REVIEW · MILAN
From Milan: Ferrari Full-Day Tour with Lunch
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Ferrari day-trip, minus the hassle. This private Milan-to-Emilia-Romagna outing packs two Ferrari museums and a guided Fiorano track experience into one full day, with hotel pickup and drop-off doing the heavy lifting. I also like that you get the museum tickets handled and a professional driver who can speak English or Italian.
One thing to note: the farm lunch quality can be uneven, so if food is a big deal for you, keep expectations flexible and consider bringing a small snack for the ride.
In This Review
- Key highlights worth planning for
- Private Van Day From Milan: How the schedule really feels
- Casa Enzo Ferrari Museum in Modena: A tighter look at the founder
- Ferrari Museum in Maranello: The bigger, car-fan payoff
- Fiorano Track and factory visit by Minibus Ferrari: Seeing where testing happens
- Lunch at a farm near Maranello: Local produce, but quality can vary
- Price and value at $807.40 per person: What you’re paying for
- Who should book this Ferrari full-day tour
- A practical packing and timing checklist
- Should you book this Milan-to-Ferrari tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the Ferrari full-day tour from Milan?
- What’s included in the price?
- Is a test drive included?
- What happens if the track tour isn’t available?
- What languages are the driver/guide?
- Is there free cancellation?
Key highlights worth planning for

- Two museums, different angles: Ferrari Museum in Maranello plus Casa Enzo Ferrari Museum in Modena
- Fiorano Track, guided on the ground: a dedicated Circuito de Fiorano visit as part of the day
- Factory and track time together: included touring by Minibus Ferrari and a set schedule that keeps things moving
- Skip-the-line museum entry: less time waiting, more time looking at cars and stories
- Long day, lots of time in transit: plan for a full 9 hours and wear comfortable shoes
Private Van Day From Milan: How the schedule really feels

This is a full-day Ferrari-focused trip built around one thing: getting you out of Milan and into Ferrari territory without the logistics headache. You start with pickup from your hotel lobby (you meet the driver about 10 minutes before your scheduled pickup), and you return the same way at the end.
The total duration is about 9 hours, and the drive time is a big part of that—roughly two hours each way by air-conditioned van. That matters, because it turns the day into a “do-it-all” experience. You’ll have a clear plan and a guide, but you’re also committing to a long day where most of the time is either in vehicles or on museum/track visits.
You’ll also want to be realistic about flexibility. If the tour can’t run as planned, the Fiorano track portion may be replaced by a short 10-minute simulator experience. It’s not the same as being on-site, so it’s smart to go in with a bit of Plan B mindset for that track segment.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Milan
Casa Enzo Ferrari Museum in Modena: A tighter look at the founder

Casa Enzo Ferrari Museum is your first Ferrari-world stop if you’re following the usual flow of the day. You’ll get about an hour here, and that time is long enough to connect the dots between Enzo Ferrari as a person and the brand as a machine-making company.
This isn’t just a room full of cars. The value is the way the museum frames Ferrari’s story through vehicles and the people behind them—so you’re not only looking at famous models, you’re also learning what shaped the company’s mindset and direction. Even if you think you know Ferrari basics, this kind of focused museum stop helps you understand the logic behind the designs and racing culture.
Practical tip: give your feet a little help. An hour inside a museum goes fast, and you’ll likely do a lot of standing and moving between displays. Comfortable shoes are listed for a reason.
Ferrari Museum in Maranello: The bigger, car-fan payoff

Then you head to Maranello for the main Ferrari Museum visit, with about 1.5 hours on the ground. This is where the day really tips toward the classic car-fan payoff: you’ll see the history, the vehicles, and the broader story of the Ferrari world in a format that’s easy to enjoy even if you’re not a hardcore mechanic.
You also benefit from skip-the-ticket-line entry. That’s not just a small convenience. In Italy, saving even 20–40 minutes can make the difference between a relaxed museum browse and feeling rushed while you’re trying to take in the details.
What I like about pairing Maranello’s Ferrari Museum with Casa Enzo in Modena is that it creates two different reading experiences. One museum tends to feel like a wide-angle introduction; the other feels like a more personal frame around the founder and the brand’s driving force. Together, they give you a fuller picture than one museum would.
Possible drawback: with only about 1.5 hours, you won’t be able to slow-walk every corner. If you’re the type who likes to read every placard cover-to-cover, you’ll want to set your priorities before you arrive—pick a couple of themes (racing eras, design evolution, key cars) so your time stays satisfying.
Fiorano Track and factory visit by Minibus Ferrari: Seeing where testing happens

This is the segment most people are really waiting for. You’ll do a guided experience connected to the factory area and the Fiorano Track—the famous Circuito de Fiorano—with a set visit time of about 45 minutes.
The key here is that it’s not just a photo stop. It’s guided, and it’s specifically tied to Ferrari’s performance environment. You’ll get to see the track in a way that’s meant to make sense of the brand’s racing and engineering culture, rather than just pointing at famous curves from behind a fence.
And yes, it can be genuinely cool to imagine the kind of pace those lines are built for—especially after spending time inside the museums where the story is about the cars and people. This track visit connects those ideas to a real, physical place.
Plan B note: if the track portion isn’t available, you’ll get a simulator replacement for about 10 minutes. That can still be fun, but it’s best to think of it as a backup, not an equal substitute. If your top priority is the real Circuito de Fiorano experience, it’s worth keeping your expectations tuned to the best-case scenario.
Lunch at a farm near Maranello: Local produce, but quality can vary
Lunch is about 75 minutes, served at a farm setting near Maranello. The intention is solid: a traditional meal with local produce, which fits the Emilia-Romagna region and keeps the day from turning into a string of museums only.
Here’s the honest heads-up. One disappointment I’ve seen associated with this tour is that the lunch experience didn’t match the overall quality of the rest of the day, including comments about service and how welcoming the staff felt. That doesn’t mean you’ll have the same experience, but it does mean you should treat lunch as a “included perk,” not the highlight of your schedule.
If you know you’re picky about food or service, a small strategy helps: eat a light breakfast, stay hydrated on the drive, and use the time to recharge without assuming a five-star meal is guaranteed. You’ll still leave with a day that’s mostly about Ferrari, not fine dining.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Milan
Price and value at $807.40 per person: What you’re paying for

This tour is priced at $807.40 per person, which is premium. So you should only book if the Ferrari-specific structure matches what you want to get out of the day.
Here’s the value case, feature by feature:
- Private group setup: You’re not sharing the experience with the random mix of strangers that can make guided days feel chaotic.
- Hotel pickup and drop-off: This matters in a city like Milan where getting out on your own can turn into a time tax.
- Air-conditioned round-trip van: Comfort is included, and you’re covering roughly four hours of driving total.
- Museum admissions: Ferrari Museum and Casa Enzo Ferrari Museum tickets are included, with skip-the-line entry.
- Factory and track touring: The guided experience tied to the factory and Fiorano Track is built into the day, not optional extras.
- Farm lunch included: It’s part of the schedule so you don’t have to plan a meal yourself.
What’s not included is also important: there’s no test drive. Some Ferrari tours try to sell that fantasy; this one clearly positions itself as museums + track/factory viewing.
So is it worth it? For serious Ferrari fans, it often feels worth the money because the day is concentrated. You’re buying time saved (transport + timed visits + tickets) and access to the key places. If you mainly want a casual look and flexible sightseeing, the price may feel steep.
Who should book this Ferrari full-day tour
This tour is best for people who want one structured day that hits the main Ferrari themes: cars, people, racing culture, and the physical reality of the Fiorano environment.
You’ll likely be happiest if you:
- care about Ferrari history enough to visit two separate museums
- want guided time at the track instead of DIY viewing
- prefer a private van so the day stays smooth and coordinated
A couple of practical constraints to know:
- It’s not suitable for people with mobility impairments, based on the tour’s suitability notes.
- Pets aren’t allowed.
- If you’re traveling with very young kids, note that a shuttle tour connected to Cittadella Ferrari is not available for children under 3 years old.
If you’re going with kids, this day is long and museum-heavy. It’s doable for motivated families, but it’s not designed as a short attention-span sprint.
A practical packing and timing checklist

You’ll be on your feet and moving through museum spaces, so plan around that. The tour explicitly asks for comfortable shoes, and I’d treat that as the main rule.
Also, keep your day energy in mind:
- The round-trip drive is long, so bring something to keep you comfortable during transit.
- Plan to take your phone camera, but expect that the day is about the experience and the explanations, not only pictures.
- If you’re sensitive to long museum days, decide in advance what you want most—Ferrari Museum first impressions, Casa Enzo’s story, or the track visit.
Should you book this Milan-to-Ferrari tour?
If your goal is a focused, Ferrari-centered day with museums, guided Fiorano Track time, and private transportation, this is the kind of tour that saves you from planning headaches and wasted hours. The museum combo in Maranello and Modena plus the guided track/factory segment is a strong match for car lovers who want a coherent story, not random stops.
I’d only hesitate if you’re very food-focused or you absolutely need a certain level of meal quality and service, because the farm lunch can be a weak point. If you go in treating lunch as a reset rather than a centerpiece, the rest of the day is built to deliver.
Overall: book it if Ferrari museums and the Fiorano experience are high on your list, and you’re okay with a full day that includes serious transit time.
FAQ
How long is the Ferrari full-day tour from Milan?
The duration is listed as 9 hours.
What’s included in the price?
Hotel pickup and drop-off, a private tour, round-trip transportation by air-conditioned van, Ferrari Museum and Casa Enzo Ferrari Museum entrance tickets, factory and track tour with Minibus Ferrari, and lunch at a farm.
Is a test drive included?
No. A test drive is not included.
What happens if the track tour isn’t available?
If the tour is not available, it will be replaced by a simulator experience for 10 minutes.
What languages are the driver/guide?
The driver/guide speaks English and Italian.
Is there free cancellation?
Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.






































