How to Get From Milan to the Dolomites 2026: The Rental Car via A22 Takes 3h10m to Cortina or 2h30m to Madonna di Campiglio, The Trento Train Takes 1h50m and Connects to the Dolomites Bus Network, The Most Scenic Single Dolomites Approach From Milan Is the Adige Valley Via Bolzano, and Summer FlixBus Direct to Cortina Runs July-August Only

Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com

Last updated: May 2026 — verified by the editorial team of www.tourleaderpro.com

How to get from Milan to the Dolomites (come arrivare nelle Dolomiti da Milano) has the most options of any major Italian city Dolomites connection: the A22 autostrada (the "Autostrada del Brennero" running north from Verona through Trento and Bolzano toward Austria) provides the most specifically efficient motorway approach to both the western Dolomites (Madonna di Campiglio, Val di Sole) and the central-eastern Dolomites (Cortina d'Ampezzo via Bolzano and the Passo Gardena); and the Trenitalia high-speed service to Trento or Bolzano provides the most specifically direct public transport link to the Dolomites bus network. The specific Milan geographic advantage for the western Dolomites: the Adamello-Brenta area (Madonna di Campiglio (GPS: 46.2311°N, 10.8267°E)) is significantly closer to Milan (2h30m via A22) than to Venice (4h by car) — making Milan the most specifically efficient single Italian city for the western Dolomites programme.

Milan to Dolomites: The Routes

Rental Car via A22 (Best for Most Dolomites Bases)

Milano → A4 autostrada → A22 Brennero → Trento exit (GPS: 46.0748°N, 11.1217°E) or Bolzano exit (GPS: 46.4983°N, 11.3548°E) → specific Dolomites base. Specific times: Milano → Trento: 2h15m (approximately 15 euros toll); Milano → Bolzano: 2h45m (approximately 18 euros toll); Milano → Cortina d'Ampezzo via Bolzano and Passo Gardena: 3h10m (approximately 22 euros toll); Milano → Madonna di Campiglio via Trento: 2h30m (approximately 16 euros toll). Rental car pickup: the Milano Centrale station rental offices (Hertz, Europcar, Avis — GPS: 45.4854°N, 9.2044°E: open 8:00-20:00 daily) or the Milano Linate or Malpensa airport rental desks (for the visitor arriving by international flight).

Trenitalia to Trento or Bolzano + Dolomites Bus

Frecciarossa Milano Centrale → Trento (1h50m, approximately 19-25 euros Economy advance) + SAD bus Trento → Madonna di Campiglio (1h30m, approximately 8 euros, via the SS239 Val Rendena road): total approximately 3h20m, approximately 27-33 euros. Frecciarossa or Intercity Milano Centrale → Bolzano (GPS: 46.4983°N, 11.3548°E: 2h10m, approximately 22-30 euros) + SAD bus Bolzano → Ortisei (GPS: 46.5746°N, 11.6726°E — the Val Gardena Dolomites base: 45 minutes, approximately 5 euros): total approximately 3h, approximately 27-35 euros. The SAD (Südtiroler Autobus-Dienst) bus network from both Trento and Bolzano covers the entire western and central Dolomites efficiently — the most specifically comprehensive single Dolomites public transport network (see sad-online.it for the 2026 specific timetable).

Summer FlixBus Direct to Cortina (July-August Only)

FlixBus Milano Lampugnano → Cortina d'Ampezzo: the specific summer-only service (July 1-August 31, 2026 — verify at flixbus.it): approximately 4h30m-5h, approximately 15-25 euros. The FlixBus summer Cortina service is the most specifically affordable single Milan to Cortina public transport option available (no train change required), but the journey duration (4h30m vs 3h10m by car) and the single-daily frequency make it most appropriate for the visitor with only hand luggage and no specific programme time flexibility.

Q&A: Milan to Dolomites

Which Dolomites base is best for the Milan visitor?

Madonna di Campiglio (the most specifically accessible single Dolomites ski resort from Milan: 2h30m via A22 + SS239; the most specifically equipped single western Dolomites winter and summer resort) for the visitor who wants ski or hiking + the most convenient Milan return journey; Ortisei-Val Gardena (the most specifically beautiful single central Dolomites valley with the most specifically extensive single Dolomites Superski area connection (the Sellaronda: the 4-pass circuit through the Sella massif)) for the visitor who prioritises the Dolomites landscape over Milan-access logistics; and Cortina d'Ampezzo for the visitor whose programme specifically includes the Tre Cime di Lavaredo hike (the single most specifically famous single Dolomites walk) regardless of the longer Milan-to-Cortina drive time.

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