每位乘客可以携带一件大行李(29" x 21" x 11" / 74 x 53 x 28 cm)和一件小行李(22" x 14" x 9" / 56 x 36 x 23 cm)。豪华轿车最多可容纳 2 件大行李。我们始终会为您安排最合适的车辆,以确保您的行李能够容纳。如有超大行李,或您不确定行李是否能放下,请 联系我们。
Yes, and it is one of the most natural combinations on the eastern Riviera. The two are only about 8 km (5 miles) apart, so adding Monaco as a stop — or using it as your starting point — adds very little travel time. A private transfer makes this kind of flexible itinerary easy to manage. Rather than coordinating buses or train schedules between villages, your driver can take you from one to the other on your own timeline, with luggage safely in the car while you explore.
Roquebrune-Cap-Martin sits between Monaco and Menton on the eastern Riviera. Monaco is approximately 8 km (5 miles) away, making it a natural pairing for a day that spans both destinations. Menton is around 5 km (3 miles) to the east. Nice is approximately 30 km (19 miles) to the west. The location makes it one of the most convenient stops along this stretch of coast, easily combined with neighboring highlights.
A half-day is enough to cover the highlights of either the village or the cape. A full day lets you do both comfortably — walk the medieval lanes and castle in the morning, then descend to the Cap Martin coastal path in the afternoon. The famous Promenade Le Corbusier, a clifftop path along the cape, takes around an hour to walk at a relaxed pace and rewards every step with open sea views.
The village and cape are well-served by road, though the narrow lanes of the medieval village itself are best explored on foot once you arrive. A private transfer drops you directly at the most convenient access point — either the village entrance for the historic quarter or the lower cape area for the coastal path — without the stress of finding parking on narrow Riviera roads. From Nice, the journey covers roughly 30 km (19 miles) and takes approximately 35 to 50 minutes depending on traffic.
The medieval castle is one of the oldest in France and offers sweeping views stretching toward Monaco and the Italian Alps. The village itself is a maze of vaulted alleyways, ancient doorways, and flowering facades. On the cape, the Promenade Le Corbusier traces the coastline past the site where the architect lived and died — his modest Cabanon cabin is a UNESCO World Heritage site. The beaches below the cape offer calm, clear water for swimming if your schedule allows.
Roquebrune-Cap-Martin offers two distinct experiences in one destination. The medieval hilltop village — one of the most intact in all of France — sits above a dramatically beautiful cape that juts into the Mediterranean. You get narrow stone streets, a 10th-century castle, panoramic sea views, and some of the most photographed coastal scenery on the Riviera, without the crowds that follow Monaco or Nice. It rewards slow exploration and feels genuinely different from the rest of the Côte d'Azur.