Livorno Ferry
Livorno Ferry
Livorno ferries connect Italy with Corsica, Sardinia, Sicily & Capraia Island with crossings available to Bastia & Ile Rousse (in Corsica), Golfo Aranci & Olbia (in Sardinia), Palermo (in Sicily), Capraia (in Capraia Island). Livorno Ferry crossings are operated by Corsica Ferries, Moby Lines, Grimaldi Lines, La Meridionale & Toremar and depending on time of year you’ll find a choice of up to 9 ferry crossings daily.
There are up to 65 ferry crossings weekly from Livorno with sailing durations starting from 2 hours 45 minutes. Our Livorno ferry summary provides a good guide but for the latest sailing information use our fare search.
Calata Carrara - Nuova Stazione Marittima, 57100 Livorno, Calata Carrara Terminal
Piazzale del Portuale - Imbarchi Stazione Marittima, Via Donegani, 57100 Livorno LI
Darsena Toscana East - Biglietteria Terminal Traghetti Grimaldi Lines Darsena Toscana, Porto di Livorno, Viale Mogadiscio 57123 Livorno
Terminal Traghetti - Calata Sgarallino, 1, 57123 Livorno LI, Italy
Molo Mediceo - Via del Molo Mediceo, 12 57123 Livorno
Livorno - Bastia with Corsica Ferries & Moby Lines
Livorno - Golfo Aranci with Corsica Ferries
Livorno - Olbia with Moby Lines & Grimaldi Lines
Livorno - Palermo with Grimaldi Lines
Livorno - Ile Rousse with La Meridionale
Livorno - Capraia with Toremar
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Visitors to the port of Livorno, set into the coastline of a bustling metropolitan on the west-coast of Italy, will immediately be struck by its size. Dockyard cranes stretch towards the Mediterranean skyline and colossal freight ships prowl the harbour, all to facilitate the port’s yearly haul of 30 million tonnes of incoming cargo. Though much of the predominantly industrial port is inaccessible to pedestrians, the cruise terminal is a welcoming open-plan space featuring a food court and free Wi-Fi. A shuttle bus service is also available for travel into the heart of the city. This short trip takes passengers over a canal teeming with small private boats before stopping in the shadow of the Palazzo Communale, Livorno’s 18th century town hall that reflects the city’s distinctive neo-renaissance architectural style. The port of Livorno offers a variety of routes for passengers wanting to explore the Mediterranean and beyond. There are plenty of daily excursions across the pristine Tyrrhenian sea, with stops in the mountainous French isle of Corsica and the Italian islands of Scilly and Sardinia further south. Longer-haul trips into Barcelona and Tangier Med in Morocco leave on a weekly basis too, both routes skirting the ocean border between Europe and Africa.
Livorno Accommodation