Puglia has two coastlines, and they feel like different countries. The Adriatic side is rocky, dramatic, morning-light. The Ionian side is white sand, shallow turquoise, golden-hour evenings. Picking the right one decides the trip.
East sideAdriatic
West sideIonian
The water
Deep, cool, navy-into-clear. Drops off fast — you're in 5+ meters meters from shore. Cleaner.
Shallow, warm, electric turquoise. Wade 50 meters and still touch sand. Warmer earlier.
The coast
Limestone cliffs, sea caves, dramatic rocky coves. Small pebbled beaches reached by stairs cut into rock.
Endless white sand dunes. Wide beaches, almost no rocks. The kind you can walk for an hour.
The light
Best in the morning. The sun rises over the water. Harsher by afternoon.
Best in the evening. The sun sets over the water. Real sunset photographs.
The towns
Polignano. Monopoli. Otranto. Vieste. Stone towns on the cliff edge — the buildings are the view.
Gallipoli. Porto Cesareo. Santa Maria al Bagno. Lower, sandier, fishing villages with summer overlays.
The crowds
Heavily photographed, heavily visited. Lama Monachile in July is a queue. Best before 9 a.m. or after 6 p.m.
Heavily Italian in August — where the south takes its own holiday. Empty in May, quiet in June and September.
Getting there
Bari and Brindisi airports nearby. Train runs along the whole coast — much of it without a car.
Car required. Rural, sparse transit, best beaches off informal parking lots.
The wind
Tramontana and scirocco both come through. Sailors love it; beach umbrellas don't.
Calmer water, less weather. Easier swimming for kids. Hotter afternoons.
Best for
Architecture-led travelers, cliff jumpers, photographers, first-timers.
Beach-holiday travelers, families with kids, sunset chasers, returners.
Go Adriatic if
You're here for the photographs.
It's your first time in Puglia.
You want the trip to look like Pinterest.
You're not renting a car — the train works here.
You'd rather jump off a rock than lie on a towel.
Go Ionian if
You're here for the swim.
You've been to Puglia before, or you want to go where Italians go.
You want actual beach days, not coastal walks.
You're traveling with kids or weak swimmers.
You'll rent a car and you don't mind a 45-minute drive to a beach.