Destinations Italy Amalfi Coast & Bay of Naples
Italy · Campania

Amalfi Coast
& Bay of Naples

9 towns
32 restaurants
16 hotels
30 things to do

Vertical villages, lemon terraces, an island that bites deep, a city that doesn't apologize. The most photographed coastline in Europe and the only place to eat a real margherita — sometimes in the same day.

Currency
EUR €
Best Time
May · Jun · Sep
Language
Italian
Daily Budget
€200–500
Plug Type
C · F · L
Tipping
Round up, €1–2
Time Zone
CET / UTC+1
Avoid
Aug · Nov–Mar
A note from Hala

The Amalfi Coast is not actually one place. It's nine towns spread across forty kilometers of cliff, an island, a peninsula, and the loudest city in Italy thirty minutes north. Most people pick one base, never leave it, and miss the entire point. The point is the contrast — a frescoed room in Ravello on a Tuesday, a stand-up margherita in Naples on a Wednesday, a fishing-village trattoria you reach by boat on a Thursday. All three are correct.

Below: everything you actually need, and nothing you don't.

Stay in Praiano. Eat in Nerano. Sleep in Ravello. Photograph Positano and leave. Don't skip Naples.
Quick take

The region is best in late May, early June, and September. July and August are heat, traffic, and prices that don't translate. Most hotels close November to March. If you can only go once, go the second week of June.

The right month is half the trip

When to actually go.

Most hotels close November to March. August is a parking lot. The window where the region is itself — open, breathable, real — is narrower than the brochures suggest.

 
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Hotels
closed
closed
closed
opening
€€€
€€€€
€€€€€
€€€€€
€€€€
€€
closing
closed
Ferries
limited
limited
limited
starting
daily
all routes
all routes
all routes
all routes
daily
scaling back
limited
Restaurants
most closed
most closed
opening
open
open
open
book ahead
ferragosto*
open
open
closing
most closed
Crowds
none
none
light
light
moderate
manageable
heavy
brutal
manageable
light
very light
none
Weather
cool, wet
cool, wet
mild
spring
warm, dry
warm, dry
hot
36°C+
warm, dry
mild
rain returns
cool, wet
Our take
don't
don't
don't
edges
go
go
pricey
avoid
go
edges
don't
don't
Sweet spot Shoulder Crowded / pricey Avoid Closed / off-season
Sweet spot Late May, early June, second half of September. Hotels are open, prices are reasonable, the heat hasn't broken brutal, ferries run on schedule.
*Ferragosto The two-week shutdown around August 15 when half the country goes on holiday. Italians fill the coast; many of the best local restaurants close.
Off-season November through March: most hotels closed, ferries limited, towns half-empty. Romantic if you're staying inland in Naples; not the trip the brochure sold you.

Drag table to scroll →

Know before you go

The towns.

Nine places worth your time, in the order you should think about them. Pick two or three as bases. The rest are day trips by ferry or hire car.

01

Positano

The famous one

Vertical, photogenic, expensive. Stay one night, photograph it from the water, move on. Le Sirenuse is the hotel everyone's heard of. Franco's Bar opens to non-guests at 6 p.m. and the line forms at 5:45.

Photo stopOne night maxCliff bars
02

Praiano

Where to actually stay

Ten minutes east of Positano, half the noise, sunsets facing west. A real town with residents and a fishing tradition. Casa Angelina is the hotel. The Sentiero degli Dei trailhead is above. Marina di Praia below is one of the prettiest swims on the coast.

Stay hereSunset sidePath of the Gods
03

Ravello

The view from above

365 meters up the mountain. Quieter, ten degrees cooler in July, home to the two best gardens on the coast. The Terrace of Infinity at Villa Cimbrone is the photo. Caruso and Palazzo Avino are the rooms. Music festival runs July through August.

Garden viewsMusic festivalCooler in summer
04

Amalfi Town

Mostly a transit hub

The Duomo di Sant'Andrea is the reason — a striped Arab-Norman façade at the top of a long staircase. Beyond that, it's buses, ferries, and tour groups passing through. Use it as a ferry base. Pizzeria Donna Stella has a rooftop covered in lemon trees.

DuomoFerry hubLemon liqueur
05

Atrani

The smallest village in Italy

A piazza with two restaurants, a pebble beach, almost no one. The closing scene of The Talented Mr. Ripley was filmed here. Le Arcate is the local trattoria, built into the rock wall that holds the town up. Twenty minutes here is worth two hours in Positano.

Quiet stopPebble beachWalk from Amalfi
06

Conca dei Marini & Furore

A fishing village and a fjord

Tiny, almost completely overlooked. The original sfogliatella Santa Rosa was invented at the convent above town in the 17th century. The Fjord di Furore — a narrow inlet between two cliffs spanned by a single road bridge — is twenty minutes east. Go before 11 a.m.

Lunch stopSfogliatella HQThe fjord
07

Sorrento

The launchpad

Better than its cruise-ship reputation. North side of the peninsula, looking across the Bay of Naples toward Vesuvius. The old town away from Piazza Tasso is genuinely charming, and it's the ferry hub for everything: Capri, Positano, Naples. Stay one night, especially if you're flying through Naples.

Ferry hubLemon grovesOne-night base
08

Capri

Day-trip the wrong one. Sleep on the right one.

The day-trip version (ferry in, bus, chairlift, ferry out) is forgettable. The right Capri is a private boat for two hours around the Faraglioni, a swim below the Tragara, lunch at Marina Piccola, a 5 p.m. ferry out. If you sleep here, do it in Anacapri — not Capri Town.

Day or stayFaraglioniSkip Marina Grande
09

Naples

Loud, tense, gorgeous

Don't skip Naples. Forty minutes north of Sorrento by train. The original margherita pizza, the most layered city in Italy, the museum that holds everything pulled out of Pompeii. Spend a full day. Eat at Sorbillo or da Michele. Walk the Spanish Quarters. Don't fight the chaos — that's the point.

Day tripThe pizzaReal city
The math of the trip

How long in each town.

Most travelers spread their nights too evenly across nine towns and miss the point. Here's the actual allocation we'd recommend for a seven-night trip — and which towns work better as day visits.

Town
Recommended
Verdict
01Positano
1 night
Beautiful, and worth a night. The light at 7 p.m. is what the photos are actually of.
02Praiano
3 nights
Stay here. Sunset side, real town, no noise.
03Ravello
2 nights
Cooler, quieter, the gardens are the point.
04Capri
1 night
After the day-trippers leave, on Anacapri side.
05Naples
Day trip
Half a day minimum. Don't skip it.
06Sorrento
Pass through
Ferry hub. One night if you're flying through Naples.
07Amalfi Town
Day trip
The Duomo and a long lunch. Then move on.
08Atrani
A few hours
Walk over from Amalfi at sunset. Stay for one drink.
09Conca dei Marini
A few hours
Lunch stop. The fjord is twenty minutes east.
Stay overnight Day trip — don't waste a night
The hardest puzzle on the trip

How to actually get around.

Forty kilometers of cliff road, ferries that don't always run, and tour buses going the other way. Most guides duck this. Here's the call for every leg of the trip.

Route Ferry Hire car Driver / taxi SS163 bus
Naples airport → Positano
85 km · The arrival
Not direct Train to Sorrento, then ferry ~3 hr · €25
Possible Stressful first drive 1.5 hr · €60–80 + parking
The call. Pre-booked car, door to door 1.5 hr · €150–200
Skip — three legs.
Positano ↔ Amalfi
17 km on the SS163
The call. Direct, fast, no traffic 25 min · €10
Avoid in summer 1.5–2 hr in July/August 30 min off-season
If ferries are out Same SS163 traffic problem €100–150 one way
Cheap, slow SITA bus, standing room 1 hr · €3
Positano ↔ Capri
By sea only
The call. NLG or Alicost · daily 50 min · €23
No road. Sea only.
Private boat charter The luxury version From €400 one way
No bus. Sea only.
Sorrento ↔ Capri
The ferry highway
The call. Every 30 min in season 20 min · €22
No road. Sea only.
Private boat Luxury option €300–500
No bus. Sea only.
Amalfi → Ravello
365m up the mountain
Ravello is inland.
Doable Steep switchbacks 20 min
The call. Local taxi from Amalfi piazza 20 min · €30
SITA bus From Amalfi piazza · hourly 30 min · €1.50
Sorrento → Naples / Pompeii
North of the peninsula
Naples only Hydrofoil to Molo Beverello 40 min · €15
For Pompeii Naples city traffic is brutal 1.5 hr · €45
Day-trip driver For Naples + Pompeii combined €280–350 full day
The call. Circumvesuviana train Pompeii 30 min · Naples 65 min · €5

Drag table to scroll →

The call — what we'd actually book Ferries don't run November–March. Sea only when the water cooperates.
Where We Eat

The table.

Southern Italian at its purest — lemons from terraces above the road, fish landed that morning, mozzarella from buffalo that live thirty minutes inland. Skip the panoramic-terrace tourist menus. The good rooms are family-run.

Coffee · Breakfast · Bakery

Stand at the bar. Order in Italian. Cornetto al limone is the regional move. Sit-down breakfast is for foreigners and people on holiday from the holiday.

La Zagara — Positano garden pasticceria

La Zagara

€€
Must orderdelizia al limone

A garden of citrus trees, a pasticceria since 1956, the best lemon delight in Positano.

The terrace is a small jungle of lemon and orange trees with a piano in the corner. Locals come in the morning for coffee and sfogliatella; tourists come at sunset for a Negroni they don't really need. Go in the morning. Take the cornetto al limone to the beach.

Garden terraceOpen since 1956Cash
lazagara.com ↗
Casa e Bottega — swap for photo

Casa e Bottega

€€
Must ordergreen juice + eggs

Half design store, half breakfast room. The only place in Positano that makes sense before 10 a.m. without a cornetto involved.

Cold-pressed juices, eggs done properly, fresh fruit, decent coffee, white-on-white interiors that photograph well. The food doesn't pretend to be Italian — it pretends to be useful. After three days of cornetti, it's the meal you actually want.

HealthySit-downDesign store
@casaebottega ↗
Pasticceria Pansa — swap for photo

Pasticceria Pansa

Must ordersfogliatella Santa Rosa

Founded 1830. The historic café in front of Amalfi's Duomo, still the best sfogliatella on the coast.

Six generations of the same family. The sfogliatella Santa Rosa was invented in 1681 by the nuns at the convent in Conca dei Marini (now Monastero Santa Rosa); Pansa took the recipe down the coast and refined it into the canonical modern version on this very piazza. Order it warm in the morning with espresso, standing at the counter.

Must-doBar onlyIn front of Duomo
InsiderThe Santa Rosa is a morning pastry. By 1 p.m. they're sold out. Be there before 10.
pasticceriapansa.it ↗
Bar Caso — swap for photo

Bar Caso

€€
Must ordertorta caprese + espresso

The original Capri torta — flourless almond and chocolate cake, invented by accident in the 1920s.

One of four bars on the Piazzetta, but the only one with the actual provenance. Stand at the counter, order torta caprese and espresso, watch the island wake up before the day-trippers arrive on the 9:30 ferry. By 11 it's a different place.

PiazzettaPre-9 a.m.Original torta
InsiderThe Piazzetta has four bars and they're all priced the same. Caso has the cake. Pick accordingly.

Casual · Lunch · Any Hour

The places you actually want at 2 p.m. between a beach and a ferry. Most are reachable by boat.

Lo Scoglio — swap for photo

Lo Scoglio da Tommaso

€€€€
Must orderspaghetti alla Nerano

A wooden pier over the sea. The dish Stanley Tucci called life-changing. The reason most people who go once go again.

The De Simone family opened it in 1958 and three generations later they're still serving food grown on their own farm up the hill. The spaghetti alla Nerano was invented in this town and this kitchen makes the version everyone else copies.

Must-doBoat accessFamily farm
Insider€29 for the spaghetti, €15 for the lemon delight. The price is the location plus the family. If that math works, worth it.
hotelloscoglio.com ↗
Da Adolfo — swap for photo

Da Adolfo

€€€
Must ordermozzarella in lemon leaves

Look for the boat with the red fish on the mast. It leaves Positano's main pier hourly between 10 and 1.

Inaccessible by road — you arrive on the family's free shuttle boat from the Spiaggia Grande, eat under a wooden roof on the rocks, swim, eat more, let the afternoon unspool. Mozzarella grilled in lemon leaves is the dish. Beach beds for rent after lunch.

Boat shuttleNo road accessBeach beds
InsiderThey don't reliably answer the phone. Have your hotel concierge book — or show up at the boat at 12:30 and try anyway.
daadolfo.com ↗
Donna Stella — swap for photo

Pizzeria Donna Stella

€€
Must orderpesto gnocchi

A rooftop terrace covered in lemon trees, halfway up the hill behind Amalfi's Duomo.

Wood-fired pizza, hand-cut gnocchi, a covered pergola of citrus trees, and almost no tourists despite being a six-minute walk from the cathedral. Reserve a few days ahead — there are maybe twelve tables and the regulars know about all of them.

RooftopReserve aheadWood-fired
@pizzeriadonnastella ↗
Le Arcate — swap for photo

Le Arcate

€€
Must orderscialatielli ai frutti di mare

Built into the rock wall that holds Atrani up. The cheapest good seafood on this stretch of coast.

An honest trattoria with a small terrace facing the pebble beach. Family-run, no website worth speaking of, prices that won't shock you. Scialatielli is what to order — the regional pasta, hand-cut, with mussels and clams from the morning's catch.

Beach frontCashHonest pricing
La Tagliata — swap for photo

La Tagliata

€€€
Must orderwhatever they bring you

No menu. A working farm in the hills above Positano. They pick you up in a van.

Family-run, three generations, working from a kitchen garden visible from the dining room. You don't choose; they bring antipasti, primi, a grilled secondo, dessert. Wine flows until someone says stop. The view is straight down to Positano with Capri in the distance.

No menuFree shuttleUnlimited wine
latagliata.com ↗

Dinner · Splurge · Special Occasions

The tables worth booking weeks ahead. Months for a few of them.

La Sponda at Le Sirenuse — Michelin-starred dining room

Photo: Brechenmacher & Baumann · Courtesy of Le Sirenuse

La Sponda at Le Sirenuse

€€€€€
Must orderlemon risotto

400 candles lit at dusk. Live music drifting through tiled walls. Le Sirenuse's Michelin-starred dining room.

Chef Gennaro Russo cooks Campanian classics without overworking them — lemon risotto, grilled branzino, lobster gnocchi. Cathedral ceilings, hand-painted tiles, every table looking out toward the sea. Smart casual. Book on opening day for July or August dates.

1 Michelin starCandlelitBook months ahead
InsiderIf La Sponda is full, Aldo's at the same hotel takes walk-ins for late-night seafood and champagne. Smaller bill, same kitchen team.
sirenuse.it ↗
Zass — swap for photo

Zass at Il San Pietro

€€€€€
Must ordertasting menu

Carved into the cliff a kilometer outside Positano. The most discreet luxury room on the coast.

Il San Pietro is hidden — buried into the rock so you can't see it from town. Zass sits on a terrace mostly invisible from the sea. Chef Alois Vanlangenaeker holds a Michelin star for cooking that draws on the hotel's terraced gardens above.

1 Michelin starHotel guests prioritizedGarden ingredients
ilsanpietro.com ↗
Belvedere at Caruso — Ravello terrace dining

Courtesy of Caruso, A Belmond Hotel

Belvedere at Caruso

€€€€€
Must orderhomemade pasta tasting

An infinity pool that ends at a thousand-foot drop. Dinner on the terrace next to it.

Caruso is a Belmond hotel inside an 11th-century palace at the highest point in Ravello. The restaurant sits on the same terrace as the most photographed pool in Italy. Cooler in summer than anywhere on the coast below, and the view at sunset is unbeatable.

Hotel restaurantCool in summerReserve weeks ahead
belmond.com ↗
Maestro's — swap for photo

Maestro's at Villa TreVille

€€€€€
Must orderchef's tasting

The only way non-residents get into Villa TreVille — Zeffirelli's old house, now a four-villa hotel.

Twelve tables, candle-lit, on a terrace looking back at Positano from above. The hotel itself is closed to non-guests by policy; dinner is the workaround. Reserve directly through the hotel three to four weeks ahead. The property has hosted everyone from Maria Callas to Diana Vreeland.

Reservation onlyNon-guests welcomeRomantic
villatreville.com ↗
Don Alfonso — swap for photo

Don Alfonso 1890

€€€€€
Must ordertasting + farm tour

The grandfather of Campanian fine dining. Two Michelin stars, four generations, one farm.

Halfway between Sorrento and Positano sits the most decorated restaurant in southern Italy. Two stars, three generations of the Iaccarino family, vegetables grown on their own farm fifteen minutes away (visit it; they'll arrange a tour). Pair the tasting with the wine flight.

2 Michelin starsFamily farmReserve a month ahead
donalfonso.com ↗
Rossellinis at Palazzo Avino — Michelin-starred dining room

Courtesy of Palazzo Avino

Rossellinis at Palazzo Avino

€€€€
Must orderseafood tasting

Inside Ravello's pink palazzo. Frescoed dining room, Michelin star, less-touristed than the Caruso.

Chef Giovanni Vanacore runs a kitchen that sources almost everything from a 30-kilometer radius. The dining room is in the original 12th-century palazzo with frescoed ceilings; the terrace, in summer, is one of the more intimate fine-dining moments in the region.

1 Michelin starFrescoed ceilingsEasier reservation
palazzoavino.com ↗
La Caravella — swap for photo

La Caravella

€€€€€
Must orderhistoric tasting menu

The first Michelin-starred restaurant in southern Italy. Open since 1959, still holding its star.

A frescoed dining room hung with vintage Amalfi ceramics and old-master oil paintings — feels more like dining inside a museum than a restaurant. The tasting menu honors traditional Amalfitana cooking with serious finesse. Formal in the old-school way: jackets recommended, conversation hushed, every course a piece of regional history.

1 Michelin star since 1959Reserve a month aheadFormal
InsiderThe historic tasting menu is the move — it walks through Amalfi's actual culinary heritage, dish by dish. A bit of a lesson, in the best way.
ristorantelacaravella.it ↗
Donna Rosa — swap for photo

Donna Rosa

€€€€
Must orderravioli capresi

A family-run honeymoon hot spot in the hills above Positano. Jamie Oliver's favorite restaurant in Italy.

An intimate, art-filled, family-run trattoria in Montepertuso, the hill village above Positano. Refined Italian pastas and seafood from a kitchen that's been doing it the same way for three generations. Jamie Oliver became a regular years ago, then opened a London restaurant inspired by it. Feels like a secret dinner party in someone's home — with a very good wine list.

Family-runHill village above PositanoReserve ahead
InsiderThey run a free shuttle from Positano center for dinner guests — book it when you reserve. Otherwise it's a steep climb.
donnarosa.it ↗

Naples Pizza · The Real One

A regional category because, frankly, you cannot come to Campania and not eat a margherita in Naples.

da Michele — swap for photo

L'Antica Pizzeria da Michele

Must ordermargherita

Open since 1870. Two pizzas on the menu. A line out the door at any hour.

The pizzeria from Eat, Pray, Love and 153 years of Neapolitan opinion. Margherita or marinara. €5 a pizza. The dough is wet, the crust is leopard-spotted, the cornicione properly puffed. Take a number outside, wait, eat at a shared table.

Must-doCash only20-min wait
damichele.net ↗
Sorbillo — swap for photo

Gino Sorbillo

Must ordermargherita + pizza fritta

The crowd-pleaser. Bigger menu, faster line, equally legitimate pizza.

Third-generation pizzaiolo in the historic center. Sorbillo's grandmother had 21 children, all of whom became pizzaioli — that's the family math. Pizza here is slightly puffier than da Michele's; menu is broader (including the fritta — fried-then-baked). Reservations possible.

ReservationsPizza frittaWalk-in welcome
sorbillo.it ↗
Margherita pizza at Concettina ai Tre Santi

Courtesy of Concettina ai Tre Santi

Concettina ai Tre Santi

€€
Must ordertasting flight

Pizza-as-restaurant. The pizzaiolo grandson took it Michelin-direction.

Ciro Oliva's grandmother opened it in 1951; he turned it into a destination. Wood-fired tasting menus that walk through Naples pizza's history — fritta, classic margherita, contemporary versions topped with smoked provola, anchovies from Cetara, garden tomatoes. The Sanità neighborhood is Naples' most interesting walk.

Tasting menusSanità walkReserve a week ahead
pizzeriaoliva.it ↗
50 Kalò — swap for photo

50 Kalò di Ciro Salvo

€€
Must ordercosacca + margherita

The dough geek's pizzeria. Long-ferment, lighter crust, modern crowd.

Ciro Salvo trained for two decades before opening 50 Kalò; the name is dialect for "good dough." His version uses a 24-hour cold ferment which makes the crust noticeably lighter and more digestible than older-school Naples pizzerias. Closer to the waterfront than the historic center, with seating that's actually comfortable.

Modern styleLong fermentSit-down
50kalo.it ↗

Late Night · Bars · Aperitivo

Where to drink across the region, in order of how late you want to be out.

Franco's Bar at Le Sirenuse — Positano sunset terrace

Photo: Brechenmacher & Baumann · Courtesy of Le Sirenuse

Franco's Bar

€€€€
Must ordernegroni or limoncello spritz

Open at 6 p.m. The line forms at 5:45. The best terrace in Positano.

Stand-up bar at Le Sirenuse — no reservations, first-come, first-served. Get there before 6 or accept that you're not getting a terrace seat. The view is the most photographed view in Positano. The Negroni is €30 and worth it for the show.

Must-doOpen 6 p.m.No reservations
InsiderBe there at 5:45. The 6 p.m. opening creates a small crowd that compounds in summer. Past 7, no chance at the terrace.
sirenuse.it ↗
Music on the Rocks — Positano cliffside nightclub

Courtesy of Music on the Rocks

Music on the Rocks

€€€

The coast's only proper nightclub. Built directly into the cliffs below Le Sirenuse.

Cover from €30, cocktails around €20, the actual late-night option in Positano. Doesn't get going until after 1 a.m. — until then the crowd is still at dinner. Bold lighting, international DJs, a setting genuinely unlike anywhere else: the cave walls are the original Amalfi rock face, lit theatrically. Dress to impress; it's flashy, unapologetically Euro, and always loud.

Cave nightclubAfter 1 a.m.Cover charge
InsiderTables are pre-booked — if you want one, contact them through the hotel concierge or via email a few days ahead. Otherwise: standing room.
musicontherocks.it ↗

Dessert · Gelato · Sweet Endings

Lemon granita is the regional move. Done well, it's the best two euros you'll spend on the coast.

Collina — swap for photo

Collina Bakery

Must ordergranita di limone con panna

Small bakery on the beach end of Positano with a granita stand outside. €3, paper cup, no ceremony.

Sfusato amalfitano lemons, ice, sugar — that's it. Eaten standing on the beach with a wooden spoon. The kind of thing that makes you understand why the Romans were obsessed with this coast.

CashBeach front4 p.m. snack
Gelateria David — Sorrento

Courtesy of Gelateria David

Gelateria David

Must orderlimone + fior di latte

The best artisan gelato on the peninsula. The owner picks the lemons himself.

Family-owned since 1957. Mr. David sources his sfusato lemons from his own grove and his fior di latte from a buffalo dairy in Agerola. Result: denser, less sweet, more recognizable than the chains. Avoid the souvenir shops on Corso Italia; walk five minutes for half the price and twice the quality.

Family-ownedArtisanAvoid Corso Italia
gelateriadavidsorrento.it ↗
Pansa — swap for photo

Pansa (Delizia al Limone)

Must orderdelizia al limone

A small dome of sponge cake soaked in limoncello and limoncello cream. Light, almost weightless.

Same Pansa as breakfast, but the dessert is what most people don't realize they came for. Technically Sorrentine in origin, but the version at Pansa — refined, less sweet, with proper sfusato cream — is the one. Take three to-go.

HistoricTo-goCash
pasticceriapansa.it ↗
Buonocore — swap for photo

Buonocore Gelateria

Must orderalmond gelato in waffle cone

Capri's historic gelateria. The waffle cones are made on the spot — you smell them from the Piazzetta.

Open since 1971, two minutes from the Piazzetta. The waffle iron at the door is the giveaway — they make every cone fresh, which is why the line moves slowly and why nobody minds. Almond and pistachio are the calls. Skip the seasonal flavors.

Fresh waffle conesOpen since 1971Cash
Sal De Riso — swap for photo

Sal De Riso

€€
Must orderricotta e pere + delizia al limone

One of Italy's most famous pastry chefs, on the beachfront in Minori.

Sal De Riso is to Italian pastry what René Redzepi is to Nordic cooking — a generational figure who reinterpreted regional traditions and made them famous everywhere. The ricotta and pear cake is non-negotiable; the delizia al limone is the most refined version on the coast. Beachfront café, stand or sit. Worth the detour to Minori.

Famous pastry chefMinori beach frontMail-order available
InsiderThey ship boxed pastries internationally — the ricotta-pear cake travels surprisingly well if you want to take Amalfi home.
salderiso.it ↗
Where We Sleep

The stay.

Sixteen hotels across the coast, the peninsula, and the island. Every one earns its rate. Click any card to expand the full picture.

€€ €200–400/night
Lemon orchard breakfast — Anacapri
Junior suite
Pool deck
Anacapri courtyard
Drag to see more

Run by the third generation of the same family — Graham Greene used to write here in the 1950s. The garden is the original lemon grove, still farmed; breakfast is served under it. Anacapri is the half of Capri you actually want to stay in: residential, walkable, ten minutes by bus to Capri Town when you want it. Better food, fewer crowds, half the price of the iconic Capri properties.

What it's known for
Family-owned, four generations
Lemon-grove breakfast garden
Walking distance to Villa San Michele
Pool with view across to Ischia
TownAnacapri, Capri
Rate range€220–380/night
Best forCouples · repeat Capri visitors
Walk toVilla San Michele 8 min · Anacapri 5 min
Good to know
Bus or taxi to Capri Town (10 min)
Closed November–March
16 rooms — book 3+ months ahead for July/August
InsiderAsk for room 14 or 15 — both have private terraces overlooking the orchard. Garden-view rooms in the back are quieter than village-view ones.
Book at casamariantonia.com ↗
Sea-view balcony
Rooftop pool
Vietri tile bathroom
Amalfi waterfront
Drag to see more

Most rooms face the sea directly, with hand-painted Vietri tile floors and small balconies. The rooftop has a small infinity pool with a view straight across the gulf to Capri. Service is family-run rather than corporate. Useful as a base for ferry hopping — three minutes to the dock — and you can walk to Atrani in twenty.

What it's known for
Direct sea views from most rooms
Walking distance to ferry — base for day trips
Rooftop infinity pool with Capri view
Hand-painted Vietri ceramic tile throughout
TownAmalfi
Rate range€240–420/night
Best forFirst-timers · ferry-base trips
Walk toDuomo 5 min · ferry 3 min · Atrani 20 min
Good to know
Sea-facing rooms can be noisy with ferry traffic
No on-site parking — use the public garage at Luna Rossa
Closed mid-November to mid-March
InsiderWalk to Atrani at sunset. Twenty minutes along the cliff path, one drink in the piazza, walk back. The whole reason to stay this end of the coast is access to the parts of Amalfi nobody else bothers with.
Book at marinariviera.it ↗
La Minervetta — striped poolside
Sea-view guest room
Cliffside pool with Marina Grande view
Library lounge
Drag to see more

Twelve rooms, all sea-facing, designed by an Italian architect (Marco De Luca) as a love letter to nautical interiors — striped floors, red coral sculptures, vintage Italian magazines stacked in the lounge. Run as a guesthouse rather than a hotel: the family makes the cakes for breakfast, the staff knows everyone's name by lunch on day one. There's a hidden staircase down to the fishing village below — most guests don't find it until day three.

What it's known for
All 12 rooms face the sea — no bad views
Adults-only, 16+
Homemade cakes and savory tarts at breakfast
Hidden staircase down to the fishing village below
TownSorrento · Marina Grande side
Rate range€300–550/night
Best forDesign-led couples · solo travelers
Walk toMarina Grande 5 min · Sorrento center 10 min
Good to know
No restaurant on-site — staff has the best Sorrento recs
Pool loungers built into the cliff
Books out months ahead in summer; only 12 rooms
InsiderDon't miss the library lounge — vintage Italian magazines, art books, the kind of space you read in for two hours and lose track of time.
Book at laminervetta.com ↗
€€€ €400–800/night
White-on-white guest room
Sea cave breakfast
Cliff-side pool
Praiano sunset
Drag to see more

A working art collection (Picasso, Klein, contemporary glass) integrated through the public spaces. The architecture is uncompromising — everything white, every angle facing the water — and the position in Praiano means sunset rather than sunrise (the right side of the coast for golden hour). The sea-cave restaurant for breakfast is one of the more theatrical mornings you can have at a hotel.

What it's known for
Sunset-facing position (Positano gets sunrise)
Working contemporary art collection
Sea-cave breakfast room
Funicular to private beach
TownPraiano
Rate range€480–780/night
Best forHoneymoons · design-led travelers
Walk toPraiano center 5 min · ferry 8 min
Good to know
Steep climb from the road — pack light
Closed November–March
Adults-only above 16 in some seasons
InsiderThe sea-cave breakfast is open to non-guests — book through the website a few days ahead if you can't get a room.
Book at casangelina.com ↗
Pool with Positano view
Junior suite balcony
Il Tridente terrace
The Positano postcard view
Drag to see more

The Aonzo family opened it in 1955 and three generations of them are still on the property — Liliana on the front desk, her sons running the kitchen. The position is mid-cliff with the best practical access (no extreme stairs from the road) and the view is the postcard one. Less famous than Le Sirenuse, less hidden than San Pietro, but the warmest room on the coast.

What it's known for
Family-run for three generations
Easy access — no extreme stairs from the road
Il Tridente restaurant on-site
Heated pool with full Positano view
TownPositano
Rate range€450–750/night
Best forCouples · returning Positano visitors
Walk toSpiaggia Grande 8 min · Le Sirenuse 4 min
Good to know
Reservations open 14 days ahead at Il Tridente
Closed November–early April
Spa is small but properly run
InsiderAsk for a deluxe room on the highest floor available. The view improves with every floor and the rate barely shifts past the third.
Book at hotelposeidonpositano.com ↗
Tomasi-designed suite
Jacuzzi rooftop
Heated pool
Capri Town entrance
Drag to see more

A five-minute walk from the Piazzetta but tucked on a residential street where you'd never know it was there. Interiors by the Italian designer Gian Paolo Tomasi — bold colors, vintage furniture, hand-painted tile in every bathroom. The pool is heated; the rooftop bar is a quiet alternative to the chaos of the Piazzetta.

What it's known for
Capri's design hotel
Off-Piazzetta location, residential street
Leading Hotels of the World member
Jacuzzi rooftop bar
TownCapri Town, Capri
Rate range€520–820/night
Best forDesign-led travelers · first Capri
Walk toPiazzetta 5 min · Marina Piccola 15 min by bus
Good to know
Closed mid-October to mid-April
Jacuzzi Bar requires a reservation in summer
Pool heated through operating season
InsiderThe Tiberio Suite rooms have private terraces with hot tubs. Worth the upgrade for one night even if you book a standard for the rest.
Book at capritiberiopalace.it ↗
€€€€ €800–1,500/night
Rooftop pool deck
Coastal-cool guest room
La Palma Beach Club
Capri Town entrance
Drag to see more

Capri's original 1822 hotel, the one Liszt and Lord Byron stayed in. Fully overhauled by the Oetker Collection in 2023 with cool-and-coastal interiors that updated the property without flattening the history. The rooftop bar buzzes from 6 p.m. with DJ sets, the private La Palma Beach Club at Marina Piccola brings back vintage-Capri glamour, and the location — steps from the Piazzetta — means you can stagger home from anywhere.

What it's known for
Capri's oldest hotel (since 1822), fully redesigned 2023
Private La Palma Beach Club in Marina Piccola
DJ sets and aperitivo on the rooftop daily
Steps from the Piazzetta — central to everything
TownCapri Town
Rate range€800–1,400/night
Best forFirst Capri stay · design-led travelers · social trips
Walk toPiazzetta 2 min · Marina Piccola 10 min by car or bus
Good to know
Closed November–March
Pool is small but lovely for post-beach lounging
Live music in the lobby bar nightly in season
InsiderThe house limoncello is bottled in custom ceramic vessels — they don't sell them on the website, but ask the concierge nicely.
Book at oetkercollection.com ↗
The famous pool at Le SirenuseThe famous pool
Franco's Bar at sunsetFranco's Bar at sunset
La Sponda dining roomLa Sponda dining room
Tiled hallwayTiled hallway
Drag to see more

Photos: Brechenmacher & Baumann · Courtesy of Le Sirenuse

The Sersale family converted their summer home into a hotel in 1951 and the same family still runs it. Hand-painted tiles, lemon trees in every public space, white-and-red exterior, the most photographed pool in Italy. Two restaurants (one Michelin-starred), three bars, a spa, and a position on the cliff that puts you in the postcard. A serious rate for a serious hotel. Every detail — the tiles, the art program, the family still on the property — earns its place on the bill.

What it's known for
The most iconic hotel pool in Italy
Franco's Bar — the famous sunset terrace
La Sponda — Michelin star
Family-run for three generations
TownPositano
Rate range€1,000–1,400/night
Best forSpecial occasions · first Positano
Walk toSpiaggia Grande 4 min · Path of Lemons 10 min
Good to know
New for 2026: Le Sirenuse Mare beach club at Nerano · 25 min by boat
Books out 6+ months ahead for July/August
Closed November–early April
Non-guests can use the bars and restaurants
InsiderThe swimming pool tiles are a 2024 commission by Swiss artist Nicolas Party. The whole hotel is a working contemporary art program, curated since 2015. Walk the halls slowly.
Book at sirenuse.it ↗
Cliff elevator to beach
Sea-level tennis court
Cascading garden
Zass terrace dining
Drag to see more

Carlino Cinque opened it in 1970 and his family has run it ever since. Architecturally, the hotel is invisible from the sea — buried into the rock face — and a private elevator takes you down through the cliff to a private beach with a tennis court. Quieter than Le Sirenuse, more residential, with the discreet glamour of a place that doesn't advertise. Ten cascading terraces of organic gardens supply the kitchen.

What it's known for
Hidden architecture — carved into the cliff
Cliff elevator to private beach
Zass restaurant — Michelin star
Ten terraced organic gardens
TownPositano (1 km outside)
Rate range€1,100–1,800/night
Best forHoneymoons · repeat coast visitors
Walk toPositano 15 min walk · 5 min by hotel shuttle
Good to know
Free shuttle to Positano center
Closed November–early April
Tennis court at sea level is uniquely theirs
InsiderThe standard rooms here are larger and more interesting than equivalent rooms at Le Sirenuse. Don't pay for a junior suite — the standard with a balcony is the better-value pick.
Book at ilsanpietro.com ↗
La CascinettaLa Cascinetta
Aquamarine suiteAquamarine suite
The entranceThe entrance
Palazzo Avino, RavelloRavello terrace
Drag to see more

Courtesy of Palazzo Avino

Originally an aristocratic family residence; bought and restored in the 1990s by the Avino family who still run it. Pink-walled, Murano chandeliers, frescoed ceilings, the kind of details that genuinely don't exist in newer hotels. The Clubhouse beach club is a 15-minute drive down the mountain and is the rare property in Ravello with sea-level access. Rossellinis, the in-house restaurant, holds a Michelin star.

What it's known for
Ravello's flagship hotel
The Clubhouse private beach (Castiglione)
Frescoed ceilings, Murano chandeliers
Pink Restaurant — terrace fine dining
TownRavello
Rate range€950–1,500/night
Best forHoneymoons · summer escapes from heat
Walk toVilla Cimbrone 8 min · Ravello piazza 4 min
Good to know
Cooler than the coast — pack a light jacket for evenings
Closed November–March
Free hourly shuttle to Clubhouse beach
InsiderThe Clubhouse beach is open to non-guests in shoulder season — book a day-bed if you can't get the hotel.
Book at palazzoavino.com ↗
Sea view from a deluxe room
Glass elevator to the beach
Pool carved into the cliff
Lemon grove gardens
Drag to see more

The Gambardella family bought it in 1904 and four generations later they're still on the property, which tells you everything. The architecture — a glass elevator carved straight through the rock face down to a beach club at sea level — is the kind of obvious-now move that took serious nerve in 1880. Rooms are antique-furnished, hand-tiled, with marble bathrooms and canopy beds; the citrus garden spa is appointment-only.

What it's known for
Glass elevator carved through the cliff to private beach
Pool cut directly into the natural rock face
Family-owned since 1880, fourth generation
Free shuttle to Amalfi town center
TownAmalfi (1 km outside on the SS163)
Rate range€900–1,400/night
Best forHoneymoons · classic-Italian luxury
Walk toAmalfi center 12 min walk · 4 min by hotel shuttle
Good to know
Closed November–March
Some rooms have sea-facing tubs — request specifically
Citrus-garden spa is appointment-only; book in advance
InsiderFamous for wedding proposals, in a good way. The breakfast terrace genuinely feels suspended in the clouds — request a corner table and they'll usually accommodate.
Book at hotelsantacaterina.it ↗
Cliff terrace lounge
Hand-painted tilework throughout
Glass elevator to the beach
Sea-view suite
Drag to see more

The newest serious entry on the coast — the Borgo Santandrea family (who own the Bulgari hotels in Italy) opened it in 2022 after a six-year restoration. Forty-five rooms, every one with a sea view, custom Italian furniture, and tilework that makes the case on its own. Three restaurants, including a Mediterranean fine-dining room that's already getting Michelin attention. Glass elevator carved through the rock to a private beach club below. Personal concierges curate everything down to the hour.

What it's known for
Just 45 rooms, all with sea views
Three on-site restaurants — Mediterranean, casual, beach
Beach club via glass elevator through the rock
Personal concierges — staff remembers your name by day two
TownConca dei Marini (between Amalfi and Praiano)
Rate range€900–1,500/night
Best forModern luxury · couples · trip-defining stays
Walk toConca dei Marini 5 min · Amalfi 25 min by hotel shuttle
Good to know
Opened 2022 — newer feel than the historic competition
Closed November–March
All rooms equal sea view — no need to upgrade for the view
InsiderThe hand-painted tile map of the coast near reception is the giveaway: serious craftsmanship, very real attention to detail. Walk past it slowly.
Book at borgosantandrea.it ↗
€€€€€ €1,500+/night
Belvedere restaurantBelvedere restaurant
Infinity pool over RavelloInfinity pool
Guest suite at CarusoGuest suite
Caruso exterior — 11th-century palace11th-century palace
Drag to see more

Courtesy of Caruso, A Belmond Hotel

An 11th-century palace at the top of Ravello, run by Belmond, with a heated infinity pool that ends at a thousand-foot drop. The pool is the most-photographed pool on the Mediterranean and somehow lives up to the photos. Frescoed ceilings restored to museum standard, a vegetable garden that supplies all four restaurants, free vintage Fiat tours of the gardens at sunset. If you book one night here, make it one of the last nights of the trip — it's hard to come down from.

What it's known for
The most photographed pool in Italy
11th-century palace, museum-grade restoration
Free vintage Fiat tours included
Belvedere restaurant on the terrace
TownRavello
Rate range€1,800–3,000/night
Best forThe trip-defining stay
Walk toVilla Cimbrone 6 min · Ravello center 3 min
Good to know
Closed mid-October to mid-April
Books out a year ahead for peak summer
Pool open to non-guests in shoulder season for a steep day fee
InsiderThe infinity pool — among the most photographed in Italy — is a midday scene, not a sunset one. Mornings are when you actually get the swim and the photo without the crowd.
Book at belmond.com ↗
Deluxe Open Space Suite bedroomDeluxe Open Space Suite
Entrance to Monastero Santa RosaThe entrance
Bar La Brocca terraceBar La Brocca terrace
Thermal relaxation pool in the spaSpa thermal relaxation
Drag to see more

Courtesy of Monastero Santa Rosa

Twenty rooms in a 17th-century Dominican convent, painstakingly restored — the original cloister, chapel, and refectory are still standing and still in use. The infinity pool earns its reputation; the spa is built into the convent's vaulted cellars. Il Refettorio (1 Michelin star) sits in the original dining hall under chef Alfonso Crescenzo, with herbs from the convent garden — replanted and tended by the hotel since the restoration. Quieter and more contemplative than the iconic Positano hotels, and frankly more interesting.

What it's known for
Only 20 rooms — most intimate luxury hotel on the coast
Il Refettorio restaurant — 1 Michelin star, in the original refectory
Spa built into the convent's ancient vaulted cellars
Cliffside infinity pool with full sea view
TownConca dei Marini
Rate range€900–2,000/night
Best forHoneymoons · serious quiet · trip-defining stays
Walk toConca dei Marini 8 min · Amalfi 15 min by hotel shuttle
Good to know
Adults only, 16+
Closed mid-October to mid-April
Each suite is named after a different herb from the garden
InsiderThe original sfogliatella Santa Rosa was invented in this convent by the nuns in 1681. Il Refettorio still serves their version at breakfast. The pastry is older than the United States.
Book at monasterosantarosa.com ↗
Zeffirelli's library
Boat shuttle to Positano
Maestro's terrace
Suite with Callas piano
Drag to see more

Zeffirelli (the film director) bought it in the 1970s and entertained Maria Callas, Diana Vreeland, Liz Taylor, and a string of others over decades. After his death, it became a 15-suite hotel, with all his original furniture, art, and books in place. There's no traditional reception; you're shown to your villa by name. The hotel runs a boat shuttle into Positano. The dining room (Maestro's) is the only way non-guests get past the gate.

What it's known for
Zeffirelli's preserved estate
Closed to non-guests entirely (except Maestro's)
Daily boat shuttle to Positano
15 suites — no standard rooms
TownPositano (east end, secluded)
Rate range€2,500–6,000/night
Best forPrivacy · anniversaries · the trip
Walk toPositano center 25 min walk · 8 min by hotel boat
Good to know
15 suites only — book a year ahead for July/August
Closed November–April
Maestro's dinner is the workaround if you can't get a suite
InsiderIf you can't justify the rate but want the experience, book Maestro's three to four weeks ahead and arrive at 7 p.m. for an aperitivo on the terrace before dinner.
Book at villatreville.com ↗
What We Do

The moves.

Know what requires advance booking, what's free, and what most people skip entirely.

01 Book ahead

Private boat day with Lucibello

Spiaggia Grande, Positano · Family-owned since 1947

Eight hours, your own captain, the route shaped around what you want — Capri grottos, hidden coves, lunch at Da Adolfo or Lo Scoglio. Lucibello has been the established operator on the coast for almost eighty years. The single best thing you can do here.

€450–800/day Direct booking 8-hour day
lucibello.it ↗
02 Book ahead

Private boat to Capri's Faraglioni

From Capri's Marina Piccola

If you're staying on Capri or arriving for the day, hire a small boat at Marina Piccola for two hours (~€200) and circuit the island — Faraglioni rocks, Grotta Bianca, swim stops in coves the ferries don't enter. The Blue Grotto queue is brutal in summer; the other grottos are nearly as good and almost empty.

€180–250/2 hr Marina Piccola Skip Blue Grotto queue
03 Book ahead

Grotta dello Smeraldo (Emerald Grotto)

Conca dei Marini · Sea cave

A sea cave where sunlight passing through underwater openings makes the water glow green. Less famous than Capri's Blue Grotto and considerably less of a circus. Boat access from Conca dei Marini, or descend the elevator from the SS163. Twenty minutes inside.

€7 entry Boat or elevator 20 min visit
04 Free

Fjord di Furore

Furore · 10 min east of Praiano

A narrow inlet between two cliffs spanned by a single road bridge, with a pebble beach below reachable by stairs. One of the most photographed spots on the coast and almost always less crowded than its reputation suggests. Go before 11 a.m.

Free Mornings only Steep stairs
05 Free

Marina di Praia swim

Praiano · Below SS163

A small fishing beach tucked between two cliffs. Wooden boats pulled up on the pebbles, two trattorias above, and one of the cleanest swim spots on this stretch. Easier to reach than Furore's beach and almost as photogenic.

Free Pebble beach Trattorias on-site
06 Free

Atrani at sunset

Atrani · Walk from Amalfi via tunnel

Walk through the tunnel from Amalfi at 6 p.m., have a glass of wine in the piazza, watch the light turn the cliffs orange. The pebble beach is mostly empty by then. Twenty minutes here is worth two hours in Positano.

Free 5 min walk from Amalfi Sunset is the move
07 €18 cash

Blue Grotto by rowboat

Capri · Northwest coast · Boat access only

A surreal sea cave where the water glows electric blue from sunlight filtering through an underwater cavity. Tiny rowboats, locals who often sing while you float inside, the whole experience lasts about five minutes. Touristy, undeniably — but the color is real and there's nothing else like it. Go early or late to avoid queues.

€18 cash per person Calm seas only Closed when rough
capri.com ↗
08 €12

Monte Solaro Chairlift

Anacapri · Highest point on Capri

Twelve minutes in an open single-seater chairlift gliding silently above lemon trees, vineyards, and villa rooftops. The 360-degree view from the top runs from Vesuvius to the Faraglioni to the open Tyrrhenian. Late afternoon for the softest light. The hike up is also possible if you've earned the calves.

€12 round trip Late afternoon best Hike option available
capriseggiovia.it ↗
01 Free

Sentiero degli Dei (Path of the Gods)

Bomerano (Agerola) → Nocelle (above Positano)

The coast's signature hike. Seven kilometers of clifftop trail, mostly downhill if you start in Bomerano, with views across the entire coast that no road can match. Three to four hours at a slow pace. End in Nocelle, take the bus down, swim. Best mid-morning, after the first wave of group hikers and before the heat.

Free 7 km · 3–4 hr Bus to start
02 €10

Villa Cimbrone gardens

Ravello · 15 min walk from main piazza

The Terrace of Infinity is the most photographed spot in Ravello — a marble balustrade lined with classical busts, opening onto a thousand-foot drop. Get there before 10 a.m. or after 5 p.m. for a clean shot. The gardens take an hour to walk.

€10 1 hr Mornings or late afternoon
hotelvillacimbrone.com ↗
03 €7

Villa Rufolo

Ravello · Off main piazza

The other great Ravello garden — 13th-century, with two terraces and an Arab-Sicilian cloister. The Ravello Festival (early July to late August) hosts orchestral concerts on a stage built over the cliff at the lower terrace. Buy festival tickets months ahead.

€7 garden Festival separate Reserve festival ahead
villarufolo.it ↗
04 Free

Sentiero dei Limoni (Path of Lemons)

Maiori → Minori · 3 km, 1 hr

The trail that connects Maiori and Minori through working lemon groves. Far less famous than the Path of the Gods and the more direct route into how the region actually grows its food. Stone-walled terraces, some 800 years old.

Free 3 km · 1 hr Easy
05 Book ahead

Pompeii or Herculaneum + Vesuvius

Pompeii 1 hr from Sorrento · Herculaneum 45 min

Pompeii is the famous one — the heat, crowds, and scale make it a slog without a guide. Herculaneum is smaller, better-preserved, and a fraction of the visitors. Pair either with a half-day on Vesuvius and a stop in Naples for pizza.

€18–22 entry Train + transfer Full day
06 Free

Naples — Spaccanapoli + Sanità walk

Naples historic center · Half day

The most layered urban walk in Italy. Spaccanapoli is the straight line that bisects the old city — markets, shrines, palaces, churches stacked on top of older churches. End in the Sanità neighborhood, which was Naples' rough heart and is now its most interesting block.

Free 2–3 hr Comfortable shoes
07 €10

Ferriere Valley Waterfalls

Above Amalfi · Hike from Pontone or Scala

A micro-jungle of mossy rock, cascading streams, and freshwater pools hidden under ancient chestnut trees, less than thirty minutes inland from the Amalfi coast. Counterpoint to the cliffside glamour: cool, green, slow, almost no one. Bring a swimsuit and reef shoes — the lower pools are worth a swim.

Free public access Guided hikes from €50 Slippery — guide wise
08 €10

Villa San Michele

Anacapri · The Axel Munthe house

An 18th-century villa-turned-museum built by Swedish doctor Axel Munthe at the turn of the 20th century. Roman antiquities, perfumed gardens, and a shaded pergola overlooking the gulf that's quite possibly the best photograph spot on Capri. Pair with the Monte Solaro chairlift, which leaves from the same village.

€10 entry 1 hr visit Pair with Monte Solaro
villasanmichele.eu ↗
01 Book ahead

Cooking class at Mamma Agata's

Ravello · Family kitchen

Hands-on Campanian cooking in a working family kitchen above Ravello. Lemon cake, pasta from scratch, eggplant parmigiana, end the morning eating what you made on a terrace with the gulf below. Mamma Agata started cooking professionally in the 1960s; her daughter Chiara runs the classes now.

€175/person · 4 hr Book 2+ weeks ahead
mammaagata.com ↗
02 Book ahead

Wine tasting at Marisa Cuomo

Furore · Cantine Marisa Cuomo

The most acclaimed winery on the coast. Vines grown on terraces above the cliff at Furore, producing Costa d'Amalfi DOC whites from native grapes (fenile, ripoli, ginestra) and reds (tintore, piedirosso). The Fiorduva white has been called the best white in southern Italy.

€45–75/person 1.5 hr Book a week ahead
marisacuomo.com ↗
03 Book ahead

Tenuta Vannulo buffalo dairy

Capaccio · 2 hours from Positano

An organic buffalo farm that produces some of the most respected mozzarella di bufala in Italy. Tour the dairy, see the buffalo, watch the cheese being made, eat it within an hour of production. Pair with the Greek temples at Paestum next door. Worth the day.

€20 tour · 1 hr 2 hr drive from Positano
vannulo.it ↗
04 Free

Vietri sul Mare ceramic shopping

Vietri sul Mare · Eastern end of the coast

Vietri is the ceramic town of the Amalfi Coast — the brightly painted tiles you see on every dome and stair riser are made here. Walking the main street is a half-day in itself: dozens of workshops, real artisans, prices a fraction of what the same pieces cost in Positano boutiques. Most ship internationally.

Free to browse Cash preferred Most ship
05 Book ahead

Limoncello producer tasting

Sorrento · Various producers

Limoncello on the coast is made from sfusato amalfitano lemons. Done well, it's a digestif. Done badly, it's syrup. Skip the gift shops; book a producer tour instead — Limonoro and Villa Massa in Sorrento include the production process and the differences between coast styles.

€25–40 1 hr Producer tour over shop
06 Reserve

Beach club at La Gavitella

Praiano · Below SS163

Italian beach clubs are an institution: rented umbrella, two sun loungers, a waiter who brings cold drinks and panini, sometimes a small restaurant for lunch. La Gavitella is the rare west-facing club on this coast — sunset stays visible until it sets.

€30–60/umbrella Reserve in summer Sunset side
lagavitella.it ↗
01 Free to browse

Carthusia Perfumery

Capri Town · Founded 1948

The island's original perfumery, hand-bottling scents from local Capri lemon, wild fig, mint, and rosemary since 1948. The flagship shop on Via Camerelle is small, atmospheric, run by people who actually know fragrance. Their Mediterraneo and Numero Uno are the iconic scents — both unmistakably island.

€80–150 full size Free to sample Iconic Capri brand
carthusia.it ↗
02 From €2,000

Chantecler

Capri Town · Founded 1947

Capri's iconic jewelry house, family-owned since 1947. The signature Campanella charm — a tiny coral or gold bell — has been worn by everyone from Jackie O to contemporary collectors. Each piece is handcrafted in Naples; vintage capsule collections are sometimes available if you ask the archivist.

From €2,000+ Bespoke charms available Naples atelier
chantecler.it ↗
03 €40–300

Antica Sartoria Positano

Positano · Family-run since 1969

Vibrant, unmistakably local, the kind of beach-resort wear that's been dressing Amalfi's regulars for half a century. Cotton, linen, embroidered kaftans, the kind of pieces that look like a costume in New York and exactly right on a Praiano terrace. Open daily; mob it before lunch or you'll wait.

€40–300 Multiple Positano shops Pre-noon best
anticasartoriapositano.it ↗
04 €20–300+

Ceramiche d'Arte Carmela

Ravello · Hand-painted family workshop

Hand-painted Mediterranean ceramics in whimsical patterns — espresso cups from €20, hand-decorated platters up to €300+. The Ravello workshop has been in the same family for three generations. They ship internationally, so don't stress about luggage weight.

Espresso cups from €20 Ships internationally Family workshop
ceramichedarte.com ↗
05 From €170

Monastero Santa Rosa Spa

Conca dei Marini · 17th-century vaulted cellars

One of the most exclusive spas in Italy, set inside the original vaulted cellars of a 17th-century convent. Treatments use Santa Maria Novella products; the thermal suite includes a steam cave, hydrotherapy pools, and a tepidarium with vaulted ceilings. Day passes are limited — reserve in advance, this is not a walk-in.

Massages from €170 Day passes limited Hotel guests prioritized
monasterosantarosa.com ↗
06 From €160

JK Place Capri Wellness

Marina Grande, Capri

Sleek white-on-white wellness space inside one of Capri's best small hotels. Bespoke treatments, a private hammam, lymphatic drainage, aroma facials, island-sourced scrubs. Try the volcanic-stone detox ritual — local specialty. Open to non-guests on availability; book a few days ahead in summer.

From €160 Open to non-guests Private hammam
jkcapri.com ↗
07 €80–500

Emporio Sirenuse

Positano · Le Sirenuse boutique

Le Sirenuse's in-house boutique on Via Cristoforo Colombo is the most considered shop in Positano — embroidered shirts, tailored linens, hand-blocked kaftans designed by Carla Sersale, the family matriarch. Resort wear with actual taste. The kind of pieces you keep wearing for ten years after the trip.

Le Sirenuse owned Free to browse Open to non-guests
emporiosirenuse.com ↗
08 From €150

Caruso Spa & Cooking School

Ravello · Belmond Caruso

The Belmond Caruso runs both a spa and a small Campanian cooking school on the same property. The spa has a heated pool with the same drop-off view as the famous infinity pool below. The cooking school is held in the old palace kitchen — small groups, hands-on, ends with lunch on the terrace. Both open to non-guests.

Spa from €150 Cooking €220 Reserve a week ahead
belmond.com ↗
3-Day Itinerary

The region, in three days.

Coast, island, city. Skip whichever day doesn't fit. The right things, in the right order, with enough time to actually be somewhere.

8:00 a.m.
Morning Eat

La Zagara

Via dei Mulini · Positano

Stand at the counter for cornetto al limone and cappuccino. Cash. The garden terrace is wasted on the morning crowd; locals come here for fifteen minutes and leave. Do that.

€3–5 Cash Bar only
9:30 a.m.
Morning See

Spiaggia del Fornillo

West end of Positano · 10 min walk from the center

The Spiaggia Grande is the famous one. Fornillo, ten minutes west around the cliff path, is the better swim — quieter, smaller pebbles, and the sun hits it earlier. Walk back via the Path of Lemons for the views.

Free public section €20 sun bed Path of Lemons walk back
12:30 p.m.
Lunch Eat

Lo Scoglio da Tommaso

Marina del Cantone · 30 min by car or boat from Positano

The reservation has been on hold for a month. Spaghetti alla Nerano, mozzarella from the family farm, lemon delight to close. Sit on the wooden pier over the water. This is the meal you'll talk about. Boat back is the move.

€€€€ Reserve a month ahead Boat or taxi
4:00 p.m.
Afternoon Move

Path of the Gods

Bomerano (Agerola) → Nocelle

Drive or bus up to Bomerano, walk the trail downhill toward Nocelle. The cliff views start about twenty minutes in. Three hours, mostly down. Take the 1,500-step staircase to Positano if you have the knees — or the bus from Nocelle if you don't.

Free 3 hr · 7 km Bus to start
8:00 p.m.
Evening Drink

Franco's Bar at Le Sirenuse

Via Cristoforo Colombo 30 · Positano

Be there at 5:45 if you want a terrace seat at 6. The Negroni is €30. The view is the most photographed view in Positano. One hour, then dinner.

€€€€ Open 6 p.m. sharp No reservations
9:30 p.m.
Dinner Eat

La Tagliata

Hills above Positano · They send a van

No menu. Three generations of family cooking from a kitchen garden visible from the table. Antipasti, pasta, grilled meat, dessert, wine until you say stop. The view is straight down to Positano with Capri in the distance. The right end to a long day.

€€€ Free shuttle Reserve ahead
7:30 a.m.
Morning Eat

Casa e Bottega

Via Pasitea · Positano

Cold-pressed juice, eggs, fresh fruit. Sit-down breakfast that actually exists. Order extra coffee to-go. The boat leaves Positano's main pier at 9.

€€ Sit-down Walk to pier
9:00 a.m.
Morning Move

Private boat from Positano to Capri

Spiaggia Grande pier · Lucibello or similar

Eight-hour charter with a captain. Tell them you want the Faraglioni, a swim below the Tragara, the Grotta Bianca and Grotta Verde. Skip the Blue Grotto unless the queue looks short — the other grottos are nearly as good and almost empty.

€600–900/day Direct booking with Lucibello 8 hr
1:00 p.m.
Lunch Eat

Lunch at Marina Piccola

Capri · Marina Piccola side

The boat captain drops you at Marina Piccola. Lunch at La Fontelina or Il Riccio (both €€€€) — both are walk-up, both are open-air, both are technically beach clubs and serve excellent seafood. Negotiate this with the captain; he picks you up at 4.

€€€€ Walk-up Reserve ahead in summer
4:30 p.m.
Afternoon See

Anacapri detour

Anacapri · Bus or taxi from Marina Grande

If the boat ends in Marina Grande, take 20 minutes to taxi up to Anacapri before the ferry back. Villa San Michele is the single best small museum in Campania — gardens, antique sculptures, a view across the gulf to Vesuvius. €12.

€12 entry 45 min visit Late ferry back
6:30 p.m.
Evening Move

Ferry back to Positano

Marina Grande, Capri

The 6:30 or 7 p.m. ferry is the move — sunset on the water, no day-trippers, you arrive in Positano just as the cliff lights come on. About 50 minutes. Sit on the upper deck.

€20–25 50 min Upper deck
9:00 p.m.
Dinner Eat

Pizzeria Donna Stella

Atrani-side hill · Amalfi

Wood-fired pizza on a rooftop covered in lemon trees. Reserve a few days ahead. The pesto gnocchi is the unexpected order; the margherita is the classic. Casual, family-run, the neighborhood Italian dinner Positano doesn't really do anymore.

€€ Reserve ahead Rooftop
7:00 a.m.
Morning Move

Drive or train to Pompeii

Sorrento → Pompeii Scavi · Circumvesuviana 30 min

The Circumvesuviana train from Sorrento goes directly to Pompeii Scavi for €3.20. Crowded, slow, but legitimate. Or hire a car and driver for the day — about €280, and worth it if you want to also see Herculaneum or Vesuvius.

€3 train €280 car all day Skip-the-line tickets
8:30 a.m.
Morning See

Pompeii or Herculaneum

Pompeii Scavi or Ercolano · Choose one

Get there at opening. Pompeii is the famous one — vast, hot, crowded after 11. Herculaneum is half the size, twice as well-preserved, and a quarter as visited. Either one needs a guide; book the entry ticket online and a guide separately on GetYourGuide.

€18–22 Book online Guide essential
12:30 p.m.
Lunch Eat

L'Antica Pizzeria da Michele

Via Cesare Sersale 1 · Naples Forcella

153 years of Neapolitan pizza opinion in one room. Two pizzas on the menu — margherita or marinara. €5 each. Take a number, wait twenty minutes, share a table. The pizza from Eat, Pray, Love. Worth the line.

Cash only 20-min wait
2:30 p.m.
Afternoon Move

Spaccanapoli + Sanità walk

Naples historic center → Sanità

Walk Spaccanapoli — the dead-straight street that bisects the old city — east to west. Stop at Cappella Sansevero (book online; the Veiled Christ sculpture is unmissable). End in the Sanità neighborhood, the city's most layered block. Get a sfogliatella from a bar along the way.

Cappella Sansevero €10 Walking 2–3 hr Sfogliatella stop
5:30 p.m.
Afternoon See

Naples National Archaeological Museum

Piazza Museo · Open until 7:30 p.m.

Everything pulled out of Pompeii is here — the mosaics, the bronzes, the secret cabinet of erotic frescoes. Two hours minimum. The single best context for what you saw at the ruins this morning.

€18 2 hr Closed Tuesdays
8:00 p.m.
Dinner Eat

Concettina ai Tre Santi

Sanità · Naples

Pizza-as-restaurant. The grandson of the founder runs a tasting flight that walks through the history of the form — fritta, classic margherita, contemporary. Wood-fired, ambitious, the most interesting room in Naples. Reserve a week ahead. Take the train or a taxi back to the coast after.

€€ Reserve a week ahead Late train back
Only in Campania

Eat like a local.

The dishes that define the region. Order these. In this order.

01

Pizza Margherita

Naples · Born here · Best at da Michele or Sorbillo

Three ingredients: tomato, mozzarella, basil — Italian flag colors, named after Queen Margherita in 1889. The one acceptable answer is in Naples. The crust should be wet, the cornicione properly puffed and leopard-spotted. €5 if you go to da Michele. Skip every Positano interpretation.

02

Spaghetti alla Nerano

Marina del Cantone · Best at Lo Scoglio da Tommaso

A pasta you can't really get outside Campania. Spaghetti, fried zucchini, butter, and aged Provolone del Monaco that emulsifies into the sauce. Invented at Maria Grazia in Nerano in the 1950s. Lo Scoglio's version, three doors down, is the one to order.

03

Vongole

Anywhere on the coast · Best at simple seaside trattorias

Spaghetti or linguine alle vongole — clams, garlic, white wine, parsley, a little chili. The clams must be small, fresh, and from the bay. Lo Scoglio, Le Arcate, any honest fishing-village trattoria does the version. Skip the upscale interpretations.

04

Linguine al Limone

Capri · Any honest Capri trattoria

Lemon pasta. Just butter, sfusato amalfitano lemon zest, parmesan, sometimes a little cream. Sounds simple; almost impossible to do right. The lemons need to be the local ones — Sicilian or Spanish lemons taste flat by comparison. Order it on Capri, where the lemons grow steps from the kitchen.

05

Mozzarella di Bufala

Caseifici inland from Salerno · Tenuta Vannulo for the source

Real buffalo mozzarella, made within hours of the milking. Should be slightly warm, slightly salty, dripping in its own water. Anywhere on the coast will serve a decent version, but a trip out to a working dairy (Vannulo, near Paestum) is the real education.

06

Sfogliatella Santa Rosa

Conca dei Marini · Pansa in Amalfi for the canonical version

Invented at the convent of Santa Rosa above Conca dei Marini in 1681. Layered, shell-shaped, filled with semolina cream and amarena cherries. There's a flatter Neapolitan version (frolla) and a flakier coast version (riccia) — the Santa Rosa is the original riccia. Order it warm, before 11 a.m.

07

Insalata Caprese

Capri · Anywhere serving real bufala and sfusato tomatoes

Tomato, mozzarella di bufala, basil, olive oil, salt. That's it. Invented on Capri in the 1920s, supposedly as patriotic food in the colors of the flag. Done badly anywhere; done correctly only when all four ingredients are local and within hours of harvest. Order it as a starter; don't make it a meal.

08

Torta Caprese

Capri · Bar Caso for the original

Flourless almond and chocolate cake, dense, slightly chewy, with a powdered-sugar top. Invented by accident on Capri in the 1920s by a baker who forgot the flour. The texture is the whole thing. Order it at Bar Caso with espresso in the morning before the day-trippers arrive.

09

Granita di Limone

Coast-wide · Collina Bakery in Positano for the cheapest

Crushed ice, sfusato lemon juice, sugar — sometimes with whipped cream on top, sometimes just naked. €2–3 in a paper cup. The afternoon snack. Better than gelato in 30°C heat. Eat it on the beach standing up.

10

Limoncello

Sorrento Peninsula · Sfusato amalfitano lemons only

Lemon liqueur, served ice-cold in a small glass after dinner. Done well, it's a digestif: bracing, a little bitter, all citrus. Done badly, it's syrup with vodka. Skip the souvenir-shop versions; book a producer tour at Limonoro or Villa Massa to taste the difference.

Worth knowing

A few things.

The stuff that separates a good trip from a great one. None of this is in the brochure.

On the SS163

The coastal road is the experience and the obstacle. Forty kilometers of switchbacks carved into the cliff, blind corners, and tour buses going the other way. Hire a driver if you can't drive a manual. Better still, take ferries — Positano to Amalfi is twenty minutes by water and ninety by road in summer.

On August

Don't. Italian families take their entire August holiday on this coast, room rates double, the SS163 becomes a parking lot, and many of the better restaurants close for two weeks (ferragosto). Late May, early June, and September are when the region is itself.

On the lemons

Sfusato amalfitano is a specific cultivar — long, thick-skinned, less acidic, more aromatic than supermarket lemons. The terraces you see climbing the cliffs are 800 years old. They're protected by IGP status. The good limoncello uses these and nothing else; the good granita too. Worth tasting the difference.

On Capri

The day-trip version (ferry in, packed bus to the Piazzetta, ferry out at 5) is forgettable. Either go for a day with a private boat for the Faraglioni and a swim, or stay overnight in Anacapri after the ferries leave. Capri after 6 p.m. is the actual island. Capri at noon in August is a turnstile.

On the side of the coast

East-facing towns (Positano, Capri) get sunrise. West-facing towns (Praiano, Amalfi side of the headland) get sunset. Both are correct, but the difference matters in summer. Sunset hits the cliffs orange around 7:30 p.m. in June; the sunrise side photographs better in early morning.

On the beach clubs

Italian beaches are split between free public stretches and private clubs (stabilimenti) with rented umbrellas, sun loungers, and waiter service. €30–60 a day for a setup, double in season. Reserve in summer. The good clubs are a full-day commitment — don't try to clock-in for two hours.

On Naples

Treated like the dodgy stop on the way to the coast. It isn't. The food is the best in the country, the museums hold what was pulled out of Pompeii, and the streets are louder, more layered, and more honest than anywhere on the cliffs. Spend a full day. Watch your bag.

On reservations

Every dinner restaurant on this list books out a week ahead in summer. The Michelin-starred ones book a month ahead. The boats (Lo Scoglio, Da Adolfo) work through hotel concierges or call directly — Italian phone manners required. Don't show up hoping.

On Pompeii

Pompeii without a guide is hot, vast, and confusing. Pompeii with a guide is one of the great experiences in Europe. Book the entry ticket separately on coopculture.it (€18) and a guide on GetYourGuide. Better yet, choose Herculaneum — it's smaller, better-preserved, half the visitors.

On dress

Coastal-Italian summer means linen, real shoes, and at least making an effort. Cover-ups for restaurants — the panoramic-terrace ones included. Shoulders covered for the Duomo and the cathedral in Ravello. Small effort, very visible result.

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