The Casamicciola Procida ferry route connects Gulf of Napoli with Gulf of Napoli and is currently operated by 2 ferry companies. The SNAV service runs up to 4 times per day with a sailing duration of around 20 minutes while the Caremar service runs up to 14 times per week with a duration from 30 min.
So that’s a combined 42 sailings on offer per week on the Casamicciola Procida 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 Casamicciola Procida route is a car and 1 passenger.
Located in the Italian region of Campania, Casamicciola Terme is a municipality in the Province of Naples, and is located in the northern part of Ischia Island. The municipality lies along the northern coast of the island between Lacco Ameno and Ischia Porto and is home to the smaller villages of Perrone, Castiglione, Piazza Bagni, La Rita, La Sentinella and Piazza Maio. Many tourists visit Casamicciola for its thermal spas and natural springs at Castiglione Thermal Park, Piazza Bagni and La Rita. However, the region has more to offer with pretty shops, cafes and restaurants where you can sit and watch world go by whilst enjoying a traditional Ischian lunch.
Hydrofoils and ferries make their way back and forth to mainland Italy in Naples from Casamicciola's pretty port which is also a marina housing a number of glamorous yachts.
Procida is an Italian island that lies in the Bay of Naples in the south of the country. The island is situated between the Italian mainland and the larger island of Ischia and has a more authentic and charming feel that the more popular islands of Capri and Ischia. The island's main settlement, Procida Porto, is located on the island's north eastern shore and is where ferries to the island dock and where buses depart to travel around the island's road network. The oldest parts of Procida Porto was built on a high headland in order to provide some form of defence from invaders. Residential dwellings can be found all over the island, but at the southern end of Procida Porto is another more concentrated settlement, called Chiaiolella. A small curving islet, called Vivara, lies alongside Procida and is now a nature reserve. The rest of the island is somewhat built up and has a fairly large amount of land devoted to agriculture.
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.