Group travel in Monaco — yacht guests, corporate delegations, wedding parties, or a family spanning three generations — requires a transport solution that preserves cohesion without compromising individual standards. FFGR Monaco operates a dedicated group transfer service using the Mercedes V-Class Executive, the Mercedes Sprinter VIP, and multi-vehicle coordination for larger parties. Every group travels as a unit. Nobody waits on a pavement.
Vehicle Options for Group Travel
The Mercedes V-Class Executive seats up to seven passengers in a fully appointed cabin — individual captain seats, fold-out tables, and audio separation from the driver compartment. For groups of eight to twelve, the Mercedes Sprinter VIP Long offers a configured lounge configuration, with seating arranged either facing or in rows. For parties above twelve, FFGR deploys multiple coordinated vehicles — typically a mix of Maybachs and V-Classes — maintaining the standard across all vehicles simultaneously.
All group vehicles carry bottled still and sparkling water, and can be configured with newspapers, device charging, or cold snacks depending on journey duration. For airport transfers from Nice to Monaco, a V-Class with luggage trailer can accommodate up to nine oversized bags — the reality of a yacht crew returning from provisioning, or a family arriving for a two-week Côte d'Azur engagement.
Yacht Crew and Charter Guest Transfers
Monaco's yacht owner community has specific transfer needs that differ from the general luxury transport market. Crew changes at Port Hercule — often eight to twelve crew members travelling on a mixed itinerary, some arriving, some departing — require a coordination layer that accounts for port security passes, gangway access windows, and the yacht's provisioning schedule. FFGR Monaco manages crew transfers as a specialist sub-service with its own coordination protocol.
For charter guests disembarking from a superyacht and departing Monaco for Nice Airport or a villa on the Riviera, we provide a luggage-first collection sequence: soft bags loaded first, hard cases last, with a final manifest check before departure. This prevents the luggage chaos that undermines an otherwise flawless charter disembarkation.

