Riviera cooking.

Transit:

Nice → Èze bus 82 (~€2-3); Èze → Menton and Menton → Nice on the TER coastal train (~€5). A regional day ticket can be worth it for multiple hops.

DAY 2 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $55 Mid $110 Luxury $240
DAY 3

Nice — the Riviera capital

Promenade des Anglais · Vieux Nice · Castle Hill viewpoint · Cours Saleya market

Activities

  1. 09:30 Promenade des Anglais & the seafront 1h30

    Walk the famous Promenade des Anglais along Nice's pebble bay, the symbol of the city, then drift into the Vieux Nice (old town) lanes.

    Cost: Free TIP: Rent a bike or just stroll. The blue chairs facing the sea are a Nice institution. The Baie des Anges curve is the classic photo.
  2. 11:00 Cours Saleya market & Vieux Nice 1h30

    Browse the Cours Saleya flower-and-produce market (mornings, closed Mondays) and the baroque churches, ochre facades, and food shops of the old town.

    Cost: Free (market browsing) TIP: Try socca hot off the griddle from a market stall. Look for candied fruit and Niçoise olives. Mondays the market turns to antiques.
  3. 13:00 Lunch in the old town 1h

    A relaxed Niçoise lunch in Vieux Nice — salade niçoise, socca, pan bagnat, or fresh pasta.

    Cost: €15-30 TIP: Far better value than anything in Monaco. Many small places are cash-friendly and quick.
  4. 14:30 Castle Hill (Colline du Château) viewpoint 1h30

    Climb (or take the free lift) up Castle Hill for the panoramic view over the Baie des Anges, the old town rooftops, and the port — the best view in Nice. There's a waterfall and gardens at the top.

    Cost: Free TIP: A lift on the east side of the old town saves the climb. Sunset here is superb. The castle itself is long gone — it's the view and gardens that draw you.
  5. 16:30 Optional: Matisse or Chagall museum 1h30

    If you have time and energy, the Musée Matisse or the Musée National Marc Chagall (both in the Cimiez area) cap a Riviera trip on a cultural high.

    Cost: €10-12 TIP: Both are short bus rides from the centre. Choose one — Chagall for the biblical-message paintings, Matisse for the local connection.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Nice café or hotel

Nice · €4-12

Coffee and a croissant before the seafront walk.

Lunch

Vieux Nice bistro

Nice old town · €15-30

Salade niçoise, socca, or pan bagnat — classic and affordable.

Dinner

Seafront or old-town dinner

Nice · €25-45

Riviera seafood or a Provençal menu to finish the trip.

Transit:

Nice is walkable in the centre; trams (€1.70) and buses cover the rest. The free Castle Hill lift saves the climb.

DAY 3 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $55 Mid $110 Luxury $250
DAY 4

Antibes & Cap d'Antibes

Old Antibes · Picasso Museum · Cap d'Antibes coastal path · Juan-les-Pins

Activities

  1. 09:00 Train Nice → Antibes 45min

    Take the coastal train west to Antibes (about 25-30 minutes), a walled seaside town between Nice and Cannes with one of the prettiest old quarters on the coast.

    Cost: ~€5 TIP: Antibes is the opposite mood to Monaco — laid-back, lived-in, and far cheaper. Trains run frequently along the coast.
  2. 10:00 Old Antibes & the Picasso Museum 2h30

    Wander the ramparts and lanes of old Antibes, browse the Marché Provençal covered market, and visit the Picasso Museum in the seafront Château Grimaldi, where the artist worked in 1946 (about €8).

    Cost: ~€8 museum TIP: The Provençal market (mornings) is great for picnic supplies. The museum is small but holds works Picasso made on site — worth it even for non-fans.
  3. 13:00 Lunch + Cap d'Antibes coastal walk 3h

    Lunch in the old town, then walk part of the Sentier du Littoral around Cap d'Antibes — a free coastal footpath past coves, pines, and the villas of the super-rich.

    Cost: €15-30 lunch TIP: The Sentier de Tirepoil section of the path is stunning but can be closed in rough weather — check locally. Bring water and proper shoes.
  4. 17:00 Juan-les-Pins or back to Nice 1h30

    Finish with a drink at the sandy resort of Juan-les-Pins next door, or train back to Nice for dinner.

    Cost: ~€5 train TIP: Juan-les-Pins has actual sandy beaches (rare on this coast) and a livelier evening scene than Antibes proper.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Nice café

Nice · €4-10

Quick coffee before the train west.

Lunch

Old Antibes bistro / market picnic

Antibes · €12-30

Provençal market picnic or a terrace lunch in the old town.

Dinner

Antibes or Nice

Antibes / Nice · €20-40

Seafood by the port, or back in Nice's old town.

Transit:

Nice → Antibes coastal train ~25-30 min (~€5). Cap d'Antibes is explored on foot via the free coastal path.

DAY 4 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $55 Mid $110 Luxury $240
DAY 5

Nice markets + a hilltop finale (Saint-Paul-de-Vence)

Cours Saleya · Saint-Paul-de-Vence · Maeght Foundation · relaxed departure

Activities

  1. 09:00 Cours Saleya market (final stock-up) 1h30

    A last wander through the Cours Saleya market in Vieux Nice for flowers, produce, and edible souvenirs — candied fruit, olive oil, and Niçoise specialities.

    Cost: Free browsing TIP: Closed Mondays (antiques day). Buy vacuum-packed or sealed items if flying. Hot socca from a stall is the perfect market breakfast.
  2. 11:00 Bus to Saint-Paul-de-Vence 1h

    Head up into the hills to Saint-Paul-de-Vence, a fortified medieval village beloved by artists (Chagall is buried here), full of galleries and cobbled lanes.

    Cost: ~€2-3 bus TIP: The bus (line 400 from Nice) takes about an hour. The village is car-free and very photogenic — go before the midday tour buses if you can.
  3. 12:30 Village lanes + Maeght Foundation 3h

    Explore the ramparts and galleries, then visit the Fondation Maeght just outside the village — one of Europe's finest private modern-art collections (Miró, Giacometti, Calder) in a garden setting (about €18).

    Cost: ~€18 foundation TIP: Lunch at a village terrace first. The Maeght Foundation's sculpture garden alone is worth the trip. A relaxed cultural finale away from the coast crowds.
  4. 16:30 Return to Nice + departure / final evening 1h30

    Bus back to Nice for an easy final evening on the Promenade or a last Riviera dinner before departure.

    Cost: ~€3 bus TIP: Nice airport (NCE) is a short tram/bus ride from the centre, making the last day flexible whether you fly out tonight or tomorrow.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Socca at Cours Saleya

Nice old town · €3-8

Hot socca from a market stall — the perfect cheap Riviera breakfast.

Lunch

Saint-Paul-de-Vence terrace

Saint-Paul-de-Vence · €20-40

A terrace lunch among the galleries and ramparts.

Dinner

Final dinner in Nice

Nice · €25-45

Seafront or old-town dinner to close the trip.

Transit:

Nice → Saint-Paul-de-Vence bus line 400 (~1h, €2-3). Nice centre to airport by tram (~€1.70).

DAY 5 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $55 Mid $115 Luxury $250
DAY 6

Cannes & the Lérins Islands

La Croisette · Le Suquet old town · ferry to Île Sainte-Marguerite

Activities

  1. 09:00 Train Nice → Cannes 45min

    Take the coastal train west to Cannes (about 30-40 minutes), the glamorous film-festival town with its palm-lined Croisette and grand hotels.

    Cost: ~€7 TIP: Cannes is busiest and priciest during the May film festival — avoid that fortnight if you can. Otherwise it's an easy, scenic train hop.
  2. 10:00 La Croisette & Le Suquet old town 2h

    Walk the famous Boulevard de la Croisette past the luxury hotels and the festival Palais, then climb to Le Suquet, Cannes' old quarter, for views over the bay and the harbour.

    Cost: Free TIP: The handprints of film stars line the Palais. Le Suquet's hill gives the best free view in Cannes. The Forville market nearby is great for lunch supplies.
  3. 12:30 Ferry to Île Sainte-Marguerite 4h

    Catch the short ferry to Île Sainte-Marguerite, the larger of the Lérins Islands — pine forests, swimming coves, and the fort that held the 'Man in the Iron Mask.' A car-free nature escape minutes from the coast.

    Cost: ~€15-17 ferry return TIP: Bring a picnic, water, and swimwear — the island has limited facilities. The Fort Royal and its small museum are worth a look. Last ferries leave late afternoon — check times.
  4. 17:30 Return to Cannes + train to Nice 1h30

    Ferry back to Cannes, then the coastal train to Nice for dinner.

    Cost: ~€7 train TIP: A drink on the Cannes seafront before the train is a nice way to end the day. Trains back to Nice run frequently into the evening.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Nice café

Nice · €4-10

Coffee before the train to Cannes.

Lunch

Island picnic

Île Sainte-Marguerite · €10-20

Forville market picnic eaten among the pines — the island has few cafés.

Dinner

Dinner in Nice

Nice · €25-45

Back in Nice's old town for a relaxed final-stretch dinner.

Transit:

Nice → Cannes coastal train ~30-40 min (~€7). Cannes → Île Sainte-Marguerite ferry (~€15-17 return).

DAY 6 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $60 Mid $120 Luxury $260
DAY 7

Slow finish in Nice

Promenade · Castle Hill · Cimiez museums · departure

Activities

  1. 09:30 Final Promenade walk + Castle Hill 2h

    A last morning stroll along the Promenade des Anglais and up Castle Hill (free lift) for a farewell view over the Baie des Anges.

    Cost: Free TIP: The morning light over the bay is the best of the day. The blue chairs on the Promenade are the classic spot to sit.
  2. 12:00 Lunch + last museum or shopping 3h

    A final Niçoise lunch, then either the Matisse or Chagall museum in Cimiez or some last shopping in the old town and around Place Masséna.

    Cost: €10-30 TIP: Choose one museum so the day stays relaxed. Place Masséna and the Avenue Jean Médecin are the main shopping streets.
  3. 16:00 Departure from Nice (NCE) 1h30

    Nice Côte d'Azur airport is a quick tram or bus ride from the centre — an easy end to a Riviera week.

    Cost: ~€1.70 tram TIP: Tram line 2 runs directly to both airport terminals from the centre. Allow extra time in summer when the airport is busy.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Seafront café

Nice · €4-12

Coffee facing the sea on the final morning.

Lunch

Last Niçoise lunch

Nice old town · €15-30

Salade niçoise or socca one more time before flying home.

Dinner

En route / airport

NCE · €10-25

A light bite before departure if flying out in the evening.

Transit:

Nice centre is walkable; tram line 2 runs to the airport (~€1.70). No car needed all week.

DAY 7 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $50 Mid $100 Luxury $220

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Monaco 7-Day Itinerary FAQ

Is a week based around Monaco worth it?
Monaco itself is a one-day stop, but a week on the eastern Côte d'Azur certainly is — Monaco, Èze, Menton, Nice, Antibes, Cannes, the Lérins Islands, and the hill villages all sit within an hour of each other on the coastal train. Treat Monaco as the glamorous day-one anchor and let the surrounding Riviera fill the week.
Should I stay in one place for seven days?
Yes — Nice as a single base works for the whole week. It's central on the train line, has the airport and cheap hotels (versus Monaco's premiums), and reaches every town in this plan as a day trip. One hotel, no repacking.
How much should I budget?
Far less than staying in Monaco. Based in Nice with train day trips, market lunches, and a mix of free sights and a few paid museums/attractions, a mid-range week runs roughly €800-900 per person plus accommodation. Monaco day-one is the most expensive day; the rest of the Riviera is much gentler on the wallet.
When should I come?
April-May or September-October for warmth, light crowds, and lower prices. Skip Grand Prix weekend (early June 2026) and the Cannes Film Festival fortnight (May) unless you're specifically attending, as both spike prices and crowds across the coast.

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