Best Things to Do in Italy (2026 Guide)
Italy is the world's most visited country and one of its greatest: 58 UNESCO World Heritage Sites, the world's largest art collection, a cuisine that defines global cooking, and a landscape that ranges from the Alps to the Sicilian volcano of Etna. This guide covers the best things to do in Italy across its extraordinary regions.
Find Things to Do →The unmissable in Italy
These are the staple sights — don't leave Italy without seeing them.
Colosseum
Pantheon
Vatican Museums
Explore Italy on the map
Destinations in Italy
More attractions in Italy
St. Peter's Basilica
Trevi Fountain
Pompeii Archaeological Site
Uffizi Galleries (Gallerie degli Uffizi)
Leaning Tower of Pisa
Da Vinci's Last Supper (Il Cenacolo)
St. Mark's Basilica (Basilica di San Marco)
Brunelleschi’s Dome (Cupola di Brunelleschi)
St. Mark's Square (Piazza San Marco)
Roman Forum (Foro Romano)
Mt. Vesuvius (Monte Vesuvio)
Mt. Etna (Monte Etna)
Spanish Steps (Piazza di Spagna)
Vatican City (Citta del Vaticano)
Piazza Navona
Grand Canal
Borghese Gallery (Galleria Borghese)
Rialto Bridge (Ponte di Rialto)
Dolomites (Dolomiti)
Milan Cathedral (Duomo di Milano)
Italy is the country that invented the concept of the Grand Tour for good reason. The best things to do in Italy are distributed across a boot-shaped peninsula 1,200 kilometres long: the Colosseum and Vatican Museums in Rome, the gondolas and Grand Canal of Venice, the Uffizi Gallery and Brunelleschi’s dome in Florence, the Amalfi Coast’s vertiginous cliff-top villages, Sicily’s Valle dei Templi (better-preserved Greek temples than in Greece itself), the Cinque Terre’s painted fishing villages on Ligurian cliffs, and the Dolomites’ pink-tinged limestone peaks above Bolzano. Italy rewards those who go deep into one region rather than rushing between its headline attractions; every Italian city, even the small ones — Orvieto, Siena, Ravenna, Lecce, Matera — contains an art collection or archaeological site that would anchor a major museum anywhere else in the world.Best time to visitApril-May and September-October are Italy’s finest travel months: comfortable temperatures, accessible coastal and mountain regions, and crowds below peak levels. Venice, Rome, and Florence in July-August are extremely hot and extremely crowded — visit early morning and late evening when the light is best and the crowds are thinner. Easter week (the greatest Catholic spectacle) and the Venice Film Festival (late August-September) require advance booking. The Palio di Siena horse race (July 2 and August 16) is one of Europe’s most extraordinary civic events. Christmas markets are excellent in the Alpine north (Bolzano, Trento, Merano).Getting aroundItaly has excellent Freccia high-speed rail: Rome to Florence (1.5 hours), Rome to Naples (1 hour), Milan to Venice (2 hours), Milan to Rome (3 hours). Budget airlines (Ryanair, easyJet) serve smaller airports (Bari, Catania, Palermo, Cagliari). Driving is rewarding in Tuscany, the Amalfi Coast (narrow roads requiring full concentration), and Sicily. Island access: Sardinia and Sicily by ferry or short flight; the smaller islands (Aeolian, Pontine, Tremiti) by summer ferry. Venice has no cars; boats serve the city.What to eat and drinkItalian cuisine is the most regionally varied in the world: every Italian region (and often every city) has dishes that do not appear on any other Italian menu. Rome: cacio e pepe (pasta with pecorino and black pepper), supplì (fried rice ball), coda alla vaccinara (oxtail stew). Naples: pizza Margherita (invented here, the only one worth having). Bologna: tagliatelle al ragu (the original — not ‘spaghetti bolognese’) and tortellini in brodo. Sicily: arancini, cannoli, pasta con le sarde. Amatriciana, carbonara, rigatoni all’Amatriciana: the Roman classics that should be eaten in Rome. Wines: Barolo and Barbaresco (Piedmont), Brunello di Montalcino (Tuscany), Amarone (Veneto), Nero d’Avola (Sicily), and the Prosecco of Valdobbiadene.Regions to exploreRome & Lazio — The Colosseum, Roman Forum, Vatican Museums, St Peter’s Basilica, Trevi Fountain, Pantheon, Villa Borghese, and Tivoli’s Hadrian’s Villa (UNESCO, 1 hour by train). Allow 4-5 days minimum.Florence & Tuscany — Uffizi, Accademia (David), Duomo complex, Oltrarno, Chianti wine country, Siena, San Gimignano, Pienza, and the Val d’Orcia UNESCO landscape.Venice & the Veneto — Grand Canal, Doge’s Palace, St Mark’s Basilica, Rialto Market, and the islands of Murano (glass), Burano (lace and colour), and Torcello (the oldest church in the lagoon).The Amalfi Coast — Positano, Ravello, Amalfi town, and the Path of the Gods walking trail (5-hour coastal hike). Best visited May-June and September — August is dangerously crowded on the single coastal road.Sicily — Valle dei Templi (Agrigento), Mount Etna, Taormina, the Baroque cities of the southeast (Noto, Ragusa, Modica), and the island of Ortigia (Syracuse — one of Greece’s greatest ancient colonies).FAQWhat are the best things to do in Italy?The best things to do in Italy include the Colosseum and Vatican in Rome, the Uffizi in Florence, a gondola on Venice’s Grand Canal, the Amalfi Coast drive, Valle dei Templi in Sicily, and hiking the Cinque Terre coastal trail.How many days do I need in Italy?Italy warrants multiple trips. A first visit: four days Rome, three days Florence, three days Venice. Return trips: Sicily, Amalfi, Dolomites, Puglia — each deserves a week minimum.Is Italy safe for tourists?Yes, Italy is very safe. Pickpocketing in Rome (Colosseum, Trevi Fountain, public transport) and Florence (Uffizi queues) is the main concern. Naples and Palermo require awareness but are tourist-friendly in the main areas. Rural Italy is extremely safe.What is the best time to visit Italy?April-May and September-October universally. Rome and the coast in spring and autumn. Dolomites: July-August for hiking, December-March for skiing. Sicily: April-June for best conditions (summer is very hot). Christmas markets in the north: November-December.