Where was Mare Fuori filmed? All the locations of season 6

From 4 March 2026 the first six episodes of Mare Fuori 6 are available on RaiPlay, with the other six starting from 13 March, available both on RaiPlay and in prime time on Rai 2. The series, co-produced by Rai Fiction and Picomedia and directed by Beniamino Catena and Francesca Amitrano, has returned to where in fact it had never stopped being, namely the city of Naples, between contradictions, working-class neighborhoods and that port which has served as a prison for six seasons minor.

View this post on Instagram

Filming began on June 30, 2025 and concluded towards the end of October, for a total of approximately 20 weeks of work, with a second unit active in parallel to cover the numerous locations scattered throughout the Neapolitan area and beyond.

The Naval Base of the Navy: the heart of the IPM

The Juvenile Penal Institute — the prison where much of the story takes place — was never the real institution. The real one is located on the islet of Nisida, in Coroglio, in the western sector of the city, and is obviously inaccessible to television crews. The exterior shots of the IPM have always taken place at the Naval Base of the Navy, between the small port of Molosiglio and the Molo San Vincenzo, in via Acton.

The Luzzatti and Ascarelli, Fuorigrotta and Gianturco districts

For the outdoor scenes, the sixth season confirmed some now historic locations of the series — and shared, among other things, with My Brilliant Friend. The Luzzatti and Ascarelli districts, in the eastern quadrant of the city, remain the urban landscape of reference for the stories of the protagonists outside prison.
In Fuorigrotta, a neighborhood on the west side of the historic center, the production shot several scenes using the buildings around the Campi Flegrei metro stations (Line 2) and via Leopardi, Coriolano and Tiberio.

Fuorigrotta Naples

Piazzale Tecchio – an important hub near the Maradona stadium, the Mostra d’Oltremare and the Federico II Faculty of Engineering – appears in several sequences, with the three spectacular towers built for the 1990 World Cup clearly visible in the background.

View this post on Instagram

In Gianturco, in the industrial area east of the centre, the production used Piazza Salvatore Lobianco, in the stretch between Via Vesuvio and Via Giuseppe Buonocore: an expanse of popular buildings that recreate the dark and concrete atmosphere that the series has always sought.

The Borgo Sant’Antonio Abate market and the Chiaia district

Among the new features of the sixth season is the Borgo Sant’Antonio Abate market, one of the most colorful and lively corners of the Neapolitan centre, where the colors and chaos of street commerce enter directly into the events of the characters.

View this post on Instagram

The Chiaia district also appears, the most bourgeois and well-kept part of the city, probably used to mark the contrast with the popular districts that dominate the rest of the narrative.

Chiaia neighborhood

The Federico II University Conference Center is another new addition compared to previous seasons.

Outside Naples: Castel Volturno and the Campania coast

The story also goes beyond the city borders. Castel Volturno, on the Caserta coast, is the backdrop to some sequences, intertwining the stories of the characters with the landscapes of the Campania coast. It is not the first time that the series leaves Naples – even in previous seasons the beach of Castel Volturno had appeared at key moments – but the choice confirms the desire to use the Campania territory more widely.

Piazza Mercato, in the Pendino district, completes the picture of the external locations, with the Basilica del Carmine Maggiore and the Aragonese bell tower looming over the events of the protagonists.

View this post on Instagram

Mare Fuori 6 is a work selected as part of the FSC “Stories of Campania” project and is created in collaboration with the Campania Region Film Commission.