Cheap Flights to Milan
Italy
CHEAPEST ROUTE
BostonMilan
BOS to MXP • ~9h flight
Est. $320
estimated round trip
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About Milan

Milan is Italy's financial and fashion capital, and it operates on a completely different frequency than Rome or Florence. This is a city where aperitivo culture is sacred, where a €10 Negroni at a standing bar comes with a spread of free food that constitutes dinner, and where the locals are too busy to play tour guide. Americans who expect the warm, touristy embrace of Venice or the Amalfi Coast will find Milan initially cool — but give it 48 hours and you'll understand why Italians consider it the country's most sophisticated city.

The flight deal situation at MXP (Malpensa) is consistently better than Milan's other airport, Linate. Nonstop service from JFK via American, Delta, and ITA Airways means you can score transatlantic fares in the $500-$700 range during shoulder season. The airport itself is well-connected to the city by train, and the whole operation is considerably less chaotic than Rome Fiumicino. If you're using Milan as a base to hit Lake Como, the Dolomites, or Cinque Terre, MXP puts you in an ideal position — the city sits at the top of Italy's rail network.

The cathedral (Duomo di Milano) and Leonardo da Vinci's Last Supper at Santa Maria delle Grazie are legitimate must-sees, but Milan's real draw is its neighborhoods. Brera is a cobblestoned art district with actual Milanese hanging out at sidewalk cafes. Navigli has a canal system that feels like a working-class Venice, packed with aperitivo bars from 6pm onward. Porta Nuova is the glass-and-steel new Milan with the Bosco Verticale — a skyscraper covered in actual trees — and some of the best coffee bars in the city. Even the Quadrilatero della Moda (fashion district) is worth a stroll even if you're not dropping €2,000 on a Prada bag.

Food in Milan is distinct from the rest of Italy and proudly so. This is the home of risotto alla Milanese (with bone marrow and saffron), osso buco, cotoletta alla Milanese (the original breaded veal cutlet), and panettone. Milan is also one of the best cities in Europe for Japanese food — the Japanese expat community is substantial — and the cocktail bar scene rivals London and Barcelona. Budget carefully: Milan runs 20-30% more expensive than Rome for hotels and restaurants, but the value at aperitivo hour is unmatched anywhere in Europe.

Best Months
may, september, october
Currency
EUR ()
Euro
Visa (US Citizens)
US passport holders enter Italy visa-free under the Schengen Agreement for up to 90 days within any 180-day period. As of 2025-2026, the EU's ETIAS (European Travel Information and Authorization System) is in effect — US citizens must register online at the official ETIAS portal before travel (approximately €7 fee, valid for 3 years). Your passport must be valid for at least 3 months beyond your planned departure date. Italy is a full Schengen member, so entering Italy uses up your Schengen days regardless of which other Schengen countries you visit on the same trip.

Best Time to Fly to Milan

Click any month for weather, crowds, and what's on.

BestShoulderPeak / Expensive
Best:May (72°F)Great weather — book early
Avoid:AugustPeak prices and crowds

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Airport to City: How to Get There

Malpensa Express train (€13, 52 minutes) is the definitive way into the city — runs every 30 minutes from Terminal 1 and deposits you at either Milano Centrale (main train hub) or Cadorna (closer to the Duomo and Brera). Buy tickets at the airport vending machines; the Trenord app also works. Taxis are regulated at a flat rate of €100 from MXP to the city center — only use white licensed cabs with a meter or the fixed-rate envelope at the taxi desk in arrivals. Avoid rideshare-style apps for this route; the fixed taxi beats an Uber-equivalent on time and reliability. Bus options (Terravision, Flixbus) run €10-12 but take 60-90 minutes depending on traffic, and Milan traffic is no joke — skip these unless you're on a strict budget and have no checked bags.

Neighborhoods & Where to Stay

Brera
mid-range

Milan's art district is a cobblestoned neighborhood of independent galleries, upscale restaurants, and some of the best wine bars in the city. Stay here for a genuinely Milanese experience — Caffè della Pusterla for morning espresso, Bar Brera for aperitivo. It's walkable to the Duomo in 20 minutes and feels nothing like a tourist zone.

Navigli
budget

The canal district is Milan's liveliest neighborhood after 6pm — every bar runs a proper aperitivo buffet where €8-10 gets you a drink and unlimited small plates. During the day it's a mix of vintage clothing shops, local cafes, and tattoo parlors. Hotels here are cheaper than the center, and the nightlife runs until 2am without being rowdy or unsafe.

Porta Nuova / Isola
mid-range

The new-money, design-forward neighborhood is where the Bosco Verticale towers stand and where Milanese yuppies brunching alongside expats drink €5 specialty coffee. Isola, just north, is grittier and better — independent restaurants, the Mercato Isola on weekends, and none of the corporate-plaza feeling of central Porta Nuova. Good value hotels in Isola run €90-130/night.

Quadrilatero della Moda / Centro
luxury

The fashion quadrilateral (Montenapoleone, Via della Spiga, Manzoni, Borgospesso) is where you go to window-shop Armani, Versace, and Valentino or to stay in a Bulgari or Four Seasons property. Room rates start at €400/night and go to the moon. Even if you're not staying here, the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II is worth an afternoon — get a Campari at Camparino in Galleria and sit at the original bar, just prepare to pay €18 for the privilege.

Sempione / Corso Magenta
mid-range

The area around Parco Sempione and the Arco della Pace is where actual Milanese families live — excellent bakeries, neighborhood osterie, and the Acquario Civico. It's also where the Last Supper is located (Corso Magenta 2), making it the most practical base if seeing Leonardo is a priority. Mid-range hotels run €100-160/night.

Daily Budget: What to Expect

Budget
$85/day

$25 hostel dorm at Ostello Bello Duomo or similar, $20 food (cornetto and espresso €1.50 at a bar, lunch at a tavola calda €10, aperitivo dinner €9), $10 metro day pass plus one tram ride, $15 one museum entry or Duomo roof ticket, $15 miscellaneous

Mid-Range
$220/day

$120 3-star hotel in Brera or Navigli, $55 food (proper sit-down lunch €20, aperitivo + dinner at an osteria €35), $15 transport (metro day pass plus occasional taxi), $30 activities (Last Supper ticket €15 + one gallery entry)

Luxury
$650/day

$400 boutique or 5-star hotel in Centro or Brera (Palazzo Parigi, The Yard, De La Ville), $150 food (breakfast at hotel, business lunch at Cracco or similar €70, tasting menu dinner at a starred restaurant €120+), $30 private car service or taxis, $70 premium museum experiences and fashion district shopping

What to Eat in Milan

1

Risotto alla Milanese at Trattoria del Nuovo Macello (Via Cesare Lombroso 20) — bone marrow, saffron, Parmigiano, cooked to order in 18 minutes. This is the definitive version in the city, served at a neighborhood trattoria with paper tablecloths and no Instagram posturing.

2

Cotoletta alla Milanese at Antica Trattoria della Pesa (Viale Pasubio 10) — bone-in, butter-fried veal cutlet the size of a dinner plate, pounded thin and fried in clarified butter. The difference between this and a schnitzel will rearrange your brain. Open since 1880.

3

Aperitivo at Bar Basso (Via Plinio 39) — the bar that invented the Negroni Sbagliato (Campari, sweet vermouth, prosecco instead of gin). Come at 7pm, order a Sbagliato (€10), and work the enormous free aperitivo buffet of pasta salads, bresaola, and marinated vegetables. This is how Milanese eat dinner on a Tuesday.

4

Panettone from Pasticceria Martesana (Via Cagliero 14) — winner of multiple national panettone championships, this is the version that makes you understand why Italians argue about bread. Buy a small one to eat immediately, and a boxed one to take home as a gift that will make you very popular.

5

Cicchetti and natural wine at Ratanà (Via Gaetano de Castillia 28) — a converted 1930s railway building in Porta Nuova that serves the best small plates in the city using strictly Lombardian ingredients. The vitello tonnato and the lardo di Colonnata crostini are non-negotiable. Book a week ahead for dinner.

Flying from the US to Milan

Airlines & Routes

  • American Airlines nonstop from JFK (daily, ~8.5 hours)
  • Delta nonstop from JFK (daily, ~8.5 hours)
  • ITA Airways nonstop from JFK (seasonal/daily depending on season)
  • Lufthansa via Frankfurt (from most major US cities, excellent connections)
  • Swiss via Zurich (from JFK, ORD, LAX — consistently reliable connections with short layovers)
  • Air France via Paris CDG (from many US cities, frequent service)
  • British Airways via London Heathrow (from many US cities)
  • United via Frankfurt or London (code-share options from hub cities)

Flight Duration

East Coast
8-9 hours nonstop from JFK / 10-13 hours with connection via European hub
Midwest
No nonstop from ORD or other Midwest hubs; 11-13 hours total via Frankfurt (Lufthansa), Zurich (Swiss), or London (BA/United) with 1-2 hour layovers
West Coast
No nonstop from LAX/SFO; 14-17 hours total via Frankfurt, Zurich, or London with connections — Lufthansa from LAX via Frankfurt is the smoothest option at 13.5 hours total

Safety Tips

Milan is genuinely safe by European major-city standards, but pickpocketing around the Duomo, the Galleria, and on the busy M3 metro line between Centrale and the center is a real and daily occurrence. Keep your wallet in a front pocket or use a crossbody bag worn in front; don't put your phone on restaurant tables in tourist areas. The Stazione Centrale area can feel sketchy at night — stick to the main boulevard and take a taxi or Uber if you're arriving late. Scooter snatching of bags worn over one shoulder is still an issue in the Navigli area at night — use a crossbody with a zipped top. The city is otherwise well-lit, well-policed, and safe for solo female travelers in all the neighborhoods listed above.

Insider Tip

Book your Last Supper ticket the exact moment they open (vivaticket.com releases slots 3 months in advance at midnight Italian time) — this is the most overbooked 15-minute experience in Italy and you absolutely cannot walk up. But here's the move no one mentions: buy a combined ticket for Santa Maria delle Grazie that includes the adjacent refectory, which has Bramantino's Crucifixion fresco and zero crowds. Also, the Pinacoteca di Brera is Milan's great art museum and has zero lines compared to the Uffizi or Vatican — show up on Tuesday morning and you'll have Caravaggio's Supper at Emmaus and Raphael's Marriage of the Virgin essentially to yourself.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the cheapest way to fly to Milan?

The cheapest route to Milan from the US is typically from Boston (BOS), with estimated round-trip prices around $320. Prices vary significantly by season and booking timing.

What is the best time to visit Milan?

The best time to visit Milan is April, May, September, October. Spring and fall avoid summer heat and winter fog. Fashion weeks (Feb/Sept) drive up hotel prices. Shoulder season is ideal for sightseeing.

Do US citizens need a visa to visit Milan?

Visa-free for US passport holders for up to 90 days within any 180-day period (Schengen Area).

How long is the flight from the US to Milan?

Flight time from the US to Milan (MXP) is approximately 9 hours from Boston. Flight times vary by departure city — eastern US cities are typically shorter to Europe.

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