Discover Monaco with our self-guided audio tour app, exploring the world’s second-smallest country at your own pace. Begin at the Casino de Monte-Carlo where Belle Époque splendor and roulette wheels create the defining image of Monaco’s gilded excess. Wander through Monaco-Ville where the Grimaldi family has ruled from the Prince’s Palace since 1297, making them Europe’s longest-reigning dynasty. Explore the Oceanographic Museum where Jacques Cousteau served as director for thirty-one years. Watch the Changing of the Guard, then follow Grace Kelly’s footsteps through the cathedral where she married Prince Rainier III. Walk the Grand Prix circuit’s famous hairpin and tunnel that Formula 1 cars navigate each May. Marvel at superyachts in Port Hercules. Discover the Jardin Exotique with thousands of rare succulents and prehistoric caves, and the serene Japanese Garden. This tiny principality perfectly fuses royal heritage, Belle Époque elegance, and glamour unlike anywhere else on Earth.
Location: Outside the main entrance of the Casino de Monte-Carlo, facing Place du Casino. Address: Place du Casino, 98000 Monaco. Coordinates: 43.739040, 7.426880
The casino that saved Monaco from bankruptcy in the 1860s remains the principality's defining landmark, its Belle Époque architecture by Charles Garnier (architect of the Paris Opera) housing gaming rooms where fortunes are won and lost beneath frescoed ceilings and crystal chandeliers. The atrium's marble columns, the Salle Garnier opera house, and the private gaming salons create progressive levels of opulence that culminate in spaces where minimum bets exceed most visitors' budgets. The casino square outside, flanked by the Hôtel de Paris and Café de Paris, provides the Monaco tableau of supercars, luxury boutiques, and people-watching that requires no admission fee.
The old town crowning the rock promontory preserves the medieval origins of a principality now defined by modern wealth, its narrow pedestrian streets, pastel buildings, and views across the harbor and casino district providing the historical counterweight to Monte-Carlo's glamour. The Grimaldi dynasty has ruled from this rock since François Grimaldi seized the fortress in 1297 disguised as a Franciscan monk—an origin recalled in the family coat of arms. The old town’s souvenir shops, galleries, and the path along the ramparts create a Mediterranean village atmosphere distinct from the high-rise density below.
The Grimaldi residence since the 13th century has evolved from Genoese fortress to Renaissance palace, its state apartments open to visitors when the Prince is away and its courtyard hosting the daily Changing of the Guard ceremony at 11:55. The interior's Throne Room, Mirror Gallery, and the apartments where Princess Grace lived blend centuries of royal accumulation while the courtyard's Carrara marble staircase and the collection of cannons create appropriate princely grandeur. The palace's position at Monaco-Ville's highest point provides commanding views that explain why this rock has been fortified since ancient times.
The 19th-century cathedral built from white La Turbie stone serves as the burial place of Monaco's princes and the site of Grace Kelly's 1956 wedding to Prince Rainier III—a ceremony watched by 30 million television viewers that transformed Monaco's image. Grace Kelly's simple grave slab and the tomb of Rainier beside her draw visitors paying respects to the Hollywood princess who became Monaco's most beloved royal. The cathedral's Romanesque-Byzantine interior, the altar paintings, and the setting in Monaco-Ville's heart make it essential regardless of any celebrity interest.
The museum founded by Prince Albert I in 1910 and directed by Jacques Cousteau for 31 years rises dramatically from the cliffs of Monaco-Ville, its aquariums, scientific collections, and exhibitions exploring ocean science and conservation. The shark lagoon, coral reef tanks, and the Mediterranean exhibits provide immersive marine experiences while the museum building itself—with facades depicting ocean life and interiors filled with Prince Albert's expedition specimens—demonstrates a century of Monegasque commitment to marine science. Th
Monaco's harbor hosts one of the world's most valuable collections of superyachts, the floating palaces worth hundreds of millions crowding the marina that also serves as the Grand Prix start/finish straight each May. The quayside promenades, the yacht clubs, and the sheer spectacle of wealth concentrated in such small space create Monaco’s defining visual—obscene to some, aspirational to others, undeniably impressive to all. The harbor's position between Monaco-Ville's rock and Monte-Carlo's towers provides the principality's most complete panorama.
The exotic garden clinging to Monaco's western cliffs cultivates thousands of succulent species—giant cacti, rare euphorbias, and specimens from arid regions worldwide—in a setting that provides some of the principality's finest views. The garden's caves, used by prehistoric inhabitants, can be visited on guided tours while the clifftop position reveals Monaco's geography from above. The Museum of Prehistoric Anthropology at the garden's base and the surrounding views toward Italy and France make this far more than mere plant collection.
Monaco's newest district, built on land reclaimed from the sea in the 1980s, hosts the Prince's private car collection, the rose garden dedicated to Princess Grace, and the commercial and residential development that accommodates the principality's growing population and economy. The Collection de Voitures Anciennes displays over 100 vehicles from Prince Rainier's personal collection while the Princess Grace Rose Garden provides tranquil green space among the high-rises. The district's modern architecture and the reclamation that created it demonstrate how Monaco continually reinvents itself within its tiny boundaries.
This authentic Japanese garden designed by Yasuo Beppu and opened in 1994 provides unexpected tranquility in Monaco's densest area, its 7,000 square meters of ponds, waterfalls, and carefully placed stones following traditional Japanese principles despite the Mediterranean setting. The garden's creation, sponsored by Prince Rainier, required importing authentic materials and plants while the ongoing maintenance adheres to Japanese standards. The tea house, zen areas, and the olive trees that naturalize the Japanese forms to the Riviera create meditative contrast to Monaco's surrounding intensity.
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You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance of the experience for a full refund.
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