Most visitors assume you must stay in Monaco for the Grand Prix. You do not. The train from Nice-Ville to Monaco Monte-Carlo takes 25 minutes, runs every 20 minutes through race weekend, and costs around €5. A 4-star room in Nice during GP weekend is 40 to 60 percent cheaper than the same standard in Monaco. Here is the honest case for basing yourself in Nice, plus the Sunday evening logistics nobody warns you about.
Typical saving by staying in Nice
On accommodation alone, for equivalent room quality. Add restaurant and bar savings on the days you are not in Monaco.
Hopp til en seksjon
The case for Nice
- You save 40 to 60 percent on accommodation. A €500 Monaco room equates to roughly €200 to €300 in Nice for the same standard.
- You eat far better outside Monaco. Old Nice has the Riviera’s best concentration of small bistros, socca bars, and proper Nicoise cooking. Monaco restaurants are mostly priced for hospitality budgets.
- You get the Riviera experience. Old Town, Promenade des Anglais, flower market, beaches, museums. Monaco is a 2km principality. Nice is a real city.
- You stay close to the airport. Nice Cote d’Azur is 7 minutes from central Nice by tram, vs 25 minutes (or a €170 helicopter) to Monaco.
- Late-night Nice has its own scene. If you do not want to wait for the late train, Nice’s own nightlife runs to 5am. See our guide to nightclubs in Nice and our rooftop bars guide.
- You have a yacht day pass. The trackside hospitality day starts before 10am and runs late. The commute is exhausting. Stay in Monaco for those nights at least.
- You are doing 3 or more late-club nights. Taking a midnight train back to Nice four nights running is a punishing schedule. Beausoleil or Cap d’Ail are cheaper Monaco-adjacent backups.
- You are doing corporate hospitality. The optics and the commute do not match the spend. Stay at Hotel de Paris or Hermitage.
- You have mobility constraints. Monaco streets are steep. Nice train commute adds platform-to-circuit walking. If walking is hard, stay close to the action.
- Monaco GP Yacht Day Pass: Hva du faktisk får: tidslinje time for time + kaiplasssoner + sjekkliste for verifisering.
- Guide til Monacos Grand Prix 2026: the full hub.
- Best Parties at Monaco GP 2026: 14 venues ranked.
- 12 ting å gjøre på Monaco GP etter løpet: Riviera-planen er avsporet.
- Top 7 Best Nightclubs in Nice: when you stay in Nice and skip the train.
- De beste takbarene i Nice: aperitif views before the Monaco commute.
- Best Restaurants in Old Nice: where to eat between GP days.
The train (and the Sunday catch)
The TER Sud-Provence-Alpes-Cote d’Azur line runs Nice-Ville to Monaco Monte-Carlo in approximately 25 minutes, with stops at Beaulieu-sur-Mer and Cap d’Ail. During GP weekend, SNCF typically adds extra services, with departures every 15 to 20 minutes during peak windows and trains running until around midnight.
The Sunday catch nobody warns you about. After the race finishes around 5pm, every Monaco visitor going to Nice tries to leave at the same time. The 5pm to 7pm trains are packed and slow. The smart moves: leave Monaco before 4pm (have an early dinner in Cap-Ferrat or Villefranche en route) or stay in Monaco for dinner and take a 9pm to 11pm train back.
Train planner
Pick your day and time. Get the realistic plan.
Best neighbourhoods to stay in Nice
Place Massena and Carre d’Or
The central plaza, walkable to the Old Town, the Promenade and Nice-Ville train station (12 minutes). Strong restaurant density, tram access, mostly 4-star hotels in the €200 to €450 night range during GP.
Vieux Nice (gamlebyen)
The yellow-and-ochre warren of streets between the Promenade and Cours Saleya. The Riviera’s best concentration of small bistros, socca bars and aperitif spots. Boutique hotels and apartments. 15 minutes walk to the train. Loud at night.
Around Nice-Ville train station
The fastest commute to Monaco. 3-star and budget 4-star hotels in the €120 to €280 night range during GP. Less charm but the train platform is literally next door. Good for short stays.
Promenade des Anglais
Sea-facing hotels including Negresco, Anantara, Hyatt Regency. 5-star territory at €700 to €1,200 night. Longer walk to the train (18 to 25 minutes), but a tram station two blocks back. Worth it if the sea view is non-negotiable.
Mont Boron and Cimiez (calm)
The quiet, residential hillsides. Better for couples on a Riviera holiday with one GP day. Tram or short taxi to the train station. Not recommended if you are doing all four days in Monaco.
Nice vs Monaco: real price comparison (GP weekend)
| Standard | Nice (GP weekend, per night) | Monaco (GP weekend, per night) | Saving in Nice |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3-star | €120 to €220 | €280 to €500 | 50 to 60% |
| 4-star | €200 to €450 | €500 to €1,200 | 50 to 65% |
| 5-star | €600 to €1,200 | €1,500 to €4,000+ | 40 to 70% |
| Apartment / Airbnb | €150 to €400 | €350 to €900 | 50 to 60% |
Prices are typical ranges based on public-facing booking platforms for GP-weekend dates. Budget hotels in Nice can run as low as €80 to €120 night if booked 6+ months ahead. Premium suites at Hotel de Paris Monte-Carlo can exceed €5,000 night during GP, with mandatory multi-night stays.
When staying in Nice is NOT the right call
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Thomas
Jeg er Thomas, grunnlegger av Nice Party Life. Vi deler de beste tipsene, fra skjulte perler til must-see, for å gjøre oppholdet ditt i Nice uforglemmelig. Enten du er ute etter natteliv eller byeventyr, er vi her for å veilede deg! 🌴✨
