Amalfi Coast Transport Cost Guide (2026)
SITA buses from €1.50, ferries from €5, and when the €10 24-hour pass is actually worth it on the Amalfi Coast.
The short version: what Amalfi Coast transport really costs
| Mode | Common example | Realistic 2026 price | Budget take |
|---|---|---|---|
| SITA bus | Positano → Amalfi | €2.40 | Default budget move |
| SITA bus | Amalfi → Salerno | €2.80 | Very good value |
| SITA pass | COSTIERASITA 24h | €10.00 | Worth it on bus-heavy days |
| Ferry | Amalfi ↔ Positano (Travelmar) | €10.00 | Nice upgrade, not cheap |
| Ferry | Salerno ↔ Amalfi (Travelmar) | €12.00 | Often worth paying |
| Circumvesuviana | Naples → Sorrento | €4.60 | Cheapest Naples gateway |
| Campania Express | Naples ↔ Sorrento | €15 one way | Comfort upgrade |
| Trenitalia Regionale | Naples → Salerno | from €5.50 | Best rail gateway for many trips |
| Private transfer | Naples → Positano | about €160–€187+ | Usually poor value on a backpacker budget |
These are current published fares or live 2026 route prices. Bus fares come from the Unico Campania fare structure and current Amalfi Coast route mappings; ferry totals vary by operator and luggage; private-car pricing varies by supplier and stop pattern.
SITA buses: the cheap backbone of the coast
This is the part people overcomplicate. On pure price, the SITA bus network is still the bargain. Single fares on the coast mostly sit in the €1.50 to €3.40 range for the routes budget travelers actually use, and even Naples-linked SITA tickets top out well below ferry or taxi money. The trade-off is comfort, not price: buses can be crowded in high season, seats are not guaranteed, and you should assume traffic will affect timing.
Also important: buy the ticket before you board. Current route guides for the coast state that SITA tickets are sold through partner outlets such as tabacchi, bars, cafés, and newsstands showing the SITA logo, and not on board the bus.
Common SITA bus fares on the Amalfi Coast
The route pairings below use the current fare classes published for 2026 route tables.
| Route | Fare class | One-way single | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Positano ↔ Praiano | AC1 | €1.50 | Good short-hop bus route |
| Amalfi ↔ Ravello | AC1 | €1.50 | Classic inland connection |
| Amalfi ↔ Minori | AC1 | €1.50 | Cheap east-coast hop |
| Amalfi ↔ Maiori | AC1 | €1.50 | Cheap east-coast hop |
| Positano ↔ Amalfi | AC2 | €2.40 | One of the most-used rides |
| Sorrento ↔ Positano | AC2 | €2.40 | Cheap gateway transfer |
| Amalfi ↔ Salerno | AC3 | €2.80 | Excellent value |
| Sorrento ↔ Amalfi | AC4 | €3.40 | Long but still cheap |
| Amalfi ↔ Naples | NA7 | €6.10 | Long bus option, usually slower than rail gateways |
One useful nuance: if your trip requires a quick bus change and you are not planning to stop, an Orario ticket can be cheaper than buying two separate singles. Ravello's current SITA guide gives Salerno → Ravello as the example: two singles cost €4.30, while one AC3 hourly ticket costs €3.50 if you continue straight onto the next connection.
Amalfi Coast transport passes: what is actually worth buying?
There is not a magic all-in-one Amalfi Coast pass covering trains, buses, and ferries. That is the main thing that confuses people. The bus pass that actually matters is the COSTIERASITA 24-hour ticket, which SITA lists at €10 for unlimited rides after first validation across the main coast towns and the Sorrento/Salerno approaches included in the pass. Some local guides also list a €12 variant that includes the local Mobility Amalfi Coast buses inside Positano.
For ferries, Travelmar is very clear: it does not sell a daily ticket that lets you freely visit both Amalfi and Positano. If you want to stop in Amalfi and then continue, you buy the legs separately. So for ferry travel, think in terms of individual route purchases, not a coastwide pass.
Is the €10 SITA 24-hour pass good value?
Sometimes. Not always.
If you only do a simple return like Positano ↔ Amalfi, you spend €4.80 in singles, so the pass is not good value. If you do Positano → Amalfi → Ravello → Amalfi → Positano, you are still only at €7.80. But if you do a bigger bus day such as Positano → Amalfi → Salerno and back, you are already at about €10.40 in singles, so the pass starts to win, and any extra hop pushes it further in your favour.
So the honest rule is: buy the pass when you are doing a bus-heavy, town-hopping day. Skip it for one or two straightforward rides.
Ferries: selective upgrades, not the budget default
Ferries are where people blow their transport budget without realising it. They are often absolutely worth paying for, but only when they solve a real problem: summer bus queues, cross-coast traffic, or a longer coastal transfer where the road is the annoying part.
Common coastal ferry fares (Travelmar, 2026) | Route | One-way fare | |---|---| | Amalfi ↔ Minori | €5.00 | | Amalfi ↔ Maiori | €5.00 | | Amalfi ↔ Cetara | €9.00 | | Amalfi ↔ Vietri sul Mare | €9.00 | | Amalfi ↔ Positano | €10.00 | | Salerno ↔ Amalfi | €12.00 | | Salerno ↔ Positano | €17.00 |
Travelmar's official 2026 fares also list a €3 luggage surcharge and note that the €1.50 municipal surcharge on Salerno departures is already included in those Salerno fares.
Gateway ferry fares that matter to backpackers
For backpacker-age travelers, these are the ferry links that are useful when you are trying to reach or exit the coast rather than just hop between coast towns.
| Route | Operator | One-way fare | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Naples Beverello ↔ Sorrento | NLG | €17.50 | Fast but much pricier than Circumvesuviana |
| Sorrento ↔ Positano | NLG | €20.50 | Scenic, but not budget transport |
| Sorrento ↔ Amalfi | NLG | €23.50 | Good splurge on bad traffic days |
| Salerno Molo Manfredi ↔ Amalfi | NLG | €13.50 | Slightly pricier than Travelmar |
| Naples Beverello ↔ Positano | NLG | €31.00 | Fast, but definitely not budget |
NLG's official route pages also list €5 per piece of luggage on these routes.
Do you need to book ferries in advance?
Not always. Travelmar says tickets can be booked online in advance or bought the same day at the pier ticket office 20 minutes before departure. That said, for July, August, and important morning sailings, I would still book ahead if the ferry is central to your plan.
Circumvesuviana, Campania Express, and Trenitalia: where trains fit
There is no rail line running along the Amalfi Coast itself. The train job is to get you to a gateway: usually Sorrento or Salerno. After that, you switch to bus or ferry.
| Route | Mode | 2026 price | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Naples → Sorrento | Circumvesuviana | €4.60 | Cheapest Naples gateway |
| Naples ↔ Sorrento | Campania Express | €15 one way / €25 round trip | Reserved seats, less stress |
| Naples → Salerno | Trenitalia Regionale | from €5.50 | Clean rail gateway to east coast ferries/buses |
For many budget travelers, Salerno is the calmer public-transport gateway when your actual destination is Amalfi, Minori, Maiori, Cetara, Vietri, or even Positano by ferry.
When the bus makes more sense than the ferry
The bus is the right answer when the route is short, the price gap matters, or you are traveling inland to places ferries do not serve, like Ravello or Agerola. It is also the better choice when you are trying to keep the whole day cheap rather than comfortable. A €2.40 bus from Positano to Amalfi is not glamorous, but it is exactly why the coast remains manageable for backpackers.
The other reason to prefer the bus is flexibility on a tight budget. If you are just doing one or two hops, ferry pricing stacks up fast. A simple bus day can stay under €5. A simple ferry day often does not.
When the ferry is worth paying for
The ferry is worth it when it saves you from the worst version of the coast. Salerno → Amalfi and Salerno → Positano are good examples: the ferry neatly removes road traffic from the equation, and on heavy summer days that can be a very sensible use of money. Amalfi ↔ Positano is another classic upgrade when you want to avoid a packed bus and arrive in a better mood.
I would not blindly tell budget travelers to "always take the ferry." I would tell them to use ferries surgically: longer coastal moves, hot crowded days, or days when the view and comfort are part of the experience you actually want.
Why taxis are almost never worth it for budget travelers
This is the easiest section to be blunt about. Taxis and private transfers are usually where the Amalfi Coast stops being budget travel. Public-facing 2026 transfer pricing puts Naples → Positano around €160 on one guide and €187 on another private-transfer listing, with other Naples-to-Amalfi-Coast transfer offers starting around €110 depending on route and provider.
Compare that with public transport. Naples → Sorrento on Circumvesuviana is €4.60, and Sorrento → Positano by SITA bus is €2.40, so a budget land route can be about €7.00 before local extras. Even a more comfortable Naples → Salerno regional train plus Salerno → Positano Travelmar ferry is still around €22.50, far below car money.
That is why I frame taxis this way: not "bad," just usually irrational for the pre-booking hostel crowd unless you are splitting the cost tightly between several people, arriving very late, or carrying a genuinely awful amount of luggage.
So is Amalfi Coast transport expensive?
Not in the way most first-time travelers think.
What is expensive is doing the coast the easy way every time. What is affordable is doing it the smart way: train to a gateway, bus as default, ferry only where it buys you time or sanity. That is the real reframe. The Amalfi Coast is not a place where every move costs a fortune. It is a place where the wrong move costs more than it needs to.
Where staying on the coast can simplify the math
If your plan is to actually spend time on the coast, not just sprint through it from Naples, sleeping on the coast can cut down repeated gateway transfers. That is where a hostel base in Positano starts to make sense. Hostel Brikette is not the cheapest way to "touch" the coast for a day, but it is a sensible base if you want to wake up already on the route network, use buses and ferries for day moves, and avoid dragging your bag through Naples or Sorrento every morning. That is an earned convenience, not a marketing fantasy.
Tips
- Buy SITA bus tickets before boarding — they are not sold on the bus. Look for tabacchi, bars, or newsstands with the SITA logo.
- Use the €10 COSTIERASITA pass on bus-heavy days with three or more rides. Skip it for simple returns.
- Use ferries surgically: longer coastal moves, hot crowded days, or when the bus queue looks brutal.
- Travel before 08:30 or after 19:00 when buses are quieter and you can actually board without pushing.
FAQs
How much do SITA buses cost on the Amalfi Coast?
Most common Amalfi Coast SITA rides used by backpackers fall between €1.50 and €3.40 one way. Typical examples are €1.50 for Amalfi ↔ Ravello, €2.40 for Positano ↔ Amalfi, and €2.80 for Amalfi ↔ Salerno.
Is there a transport pass worth buying on the Amalfi Coast?
Yes, but it is limited. The main one worth knowing is the COSTIERASITA 24-hour bus pass for €10. It is good value on days with lots of bus hopping, but there is no single all-in-one pass covering coast buses, ferries, and trains, and Travelmar says it does not offer a ferry day ticket for freely visiting both Amalfi and Positano.
Are ferries or buses cheaper on the Amalfi Coast?
Buses are usually much cheaper. Positano ↔ Amalfi by SITA bus is €2.40, while the same route by Travelmar ferry is €10.00, and by NLG it is €13.00. Ferries are better thought of as paid upgrades for speed, views, and queue avoidance.
Should I buy bus and ferry tickets in advance?
Buy bus tickets before boarding, because the coast guides say they are not sold on board. Ferries are different: Travelmar says you can buy them in advance online or on the departure day at the pier around 20 minutes before departure. For high summer and important morning crossings, advance booking is the safer move.