The Procida Casamicciola ferry route connects Gulf of Napoli with Gulf of Napoli and is currently operated by 2 ferry companies. The SNAV service runs up to 5 times per day with a sailing duration of around 10 minutes while the Caremar service runs up to 7 times per week with a duration from 30 min.
So that’s a combined 42 sailings on offer per week on the Procida Casamicciola route between Gulf of Napoli and Gulf of Napoli. Compare now and get the best fare at the time that you want to travel.
Prices shown represent the average one way price paid by our customers. The most common booking on the Procida Casamicciola route is a car and 1 passenger.
Located in the Flegrian group of islands is the Italian island of Procida. It lies just of the coast of Naples, between Cape Miseno and the island of Ischia. It is a small island with a land area of just 4 sq. km and a rocky coastline measuring 16 km. Terra Murata hill is the island's highest point and measures just 91 meters above sea level. In terms of visitor attractions, the island does not have much to see and what it does have seem to have been neglected. Therefore, visitors to the island should indulge in its relaxing, shabby-chic, atmosphere rather than to go searching of ancient monuments. Marina Corricella is perhaps the prettiest spot on the island and is a thin sliver of waterfront backed by a cliff of fisherman's houses. Behind a long fishing harbour, houses were built on and into the rock in a kind of pretty vertical muddle. There are several bars and restaurants in Corricella, with tables attractively scattered along the waterfront.
Ferries to Ischia generally stop at Procida. There are both fast and slow services, and some run from a different port in Naples, called Mergellina, which is handy for the Italian railway network. Procida is also served by ferries from a nearby town on the mainland called Pozzuoli.
Casamicciola is located on the north coast of the island of Ischia which is in Italy's Campania region, at the northern end of the Bay of Naples. The island, which is of volcanic origins, is within easy reach of Naples by both conventional ferry and hydrofoil. The island is popular with tourists for its sandy beaches, crystal clear sea and for its thermal springs which have had spa resorts built around them. The island seems to be especially popular with German tourists and as a consequence many of the island's signs and notices are also in German. The north coast towns such as Ischia Porto, Ischia Ponte, Casamicciola Terme, Forio and Lacco Ameno are the towns that most visitors head for. Of these, Ischia Porto boasts the best bars, Casamicciola the worst traffic and Ischia Ponte and Lacco Ameno the most appeal.
Hydrofoils and ferries make their way back and forth to mainland Italy in Naples from the pretty port of Casamicciola.