Frank Martin is back in The Transporter 5, retired but not forgotten. Now living a quiet life on the French Riviera, Frank spends his days maintaining classic cars and avoiding the criminal underworld that once defined him. But his peaceful existence is shattered when an anonymous client lures him into one final job — transporting a mysterious woman named Alina and a sealed briefcase from Monaco to Berlin, no questions asked.
As Frank begins the job, he quickly realizes things aren’t what they seem. Alina is no ordinary passenger — she’s a hacker who holds encrypted data capable of exposing a global trafficking syndicate. That briefcase? It’s a mobile hard drive loaded with evidence implicating political elites, corrupt military officers, and even former Transporter clients. Soon, Frank finds himself hunted by mercenaries, Interpol, and a secret Russian assassin named Arkady Vostov, who has personal history with Frank’s late father.

The chase takes Frank across Europe — narrow alleys in Rome, explosive car chases through the streets of Prague, and a bullet-filled standoff in Berlin’s abandoned subway system. Along the way, Frank begins to bond with Alina, seeing in her the same drive for justice that once pushed him. But trust is fragile. Frank suspects there’s more to her story — and he’s right.
In a high-stakes twist, Frank discovers Alina was once part of the very syndicate she’s trying to expose — until they betrayed her and murdered her family. Now, she’s not just seeking justice; she wants revenge.
The climax erupts atop a Berlin skyscraper where Frank must choose: stick to the mission, or break his three sacred rules to save Alina and destroy the network for good. With signature martial arts, high-speed precision driving, and explosive action, The Transporter 5 ends with Frank walking away from the burning wreckage — wounded but victorious, his moral compass finally realigned.
But as he drives into the sunrise, a mysterious call comes through his burner phone: “We need a Transporter… in Tokyo.” Frank smirks. He’s not done yet.