The Metro (Subway) of Rome
Getting around Rome, Italy, by Metro (the subway, or underground train, system)
www.atac.roma.it
ReidsItaly.com Rome Map
» View ENLARGED MAP with all listings
Rome Tours & Activities

The modern interior of the Rome Metro.Rome's Metro (which is short for "Metropolitana," which is Italian for "underground," which is British for "subway") is a good idea that turns out to be fairly useless.
Useful Italian
Ticket - biglietto
City bus - autobus
Bus stop - fermata
Subway - Metro
Subway station - stazione Metro
I'm getting off! - scendo!
Excuse me (to get though crowds) - permesso
Excuse me (to get attention) - scusa
Excuse me (to apologize) - mi dispiace
The main reason for this is that it isn't very extensive—every time workers dig new tunnels, they run across ancient ruins and have to stop so archaeologists can putter about.
The city has only two lines (the orange "A" and the blue "B") that etch a rough X on the city map, with Stazione Termini at the intersection.
Line A runs from Viale Aurelia, past Cipro–Musei Vaticani (the new Vatican Museums stop) and Ottaviano–San Pietro (a dozen blocks from St. Peter's), and makes stops such as Flaminia (near Piazza del Popolo), Spagna (at the Spanish Steps), Termini, and San Giovanni (Rome's cathedral).
For info on tickets, click here.
For more on Rome's
transportation system (buses/trams and the Metro) visit www.atac.roma.it.
For more on Rome's general layout—its major streets, squares, and neighborhoods—click here.
Line B is most useful to shuttle you quickly from Termini to stops such as Colosseo (the Colosseum), Circo Massimo (the Circus Maximus), and Piramide (at the Tiburtina train station, near Testaccio).
Related pages
- City transport tickets (bus/tram and Metro)
- Getting around by: bus, taxi, bike, scooter, car, foot
- Rome city layout
- Rome planning FAQ
- Rome homepage
This material was last updated January 2011. All information was accurate at the time.
about | contact | faq
» THE REIDSITALY.COM DIFFERENCE «
Copyright © 2008–2012 by Reid Bramblett. Author: Reid Bramblett
- Plan
- Stay
- See & Do
- All the sights in Rome
- Top Rome Sights
- Reid's List: Rome
- Rome tours, guides, & cooking courses
- By category
- By neighborhood
- Downtown Ancient Rome (Forum/Colosseum)
- Lower Tiber Bend (Campo de' Fiori)
- Upper Tiber Bend (Pantheon/Piazza Navona)
- Tridente (Spanish Steps/Piazza del Popolo)
- Via Veneto/Villa Borghese
- Termini (train station)
- Viminal/Esquiline (south of Termini)
- Aventine/Testaccio
- Trastevere
- Borgo (Vatican)
- Outside the walls
- Rome side-trips
- Reid's Rome blog
- Eat
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
Tours from Viator
- Plans
- Top 10 planning tips
- Transport
- Getting to Italy
- Tours & Packages
- Vacation packages
- Air-hotel packages
- Air-car packages
- Specialty tours
- Learning vacations
- Cooking schools
- Study tours
- Language schools
- Active vacations
- Bike tours
- Hiking tours
- Seniors tours
- Family tours
- Women's tours
- Singles' tours
- Gay tours
- Disabled tours
- Religious tours
- Guided tours
- Design your own group tour
- Microtours/single-day tours
- Private guides
- Daytrips
- Getting around Italy
- Lodging
- Top 10 lodging tips
- Booking hotels
- How Italian hotels work
- The hotel hunt
- Hotel scams & rip-offs
- Reid's tips for lodging savings
- Hotel alternatives
- Agriturismi / farm stays
- Albergo diffuso (diffuse hotel)
- Apartments
- B&Bs
- Campgrounds
- Castles
- Chains
- Convents
- CouchSurfing
- Crewing a boat
- Free options (honest)
- Historic inns
- Home swapping
- Hospitality exchange
- Hostels
- Hotels
- House sitting
- Monasteries
- Motels
- Mountain huts
- Overnight trains
- Rental rooms
- Residences
- RVing
- Sleeping in airports
- University dorms
- Villa rentals
- Itineraries
- Shop
- Preparations
- Fun
- Places







ShareThis











