FCO - Rome

Getting from Rome Fiumicino Airport with children and family

Last updated: March 2026

Fiumicino is a large, reasonably family-friendly airport but the 30 km distance to Rome means the transport leg requires planning, especially with young children and luggage.

The terminal with children

T3 (main international arrivals) is modern and spacious. Baby changing facilities are in restrooms throughout the terminal. Luggage trolleys are available at baggage carousels. The walk from gates to arrivals is manageable. After clearing customs, signs clearly indicate taxis, trains, and buses.

If you arrive at T5 (US pre-cleared flights and some long-haul), a shuttle bus connects to T3 — allow an extra 15-20 minutes and factor this into tired-children logistics.

Child seats: the critical issue

Italian taxis do not carry child seats. This is not a minor gap — it is standard practice. For children who legally require a restraint (generally under 135 cm), your options are:

  • Pre-booked transfer with child seat: Specify the child's age and weight at booking. The provider installs the correct seat (infant, toddler, or booster). This is the safest and most practical option.
  • Bring a portable seat: A lightweight foldable booster seat works in any vehicle. Useful throughout your Rome stay when taking taxis.
  • Leonardo Express: No child seat required on trains. The 32-minute journey to Termini is comfortable for children old enough to sit. Luggage space is available but limited during busy periods.

Leonardo Express with children

The train is a good option for families with children who are past the infant stage. Trains are modern, air-conditioned, and have luggage areas. The 32-minute journey is manageable.

Challenges: the station entrance involves escalators and/or stairs. At Termini, navigating to the metro with luggage and children can be hectic — Termini is Rome's largest and busiest station. If your hotel is near Termini, this is fine. If you then need a taxi from Termini, you are adding another step.

Taxi with families

The EUR 50 fixed fare makes the taxi excellent value for a family of four compared to four Leonardo Express tickets at EUR 56. The taxi is door-to-door to your hotel, which is a real advantage with tired children and heavy luggage.

The problem is child seats — Italian taxis carry none. If you have children under 135 cm, the taxi is not a compliant option unless you bring your own seat.

Recommended approach

Families with children under 4: Pre-booked transfer with child seat. The door-to-door service, pre-installed child seat, and driver waiting in arrivals is the least stressful option after a long flight.

Families with children 4-10: Transfer remains easiest, but the Leonardo Express + taxi from Termini works if you have suitable portable booster seats. EUR 50 taxi to the hotel from the airport is also straightforward if you bring a booster.

Families with teenagers: Leonardo Express for EUR 14 each, then metro or a short taxi. Standard and efficient.

Multi-generational travel: Minivan transfer accommodates everyone. Coordinating grandparents, parents, children, prams, and luggage across two or three taxis at Fiumicino is genuinely stressful.

Rome with children — practical notes

Rome's historic centre has significant cobblestone paving. Pushchairs and strollers work but the cobblestones of Trastevere, Campo de' Fiori, and around the Colosseum are hard going. A compact, manoeuvrable pram is much better than a large travel system.

Many central Rome hotels are accessed via steep narrow alleys. Ask your hotel about the nearest vehicle drop-off point. A transfer driver who has your hotel address in advance can find this more smoothly than a taxi driver navigating on the fly.

For families with cruise connections

If you are travelling to Civitavecchia for a cruise, the transfer from Fiumicino (70 km, EUR 90-130) is the only practical option. There is no direct public transport. With children, luggage, and a check-in deadline, booking this in advance is essential.

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