About Monte-Carlo
The name Monte Carlo is synonymous with Monaco itself, and the district delivers on that reputation with unapologetic grandeur. At its core sits the Carré d'Or, a tightly drawn grid of streets bounded roughly by the Casino, the Hôtel de Paris, and Avenue Princesse Grace. Within this golden perimeter, apartment prices regularly exceed one hundred thousand euros per square metre, and penthouse transactions have set records for European residential property. The Carré d'Or is not merely expensive, it is a global marker of financial arrival.
Beyond the Golden Square, the wider Monte Carlo district extends northward towards Boulevard des Moulins and the commercial spine of the Principality. Here the character shifts slightly: still polished, but with a lived-in energy that includes everyday patisseries, professional offices, and residential buildings that offer strong value relative to the Carré d'Or itself. Several well-maintained post-war residences along Rue Grimaldi and Boulevard de Suisse present genuine opportunities at a lower entry point while retaining a Monte Carlo address.


The lifestyle is urban, walkable, and international. The Opera House, Salle Garnier, and a concentration of Michelin-starred restaurants sit within minutes of most residences. The Casino Gardens provide the district's principal green space, a manicured counterpoint to the density around it. For buyers who want to be at the centre of Monaco's social and commercial gravity, Monte Carlo is simply without equal.
About Monte-Carlo
Monte Carlo is Monaco's commercial and cultural epicentre, the district where the Principality's global reputation is made and where its most valuable residential addresses concentrate. At its core sits the Carré d'Or, the Golden Square bounded roughly by the Casino de Monte-Carlo, the Hôtel de Paris, and Avenue Princesse Grace: a tightly drawn grid of streets where apartment prices regularly exceed one hundred thousand euros per square metre and where penthouse transactions have set multiple records for European residential property. The Carré d'Or is not merely the most expensive address in Monaco, it is a global marker of financial arrival.
Beyond the Golden Square, the wider Monte Carlo district extends northward toward Boulevard des Moulins and westward along the Carré d'Or's commercial spine. The character shifts subtly: still polished, but with a lived-in quality that includes everyday patisseries, professional offices, and residential buildings offering genuine value relative to the Carré d'Or while retaining the Monte Carlo address. Rue Grimaldi and Boulevard de Suisse carry a mix of independent boutiques, financial services, and apartment buildings from the post-war era through to the twenty-first century. Monaco's social and commercial gravity concentrates here more than anywhere else in the Principality.
The lifestyle is definitionally urban. Casino Square, the Metropole Shopping Centre, a concentration of Michelin-starred restaurants, the Opéra de Monte-Carlo, and the Salle Garnier sit within minutes of most residential addresses in the district. The Casino Gardens provide the quarter's principal green space, carefully manicured lawns and formal planting that frame the Belle Époque casino façade. For buyers who want to live at the centre of Monaco's social, commercial, and cultural activity, Monte Carlo is without equal.

Investment and Market Context
Monte Carlo is the most active property market in Monaco by a considerable margin: 673 active listings represent more transactions than all other districts combined. The Carré d'Or commands the highest prices per square metre in the Principality, and holds value exceptionally well through market cycles, driven by structural scarcity in the most coveted streets and persistent international demand from buyers for whom the address itself is the point. Demand consistently outstrips supply in the premium tier, and well-configured apartments with sea views attract competitive interest.
The wider district offers more accessible entry points without sacrificing the Monte Carlo address premium. Mid-market buildings along Boulevard des Moulins and Boulevard de Suisse allow buyers to establish a Monaco presence at prices meaningfully below the Carré d'Or, with the same fiscal advantages and postcode. Rental demand in Monte Carlo is the strongest and most internationally diverse in the Principality, corporate lets, seasonal occupancy, and long-term professional tenancies all operate here with minimal vacancy periods.
Average prices across the Monte Carlo district as a whole are approximately €54,000 per square metre, though the distribution is wide: Carré d'Or addresses sit significantly above this, while mid-market buildings in the district's northern fringe offer more competitive entry. New development continues to bring premium stock to market, One Monte-Carlo, the mixed-use complex anchoring the Casino Square redevelopment, represents the most significant recent addition. For investors with a long-term horizon, Monte Carlo's combination of demand depth, address prestige, and supply constraint makes it the most reliable capital-growth district in Monaco.

Living Experience
The Metropole Shopping Centre on Avenue de la Madone provides the district's primary enclosed retail: a curated collection of international luxury brands within a purpose-designed space that anchors the Carré d'Or's commercial identity. One Monte-Carlo, the mixed-use development by One&Only, extends the luxury retail and hospitality offer around Casino Square, creating a connected circuit of premium shopping along Avenue des Beaux-Arts and the Allées Lumières. For everyday needs, the Casino Supermarket on Avenue de la Costa and several independent food retailers provide practical daily shopping within walking distance of most addresses.
The dining and entertainment offer is the deepest in Monaco. Le Louis XV at the Hôtel de Paris holds three Michelin stars and is among the most decorated restaurants on the Riviera. Le Grill, Café de Paris, and the Hotel Hermitage restaurants anchor Casino Square. Away from the grand hotels, a range of serious but less formal restaurants on Boulevard des Moulins and the surrounding streets serves residents seeking a more daily dining option without the event pricing of the casino quarter. The Opéra de Monte-Carlo, housed in Salle Garnier, provides a world-class performing arts programme throughout the season.
The Casino Gardens, Jardins de la Petite Afrique and the Boulingrins, provide the quarter's green space: formal planting surrounding the Casino Belle Époque façade, with the scale and regularity that befits a civic space designed in the nineteenth century. For sport, the Monte-Carlo Bay hotel complex and several private clubs serve residents, and the wider Monaco sports infrastructure is accessible by bus in under fifteen minutes. The Formula 1 Grand Prix circuit passes through the district's eastern fringe in May, bringing a week of concentrated global attention that is both spectacle and, for those with the right apartment, significant commercial opportunity.

Getting Around
Monte Carlo is served by CAM bus lines 1 and 5 passing through the district's principal streets, with regular connections to La Condamine, Larvotto, La Rousse, and Fontvieille. Numerous public lifts and escalators link the Carré d'Or level to the upper districts and to the lower port area. Everything within the district is walkable, the Casino is a fifteen-minute walk from the furthest residential addresses, and the Metropole Shopping Centre is the effective centre of a pedestrian circuit that encompasses most daily needs.
Monaco-Monte Carlo train station in La Condamine is approximately fifteen to twenty minutes on foot or five minutes by bus, providing TGV connections to Nice (under thirty minutes), Marseille, and Paris. Nice Côte d'Azur Airport is thirty to forty minutes by road or accessible by train via Nice-Ville station. The Monaco Heliport in Fontvieille offers helicopter transfers to Nice Airport in approximately seven minutes, reachable from Monte Carlo in fifteen minutes by car.
Parking in Monte Carlo is constrained, the district's density and visitor volumes create persistent pressure on underground car parks and street parking. Most residential buildings in the Carré d'Or and the immediate surroundings include underground parking, but this should be confirmed at the point of purchase. For residents who do not commute by car, the combination of walkability within the district and the bus and lift network beyond it makes vehicle ownership optional rather than essential.

Living Experience
Living in Monte Carlo means being at the centre of Monaco's social and commercial gravity at all times. For some residents this is the entire point: the Casino, the restaurants, the Opera, and the shopping circuit are accessible on foot, and the district's international energy, the mix of languages, the constant flow of globally significant visitors, the pervasive sense that something is always happening nearby, is experienced as stimulation rather than intrusion. For others, the same density becomes exhausting, particularly during the Grand Prix and the Monaco Yacht Show when the district's streets become international stages.
The Carré d'Or has a social architecture of its own: the circuit between the Café de Paris terrace, Casino Square, and the Hôtel de Paris bar is, for a certain stratum of Monaco residents, a daily social ritual. The clientele is international, the conversations are multilingual, and the atmosphere is one of studied nonchalance in the face of extraordinary privilege. It requires some adaptation to inhabit naturally, but those who have lived in it for years describe it as its own kind of normalcy, or, at least, as a normalcy that would be very difficult to relinquish.
Beyond the Square, the wider Monte Carlo district has a more varied daily texture. Boulevard des Moulins has working bakeries, local hairdressers, and office buildings that inject a practical dimension into the postcode. Residents who live slightly back from the glamour circuit find that Monte Carlo functions as a genuinely liveable urban centre, with the Carré d'Or as an occasional amenity rather than a constant backdrop. This version of the district, quieter, more residential, but still definitively Monte Carlo, is where a significant portion of the district's long-term residents actually live.

Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Carré d'Or and why is it so significant?
The Carré d'Or, Golden Square, is the block surrounding Casino Square, bounded by the Casino de Monte-Carlo, the Hôtel de Paris, and Avenue Princesse Grace. It contains Monaco's most expensive residential addresses, with prices per square metre regularly exceeding €100,000 at the top of the market. The postcode carries a global recognition that makes it among the most prestigious residential addresses in Europe.
How many properties are available in Monte Carlo?
Monte Carlo currently has 673 active listings, by far the largest inventory of any Monaco district. This reflects the district's scale and the depth of its market. Buyer choice ranges from studio apartments in the northern fringe of the district to ultra-premium Carré d'Or residences and penthouses overlooking Casino Square.
What are average property prices in Monte Carlo?
The district-wide average is around €54,000 per square metre, but this conceals a wide distribution. Carré d'Or addresses sit significantly above this average, while mid-market buildings on Boulevard des Moulins and Boulevard de Suisse can be acquired at more accessible prices while retaining a Monte Carlo address.
Is Monte Carlo affected by the Formula 1 Grand Prix?
Yes. The Grand Prix circuit runs through the eastern fringe of Monte Carlo, and the district is significantly affected during race week in May, street closures, elevated noise, and concentrated visitor volumes. Apartments with circuit views command premium short-term rental rates during this period, which many owners use to offset annual property costs.
How does One Monte-Carlo fit into the district?
One Monte-Carlo is a major mixed-use development completed around Casino Square, incorporating luxury residences, an international hotel, and a premium retail street. It represents the most significant addition to the Carré d'Or's built fabric in recent decades and has reinforced the area's position as Monaco's premier residential and commercial address.

Living in Monte-Carlo
Character
The glamorous heart of Monaco. Casino Square, designer boutiques, and Michelin-starred dining define this ultra-premium district. Includes the Carré d'Or, Monaco's golden square surrounding Casino Square and the Hotel de Paris.
Sub-Areas
Monte-Carlo includes the following sub-areas: Carré d'Or. Properties in these areas are part of the wider Monte-Carlo district.
Best For
- International professionals
- Ultra-HNWI buyers
- Nightlife and entertainment
- Ultra-luxury living
- Prestige address
Transport
- CAM Lines 1, 2, 4, 5, 6 with 12 stops across the district
- Night buses N1 and N2 run until after midnight (later on Friday and Saturday)
- Express route X2 for faster weekday connections
- 13 MonaBike stations with electric bike docks
- Public lifts to La Condamine and the port area
Nearby Schools
- Lycee Albert Premier (10 min walk)
- ISM Larvotto campus (15 min)
Shopping
- Metropole Shopping Centre
- One Monte-Carlo luxury retail
- Designer boutiques on Avenue des Beaux-Arts
- Casino Supermarket (nearby)
Dining
Home to Le Louis XV (3 Michelin stars), Le Grill, Cafe de Paris, and dozens of premium restaurants around Casino Square and Place du Casino.
Green Spaces
- Casino Gardens (Jardins de la Petite Afrique)
- Boulingrins Gardens
Key Landmarks
Buildings in Monte-Carlo
Properties in Monte-Carlo
View allSardanapale
Le Renzo
Le Mirabel
Le Mirabeau

Les Acanthes

Les Acanthes

Park Palace

Park Palace
Villa Bianca

Les Acanthes
Résidence Mirabeau
Le Mirabeau

One Monte-Carlo

Les Acanthes
Le Renzo
Le Mirabeau





































