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Europe, Luxury Journeys

21 Most Beautiful Places In Italy You Need To Visit

March 4, 2025 by Laura Goodman No Comments
Gondola in the Grand Canal in Venice at sunset

What’s the most beautiful place in Italy? We chose 21, and we’re still lamenting all the places we had to leave out. When you behold a list of the most beautiful places in Italy, you realize how much stunning scenery this one slender European country contains.

Our Ultimate Italy journey is 12 days of signature luxury guided travel, taking in Venice, the Cinque Terre, Florence, San Gimignano, Tuscany, Rome, Naples and more, but you could always extend your stay (for a year or so) to fit in all of the locations below. The pictures are probably speaking for themselves by now, so let’s dive in.

Burano, Venice

Coloured houses line the canal in Burano, Venice

It’s impossible to choose just one beautiful spot in one of the most ethereally beautiful cities in the world, but Burano is a sight to be savored. It’s the island in the Venetian Lagoon you’ve seen on art prints a hundred times – pastel-colored homes reflected in the canal below. It’s a special place, deserving of its fame, with its leaning bell tower, fairytale bridges and shops and workshops full of intricate lacework.

Grand Canal, Venice

OK, we didn’t choose just one. There is nowhere on earth like the Grand Canal, especially at sunset, when the sky is streaked with pinks and purples, and the surrounding palazzos take on a golden glow. The most elegant way to arrive in Venice is by private water taxi, which ideally takes you to your hotel by the water’s edge, as on our Ultimate Italy journey.

You may also enjoy reading: The 30 Most Beautiful Places in the World You Need to Visit

Polignano a Mare, Puglia

White stone houses sit high on a rock in Puglia, Italy.

Just before the heel begins, on the southern Adriatic coast, this enchanting town is perched on limestone cliffs. It’s petite, but spectacularly positioned. Day trippers come from Bari (30 minutes away) to see the waves crashing against the craggy cliffs and to cruise the coastal caves. Admirers tend to focus their gaze on Lama Monachile, a rocky bay between cliffs that was once used as a port.

Lecce, Puglia

In the Salento region of Puglia, tucked well within the heel of the boot, this honey-coloured Baroque city of exuberant carved sandstone is often referred to as the “Florence of the South”. However, that seems a little reductive because Lecce is a masterpiece on its own merit – a mini metropolis of 17th century piazzas, basilicas, columns and gargoyles, with architectural surprises (and leisurely lunches) around every cobblestone corner.

Ostuni, Puglia

beautiful view of scenic narrow alley with plants, Ostuni, Apulia, Italy

Will we ever leave Puglia? Perhaps. But first we must take a pause in Ostuni, which is known as the White City for its wedding cake of sun-drenched, whitewashed houses, arranged across three hills. Delicious things await in Ostuni’s medieval alleys, and from the walled city’s many balconies, you also get glorious views of the Puglian countryside – olive groves, vines and all.

Ortigia, Sicily

Ortigia is the tiny Sicilian island that forms the historical heart of Siracusa – it’s connected by three bridges, with cars best left in the car park outside. Ortigia’s story began in 734, when Archia arrived from Corinth to defeat Sicilians and form the Greek colony of Siracusa. Nowadays, it provides more of that honey-hued baroque magnificence we’ve met before, but with added turquoise waters and atmosphere in abundance.

Discover more about out Ultimate Italy journey: How Travel Concierge Elena Makes Italy Sparkle

Matera, Basilicata

View of Matera at sunrise in Italy

You really have to see Matera to believe it. In Basilicata, in southern Italy, this city of stone is situated on a rocky outcrop and the whole place sparkles at dusk. Matera incorporates the Sassi (“stones”) districts, complexes of unfathomable cave dwellings which have been excavated and extended over millennia. It’s one of the most unique landscapes in the world – beautiful inside and out.

Spiaggia dei Conigli (Rabbit Beach), Lampedusa

What are the most beautiful beaches in Italy? Those of the Cinque Terre and the Amalfi Coast are up there, but Spiaggia dei Conigli is a special one we couldn’t miss. It’s accessible by boat or on foot via a 20-minute detour from the main road and it is a true Sicilian paradise, named after its original inhabitants. There are aperitif boat rides and dolphin spotting excursions, but once you get there, the best thing to do is sit and drink it in.

Duomo de Milano, Milan

Milan Cathedral, Duomo di Milano at dawn

What are the most beautiful cities in Italy? While the capital of fashion might not rank highest in your mind, it’s undeniable that the Duomo de Milano is a Gothic sensation, its facade festooned with gargoyles and spires. Constructed over several centuries, with the input of various architects, sculptors and artists, the duomo combines contrasting styles and contains more statues than any other cathedral in the world – over 3,500.

Val d’Orcia, Tuscany

This is a lush, hilly expanse of countryside so green and densely packed it’s on the UNESCO World Heritage list, making it officially one of the most beautiful places in Italy. This quintessential Tuscan landscape is graced with vineyards, olive groves, medieval villages, cypresses and chestnut groves. Visitors meander between thermal spas, rustic osterias and enrapturing wine trails, stopping to take photographs around each and every bend of the cypress-lined road.

Soak up even more travel inspiration: The 30 Most Beautiful Places in the World You Need to Visit

Roman Forum, Rome

The Temple of Saturn in the Roman Forum, Rome

Once the centre of public life – the place to witness gladiatorial combats, public speeches and criminal trials – this is now (bear with us) an assemblage of rather random ruins between the Palatine and Capitoline hills. And while it’s hard to picture the area in all its former glory, the sheer spectacle of the iconic columns and archways seemingly sprouting from the ground right in the middle of modern day Rome is something special.

Ravello, Amalfi Coast

High in the hills, with coastline views unlike anywhere else on earth, Ravello is one of the Amalfi Coast’s quieter but no less flamboyant towns. It may not be as famous as Positano or Amalfi, but its position is second to none. Ravello is a place of such stark beauty that writers and artists have come here for decades to feel alive again, and be inspired. Whether you’re creative or not, the view from the belvedere at Villa Cimbrone will live with you, always.

Lake Como, Lombardy

Lake Como shines bright blue in Italy

Opulent neoclassical villas and garden follies in shades of pearl and rose are set against a backdrop of mountains, cypresses, magnolias and palm trees, arranged around the star of the show: the twinkling Lake itself. Add to the picture a few speedboats and ferraris and here you have the location of the Bond film Casino Royale and the site of Amal and George Clooney’s wedding. Not just one of the most beautiful places in Italy, it’s one of the most luxurious and captivating places on earth, and you have to see it.

Tropea, Calabria

On the Gulf of Saint Euphemia, part of the Tyrrhenian Sea, Tropea is another irresistible cliffside town. It’s a white sand paradise, famed for its associations with Hercules (who may have founded it), for being “the jewel in the crown of Calabria”, for its assemblage of cobbles and piazzas, and – not forgetting – its Tropea red onions. It’s frequently named one of the most beautiful villages in Italy.

Food lovers may also enjoy reading: These Are Our 15 Favorite Michelin Star Restaurants in Italy

Vernazza, Cinque Terre

A small town on a rocky outcrop on the coats of Italy.

On the rugged Italian Riviera, this divine little fishing village is the Cinque Terre in a nutshell – little jumbles of candy-coloured houses balanced on and around the cliffs, opening out to perfect bays where lucky people are taking the most beautiful and invigorating sea swims of their lives. Cinque Terre means “five lands”, and it actually consists of five villages, all of them absurdly photogenic, but Vernazza just pips the others.

Capri, Bay of Naples

Water views in Capri, Italy

In Italy’s Bay of Naples, Capri (darling) is chic to the bones, with its elegant boutiques, megayachts and sun-kissed limoncello. But it also has natural beauty in rich abundance, in its dramatically craggy rock formations and sea caves tucked into cliffs. The Blue Grotto is the most famous sea cave – so-called because the sunlight streams through an underwater cavity, giving the water a blue glow that lights up the space.

Langhe, Piedmont

The softly rolling, wine-growing hills of the Langhe may be less dramatic than Italy’s city duomos and craggy coastline, but it is no less beautiful. As you drive around, among the vines, with the scents of hazelnut and truffle in the air, each hilltop appears iced with its own fairy castle. What are the most beautiful towns in Italy? It could be these Piedmontese dream locales: Alba, Grinzane Cavour and Barolo.

Gulf of Orosei, Sardinia

Boats dot the ocean in the Gulf of Orosei, Sardinia

On the east coast of Sardinia, the Gulf of Orosei is home to some of the most photogenic beaches in Italy and the whole Mediterranean, with their clear turquoise waters and white sand. Cala Luna is the real deal, with powdery soft sand and a gentle slope out to sea – it’s accessible by boat, or a two-hour hike. Cala Goloritzè is just as idyllic, with the same impeccable colour palette, but it’s a little wilder, with a mighty limestone pinnacle.

Piazza del Campo, Siena

Italy has piazzas aplenty, but no others quite like Siena’s huge, sloping social centre. One of the most beautiful places in Italy, it’s the shape of a scallop shell, divided into nine sections, recalling the ‘Nove’ (the nine) who governed the city for the ‘common good’, not for the nobility, at the end of the 13th century. Nowadays, it’s surrounded by the Palazzo Pubblico and its Torre del Mangia, as well as various opportunities for aperitivo.

Bookmark for later: The Luxury Gold Guide to Private Wine Tasting in Italy

Tre Cime di Lavaredo, Dolomites

Three Peaks of Lavaredo, Dolomite Mountains, Italy

Three distinctive rocky peaks rise abruptly and spectacularly into the sky in the Sexten Dolomites of northeastern Italy. These are the three epic icons of The Dolomites UNESCO World Heritage site and if you want to hike them all, it’s a 10km route, best taken in the summer when the buttercups, forget-me-nots and vanilla orchids are in bloom. The Dolomites are a popular draw all year long, though, and one of the most inspiring places on earth to get outside and walk.

San Fruttuoso, Liguria

What this list needs to finish is a good, ancient Benedictine monastery, right on the seashore. The tiny hamlet, situated between Camogli and Portofino, and surrounded by Portofino Regional Park, has all the right shades of aquamarine and sun-blanched white, but its dominated by the Abbazia di San Fruttuoso, with its domed watchtower. It has to be one of the most beautiful places in Italy to lay your chic, striped beach towel.

 

Keen to discover Italy in luxury style? Take a look at our Ultimate Italy small group journey.

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Cuisine, Europe

The Luxury Gold Guide to Private Wine Tasting in Italy

August 10, 2023 by Luxury Gold No Comments
Hilltop winery, surrounded by vineyards in Tuscany

Wine tasting in Italy is an experience that’s as educational as it is engaging. Whether you’re surrounded by an extensive collection of bottles in a cozy wine cellar or gazing at the vast Italian countryside amongst endless varietal blocks, Italian wine tasting in situ is an opportunity to learn about the history, culture, agriculture, and ancestry of a vineyard. 

Professional wine tasters, sommeliers, and artisan vintners have an unrivaled knowledge of these wines. More than simply knowing how to note each delicate finish, they act as guides to help you identify aromas, tastes, and tannins, enabling you to enjoy a full sensory experience from serve to swirl to spit. And, yes, it is polite to spit out wine at a tasting in Italy.

Discover our Italy Luxury Tours and Vacation Packages


Wine being poured into glass with table set for dining

Most wine tastings will have spittoons present so you can swirl and spit as needed. It’s also not offensive to dump a sample of wine if it’s not your preferred taste. However, keep in mind that these private wine tasting events are curated with a reverence for the wine and winemakers and are designed to amplify your experience. 

Remember that the high alcohol content and the potential limitation of food pairings will impact your experience as the tasting progresses. A single taste swallowed allows you to savor the initial flavor while a second sip spat into a spittoon lets you focus on the individual notes. 

There are hundreds of vineyards for private wine tasting in Italy, including these exquisite vineyards in Tuscany, Piedmont, and Veneto. 

Need to know: How a travel concierge elevates your Italy experience

Tuscany

Sunset over vineyards in Tuscany

Envision your perfect private wine tasting in Italy and you’ll likely conjure up visions of the Tuscan hillside. Less than 200 miles from Rome, Tuscany’s Sangiovese grapes take center stage. Renowned dry red wines like Chianti and Vino Nobile di Montepulciano pair beautifully with Bistecca alla Fiorentina. This region has some of the best wine tasting in Italy and private wine tastings at these two wineries won’t disappoint.

Read more: 10 stunning Lake Como towns you need to visit

Brolio Castle

Ricasoli is the name in Tuscan wine: the family that created the original Chianti wine. Since the 1100s, the Ricasoli family’s estate has grown grapes for centuries. You can visit one of the oldest wineries in Italy and savor a stunning tour of the castle, vineyards, and Ricasoli cellars. Take the Privilege Tour and experience a private visit of Brolio Castle where you’ll taste the limited-quantities of flagship Castello di Brolio, classic Chiantis, and the 100% Trebbiano Sanbarnaba in the opulent formal dining room.

Antinori nel Chianti Classico

26 generations of winemakers have kept the Antinori family name respected throughout Italy. Learn more about the family’s history bottling classic Chiantis with a tour of the award-winning vineyard’s estate, which includes three tastings surrounded by the family’s private art collection. Those searching for a more immersive experience should take the Cru tour: a deep dive into Marchesi Antinori’s wine making philosophy. It includes a private wine tasting of the seven Crus best representing Antinori’s ambition.

Read more: An exclusive invitation from Tuscan wine dynasty, La Famiglia Mazzei

Piedmont

Woman walking in vineyards at sunset, Piedmont, Italy

A region known around the world for its coveted white truffles, Piedmont offers some of the best wine tasting in Italy paired with some of the greatest truffle dishes on the planet. Just west of Milan, Piedmont is a place for gastronomic grandeur. Take advantage of private wine tastings at these two wineries that will prepare your palate for Piedmont’s exceptional bounty of culinary delights.

Casa di Langa

The world’s first hotel with a truffle concierge, Casa di Langa sits in the Alta Langa region of Piedmont. Pinot noirs and chardonnays are the featured wines of the area and the hotel’s two wineries. While the Nebbiolo vines in nearby Barolo and Barbaesco may tempt you for a vineyard visit, we recommend a special tasting in Casa di Langa’s wine academy. Tastings are limited in opportunity and capacity each day, while the range of sampling is anything but. Personalized blind tastings are accommodated, as are broad tastings that reflect the different varieties of the region. Naturally, the best way to follow up this experience is with a multi-course meal Fàula Ristorante where these wines are paired with creative plates and fresh truffles foraged from the hotel’s private forest.

Tenute Cisa Asinari Dei Marchesi

Since the late-1700s, the Grésy family’s four estates have cultivated exceptional vineyards between the Monferrato and Langhe hills. Their historic cellars are ideal for both wine connoisseurs and those just getting a taste for the delicate notes of a fine wine. Private tastings include tours of the cellar where Barbaresco DOCG wines are featured. The vertical tasting is especially intoxicating as it showcases five Barbaresco DOCG wines from three of the estate’s vintage labels.  

Discover new flavors: The best gelato in all of Italy, served in a tiny San Gimignano gelateria

Veneto

Glasses of white wine

If Venice and Verona weren’t enough to make you fall in love with Italy’s Veneto region, then its wine will surely leave you smitten. Pinot grigio and Prosecco vye for your heart, each enticing you to deny your infatuation with the deep reds and instead embrace the white Italian wines at these wineries located in the heart of the Conegliano Valdobbiadene DOCG UNESCO Heritage site.

Il Colle

Though Il Colle has a history dating back only to the 1970s, the still and bubbly wines produced on their estate yield nothing less than memorable finishes reflecting the soil’s centuries of hard work cultivating a foundation for exceptional white grape growing. For those who want the ultimate Prosecco DOCG experience, nothing less than the premium itinerary tour will suffice. Not only will you taste a new vintage directly from one of the tanks in the winery, but you’ll also hand-pick six still or sparkling wines to sample with artisan cheeses and breadsticks.

La Tordera

With Venice on one side and the Dolomites on the other, there are few better places to find yourself than La Tordera’s winery in the hills of Valdobbiadene. A dynamic private tasting awaits those who desire an education in sparkling wine. Tour the winery with a guide and sample wines ranging from dry aperitif Proseccos to sparkling no-sugar wines for the discerning connoisseur. 

You’ll have no trouble keeping your wine glass full while on Luxury Gold’s Ultimate Italy tour. From Venice to Capri, you’ll spend 12 days exploring just as many cities. One of the highlights of this exciting tour awaits in Tuscany where you’ll enjoy a lunch and private wine tasting at Marchese Mazzei’s estate. You’ll also have daily opportunities to schedule your own wine tasting in Italy as you explore these iconic cities at your leisure. 

Which of Italy’s wine regions are you most excited to uncork? Let us know in the comments below.

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Europe, Luxury Journeys

An exclusive invitation from La Famiglia Mazzei, a Tuscan wine dynasty

May 3, 2023 by Luxury Gold No Comments
Image of Marchese Francesco Mazzei greeting guests outside his family home in Tuscany

Under the Tuscan sun, immerse yourself in fine vintages and fascinating conversation at the sublime Castello di Fonterutoli. Take a timeless journey with us to Italy on a Founder’s Collection departure and be personally welcomed into the home of La Famiglia Mazzei, the renowned Tuscan winemaking family.

An exclusive invitation from la Famiglia Mazzei

For over six centuries, ‘la Famiglia Mazzei’ has dedicated itself to winemaking, with a passion and commitment handed down from one generation to the next. In 1938, Ser Lapo Mazzei became known as the pioneer of Chianti Classico, as the author of the first document known to mention ‘Chianti.’ Then in 1435, when Ser Lapo’s granddaughter Madonna Smeralda Mazzei married Piero di Agnolo from Fonterutoli, the Castello di Fonterutoli estate became a family heritage.

Enjoy an exclusive lunch and wine-tasting with either Marchese Francesco Mazzei or his grandson Lapo Mazzei, at their centuries-old Tuscan estate. Through this intimate meet and greet, learn about the family themselves, their beautiful home, the Mazzei wine dynasty and how they are preserving the local eco system for future generations.

Experience this on a Founder’s Collection departure of Ultimate Italy

Castello di Fonterutoli

 

“My family has owned Castello di Fonterutoli since 1435, so for 25 generations. We’ve been living here forever, it’s our paradise,” Marchese Francesco Mazzei explains.

Set in the picturesque village of Fonterutoli, Castello di Fonterutoli is more than a winery. This small rural settlement is located in the heart of Chianti Classico between Florence and Siena and is considered one of the most important institutions of Chianti Classico and Tuscany.

Built at the end of the 1500’s, the Marchesi Mazzei have taken care to preserve the authentic charm and atmosphere of the village, and today it retains much of its original spirit. Cobbled paths, beautiful rustic buildings decorated by rose pink flowers and a strong community prevail. Visitors can enjoy a coffee in the village bar, a chat with the locals or, of course, sip some famous Castello di Fonterutoli wines.

You may also be interested to read: Making it personal: How Travel Concierge Anna elevates your Italy experience

Ancestors celebrated through their wines

@marchesimazzei

The Mazzei family describe their wines as ‘the maximum expression of their terroirs.’ Maybe one of their most renowned products is the ‘Siepi’. Credited as ‘one of the 50 wines that changed Italy’s wine style’ this has been produced by the Mazzei family since 1435.

Much of the family history is told through its wines. With their outstanding ‘Chianti Classico Riserva’, the Marquis Mazzei celebrate their notable ancestor Ser Lapo, and a sublime vintage named ‘Philip’ is dedicated to Philip Mazzei (1730-1816). An illustrious ancestor and political thinker, together with Thomas Jefferson, Philip was a pioneer of the viticulture in Virginia.

Captivating stories and connections

As part of your visit, you will have the opportunity to see inside the impressive wine cellars. This vast space is taken up by thousands of barrels, all decorated with the Mazzei family’s official stamp. On your tour you will learn about the various vintages, and the barrelling process.

“If I could bring anyone here, past or present, it would have to be Thomas Jefferson. He was a real wine connoisseur,” Marchese Francesco Mazzei tells us. Jefferson also happened to be a close friend of Francesco’s ancestor, Filippo Mazzei, and was a Founding Father of the United States, contributing to the Declaration of Independence in 1776.

Filippo Mazzei is credited for being the inspiration behind one of its famous quotes: “All men are by nature equally free and independent. Such equality is necessary in order to create a free government,” something later acknowledged by President John F. Kennedy in his book, “A Nation of Immigrants”.

You may also enjoy reading: This little gelateria in San Gimignano may just serve the best gelato in all of Italy

Natural treatments in the vineyard

@marchesimazzei

Guaranteeing the stability of the ecosystem and its biodiversity is very important to the Mazzei family. At Castello di Fonterutoli and their other estates, they’ve eliminated chemicals for weeding and recycle their production waste (shoots, grape stalks, olive pomace, and horse manure) as organic fertilizer.

To reduce their carbon footprint and preserve of the surrounding landscape, they’ve adopted various methods, including their ledge-shaped terraced vineyards. This reduces erosion and preserves the heritage of the landscape.

Water is used carefully, including as a natural coolant for the wine cellar. Through the recycling of the fast flowing spring water through the rock walls of the cellar, no climate control system is required.

An elegant and intimate lunch

@marchesimazzei

Traditional Tuscan dishes, reinterpreted in a gourmet-style await you in the family’s osteria. This quaint restaurant, surrounded by stunning views of the rolling Tuscan countryside, is where Founder’s Collection guests enjoy an exclusive and delicious rustic meal during their trip to Castello di Fonterutoli.

Sip some more of the estate’s wines and dine on dishes made exclusively with fresh, seasonal local produce. Each plate respects the Tuscan heritage, with a particular eye to the wild game that roams wild in the estate’s meadows and woodlands.

To accept your exclusive invitation to meet with la Famiglia Mazzei, join us on a Founders Collection departure of Ultimate Italy. 
With our Founders Collection, we take you even further beyond your expectations. This is our exclusive collection of intimate invitations to meet European nobility, legendary locals and celebrated icons. Available on selected Luxury Gold departures, spend time with the people who have shaped the history of the places you are visiting.
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