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Nice · Promenade des Anglais & Seafront

French Riviera Pass

Experience

French Riviera Pass, Nice · Promenade des Anglais & Seafront
Category
Experience
Duration
5h 30m
Best Time
Any time
Entry
EUR 28
Rating
4.9 (10,086)
The place

About French Riviera Pass

The French Riviera Pass gets you into Monaco's top three attractions without queuing: the Oceanographic Museum with its jaw-dropping aquarium tanks, Prince's Palace where you can tour the royal apartments, and the Casino Monte-Carlo's viewing terrace overlooking the gaming floors. You'll spend a full day exploring Monaco's old town and Monte-Carlo district, with audio guides explaining everything from Princess Grace's story to Jacques Cousteau's deep-sea discoveries. The free shuttle saves your legs between the clifftop palace and waterfront museum.

Your day flows naturally from Monaco-Ville's narrow medieval streets down to the harbor district. The palace feels surprisingly intimate for a royal residence, especially the throne room with its Renaissance frescoes. At the Oceanographic Museum, the shark lagoon and tropical aquariums are genuinely spectacular, while the rooftop terrace offers postcard views across the Mediterranean. The casino's Belle Époque architecture impresses even from the public viewing area, though you can't actually gamble without paying extra.

Most visitors rush through all three attractions and miss the best parts. The palace tour takes 45 minutes if you actually listen to the audio guide, the museum needs at least two hours for the main floors, and the casino viewing terrace is frankly skippable unless you're obsessed with gambling history. At €35 for adults, you'll break even versus individual tickets, but only if you skip the rushed tourist pace and actually enjoy each stop.

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The place

Getting there

Address
6 Av. des Pins, 06200 Nice, France
Neighborhood
Promenade des Anglais & Seafront
View on Google Maps →
Good to know

Tips, answered

Book the 9 AM time slot online to beat cruise ship crowds at the Oceanographic Museum, then grab coffee at Café de la Rotonde while other tourists are still arriving

Skip the casino terrace entirely and use that extra hour for the museum's rarely visited top floor, where Cousteau's original diving equipment tells better stories than any gaming room

The palace audio guide has a 'quick visit' option that most people miss, covering just the highlights in 20 minutes instead of the full 45-minute version

Plan for about 5h 30m.

French Riviera Pass is in the Promenade des Anglais & Seafront neighborhood of Nice. The address is 6 Av. des Pins, 06200 Nice, France. The area is well-served by metro.

This works well at any time of day, though mornings tend to be quieter. Weekdays are less crowded than weekends.

Comfortable shoes are recommended. Parts are outdoors, so bring a light layer.

Closed on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday. Check the official website for holiday closures and special hours.

Around the corner

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Place Masséna sits at the exact center of Nice, where the old town's narrow streets meet the modern shopping district. You'll find seven towering statues on 10-meter poles representing the continents, changing colors every few minutes throughout the day. The square's red ochre buildings with neo-Moorish arcades frame the space perfectly, while interactive fountains let kids (and adults) cool off during summer heat. The square feels like Nice's living room where everyone eventually passes through. Street performers claim corners near the fountains, while locals cut across on their way to work or shopping. The contrast hits you immediately: medieval old town alleys on one side, modern tram lines and chain stores on the other. During festivals, temporary stages transform the space, but day to day it maintains an elegant calm despite constant foot traffic. Most guides oversell this as a destination when it's really a perfect starting point. Don't plan more than 20 minutes here unless there's an event happening. The real value is using it as your navigation hub: old town to the south, shopping streets to the north, and Promenade du Paillon gardens stretching behind. Skip the overpriced cafes around the edges and grab coffee in the old town instead.

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