Monza sits inside Royal Monza Park — a protected woodland that restricts road access on race days. Getting in by train is fast and straightforward. Getting out is where most first-timers lose an hour they didn't need to lose.
Royal Monza Park road access is restricted for all non-official vehicles on Saturday and Sunday. Official car parks exist at varying distances from the circuit (0.5–5km), but on race day these are primarily for VIP and paddock pass holders. For general ticket holders, the train is the only practical option — navigation apps will mislead you about road access.
Driving to Monza on race day
Do not attempt this if you have a general or grandstand ticket. Road restrictions are enforced by police. The train from Milan takes 10–12 minutes and runs constantly. There is no reason to drive.
The S8 and S11 regional lines run from Milano Centrale (and Milano Porta Garibaldi) to Monza station continuously. Journey time is 10–12 minutes. Tickets are purchased at machines in the station — validate before boarding. Trains are busiest from 8–10am on race days.
From: Milano Centrale or Milano Porta Garibaldi
Line: S8 or S11 (regional — not the Metro)
Journey time: 10–12 minutes
Ticket price: Approximately €2–3 each way
Frequency: Multiple trains per hour — no advance booking needed
Exit at Monza station: Use the Piazza Castello exit for the Linea Nera shuttle
Allow at least 90 minutes from central Milan to your grandstand seat on race day — train time plus shuttle plus the 15–20 minute walk through the park. Friday is faster; Sunday is slowest.
The S7 line from Milano Porta Garibaldi stops at Biassono-Lesmo — approximately 200m from the Lesmo corner entrance to the circuit. This is significantly closer than Monza station and skips the shuttle bus entirely.
From: Milano Porta Garibaldi (direction Lecco)
Exit station: Biassono-Lesmo — ~200m from Lesmo entrance
Best for: Lesmo, Roggia, or Parabolica grandstand tickets; also GA in that zone
Capacity: Lower than Monza station — can be congested on race day morning
If your grandstand is on the back section of the circuit, this route saves 20–30 minutes over the Monza station + shuttle route. If you're heading to Tribune Centrale, Monza station is better.
From Monza station (Piazza Castello exit), the Linea Nera shuttle bus runs directly to the circuit perimeter. Cost is approximately €6 return per day. The drop-off point is still a 15–20 minute walk through the park woods to reach the actual circuit gates — factor this in when planning your arrival time.
Walking vs shuttle
From Monza station, the circuit is roughly a 30–35 minute walk through the parkland without the shuttle. On Friday and quiet mornings, walking through the woodland is genuinely pleasant. On Sunday morning when trains arrive packed, the shuttle is worth paying for. The €6 is reasonable; the queue for the shuttle itself can add 10–15 minutes at peak times.
After the chequered flag, all 60,000+ spectators converge on two train stations. The standard mistake is heading directly for the gates. The circuit itself gives you a better option.
Rush to the station at the chequered flag
Both Monza station and Biassono-Lesmo fill within 20–30 minutes of the race ending. Queues of 60–90 minutes are standard. This is the most common mistake at the Italian GP.
Stay for the podium and track invasion
The post-race track invasion is a Monza tradition — spectators walk the main straight and pit lane. Staying adds 30–60 minutes inside the circuit, and by the time you leave, the worst of the station queue has cleared.
Wait inside the park (30–45 minutes)
If you don't want the track invasion, find shade in the park and wait. By 60–90 minutes after the race, the station queues drop noticeably. The park is pleasant — this is not a hardship.
The track invasion — decide in advance
After the race ends, spectators are permitted onto the circuit — a Monza tradition stretching back decades. Thousands of fans walk the main straight, photograph the pit lane, and stay until security begins clearing the circuit. If you want to do this (worth it on a first visit), the station queues will have partially cleared by the time you leave. If you don't want to do it, wait in the shade inside the park for 30–45 minutes instead.
Official car parks exist at 0.5–5km from the circuit, primarily used by VIP, paddock, and media access holders. Some general public parking areas exist on the outer perimeter, but these are a significant walk from the circuit gates and road access is restricted on race day — meaning you park further away than you expect and walk into the same woodland you'd reach by train anyway.
If you are staying in Monza town rather than Milan, walking to the circuit entrance from the town centre (~2km) is a reasonable option on Friday and Saturday when park access is less restricted. On race day, check the official circuit communications for updated access restrictions before assuming any route works.
Getting there from central Milan
S8 or S11 from Milano Centrale to Monza. 10–12 minutes, runs constantly. Then Linea Nera shuttle (€6 return) or 15-min walk to circuit gates. Allow 90 minutes total on race day.
Getting there from Porta Garibaldi / via Lecco
S7 line from Milano Porta Garibaldi to Biassono-Lesmo. Station is ~200m from the Lesmo entrance. Faster if you're based northeast of Milan or have Lesmo/Parabolica tickets.
Getting there from outside Milan
Connect to Milano Centrale or Porta Garibaldi. Driving to the circuit on race day is not realistic — road access within Royal Monza Park is restricted.
Post-race — best option
Stay for the track invasion or wait 30–45 minutes in the park. By 60 minutes after the race ends, the station queue has dropped from 90+ minutes to something manageable.
Common Mistakes →
Transport, bag issues, and what else catches people out at Monza
Italian GP Guide →
Circuit overview, grandstands, and race weekend info
The 2026 Italian F1 Grand Prix runs September 4–6 at Autodromo Nazionale Monza. Train schedules from Trenord — check the app for confirmed race weekend timetables.
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