Everyone has a favorite beach along Italy’s
8,600 kms of coastline, but if you ask ten Italians where their country’s best
beaches are, nine will give you the name of an island, usually Sardinia.
After almost 50 years in Italy I have visited most of the islands and beaches but since I am more of a history & museum person, I got a little help from my friends to put together this insider list of Italy’s ten best
beaches.
This article has been read by thousands of people, it is the absolutely most popular post in my blog. I would love to know who you are, so why not leave a quick comment below.
Most of Italy's beaches are covered with stabilimenti, where one pays for entrance, beach chairs, changing rooms, etc.
Considering the current crisis the country is going through, yesterday's issue of Corriere della Sera (June 30, 2012) published an article about FREE BEACHES.
Here is the list journalist Carlotta Lombardo put together. You will need a detailed map and local knowledge to find most of them.
Sicily-Cala Mosche in the National Park dello Zingaro near San Vito lo Capo
Sardegna-Cala Sisina near the Gulf of Orosei
Tuscany-Cala Violina in Maremma
Calabria -Capo Bruzzano 30 kms from Locrì
Liguria-Monterosso and Vernazza
Puglia -Dune of Campomarino
Campania-Buon Dormire near Capo Palinuro
Marche-Due Sorelle Beach near Conero
Basilicata -Spiaggia Nera at Cala Jannita near Maratea
Veneto-Cà Roman di Venezia on Pellestrina a 11km long beach
This article has been read by thousands of people, it is the absolutely most popular post in my blog. I would love to know who you are, so why not leave a quick comment below.
Most of Italy's beaches are covered with stabilimenti, where one pays for entrance, beach chairs, changing rooms, etc.
Considering the current crisis the country is going through, yesterday's issue of Corriere della Sera (June 30, 2012) published an article about FREE BEACHES.
Here is the list journalist Carlotta Lombardo put together. You will need a detailed map and local knowledge to find most of them.
Sicily-Cala Mosche in the National Park dello Zingaro near San Vito lo Capo
Sardegna-Cala Sisina near the Gulf of Orosei
Tuscany-Cala Violina in Maremma
Calabria -Capo Bruzzano 30 kms from Locrì
Liguria-Monterosso and Vernazza
Puglia -Dune of Campomarino
Campania-Buon Dormire near Capo Palinuro
Marche-Due Sorelle Beach near Conero
Basilicata -Spiaggia Nera at Cala Jannita near Maratea
Veneto-Cà Roman di Venezia on Pellestrina a 11km long beach
1.
Italy has about
400 islands, some just uninhabited rocks, others organized as stunning summer resorts. Crystal-clear water, unspoiled
nature and unique folklore and culture can be found on the island of Sardinia.
a beach in Sardinia |
From the little
peninsula of Stintino to S. Teresa di Gallura in the north-eastern
corner, lies a Riviera of emerald water and fine sandy beaches, some of them
with pink sand and some only large enough for a couple of beach blankets.
the spiaggia rosa ,Sardinia |
Old towns, many
dating from the 12th century
are dominated by castles and walls which once held pirate raiders at bay. Summer
villages and hotels are modern, elegant and offer facilities for water sports,
swinging nightlife and fine eating.
A relatively unknown part of Sardinia is the island of
San Antioco in the south-western corner. Here gourmets can gorge themselves on
local lobster and tuna and the wines of Calasetta.
Unless you are a millionaire, avoid the expensive resorts on the Costa Smeralda and
stay clear of beaches near large
cities, like Cagliari's Poetto unless its low season.
2.
The 400 inhabitants of Stromboli island are not jittery even though they
live on a still-active volcano in the
Aeolian archipelago north of Sicily. Famous for its black lava sand beaches,
the comforts of civilization are assured although drinking water is brought in
by cistern ship during the dry summers. Stromboli is memorable for its natural firework displays that awe cruise ship passengers when they sail past in the night.
Closer to the Sicilian coast is the greener island of Vulcano, with lovely beaches and mud baths. Both Stromboli and Vulcano can be reached by ferry from Milazzo in Sicily.
Closer to the Sicilian coast is the greener island of Vulcano, with lovely beaches and mud baths. Both Stromboli and Vulcano can be reached by ferry from Milazzo in Sicily.
Stromboli island |
3. The Tuscan island of Elba, reachable by ferry from the port of Piombino, is known
for having once housed the exiled French
emperor Napoleon. Its green rolling hills, beaches like Biodola near
Portoferraio, and laid-back lifestyle make it a perfect getaway. This is the only one of the Tuscan islands I have yet to visit, but this September I'll be lecturing on a luxury cruise that stops there.
4. In northern Italy the Venetian lagoon holds several
islands worth a visit. The Lido is a quick vaporetto ride from crowded
St. Mark’s Square and is probably Italy’s most beautifully equipped beach with exclusive
beach cabins, tents, white-jacketed waiters scurrying with ice buckets from the
Excelsior’s bar and a famous gambling casino and annual cinema festival.
Chioggia, at the southern tip of the Venetian lagoon, is 40 miles from
Venice by road or a two-hour cruise from Riva degli Schiavoni. An important
fishing center, it boasts the lively Sottomarina beach, plenty of good hotels
and nightlife.
Lido, Venezia |
5. Ligurian beaches include those of Diano Marina and the picturesque hilltown of Cervo Ligure a few miles up the
coast from San Remo of music and casino fame.
Diano Marina, Liguria |
6.The stretch of beaches near Rimini on the Adriatic coast is a swinging summer spot
with 15 kms of white sand, clean water and droves of Scandinavians, Russians
and Anglo-Saxons from spring to autumn. Each year the best beaches are
awarded prizes signalled by a “bandiere blu” flag.
7.Fregene and Ostia are Rome’s seaside resorts where a midday dip in the
Med is possible before returning to the city. These beaches are fine during the
week but are guaranteed to be very crowded on weekends. Ostia is connected to
downtown Rome by a rapid train and has the added attraction of the
archeological site similar to Pompeii, Ostia Antica.
8.Campers love the sandy coastal beaches backed by pine groves between Albinia and Talamone near Grosseto
because of several inexpensive campgrounds .
Gastronomic delights of the area
include wild boar stew in the inland medieval hill towns , like Capalbio . Try La Parrina estate for cheeses made on
site, farm produce, local wine and oil.
deer in La Feniglia nature reserve |
9.In southern Italy folks dote on the Calabrian coast
and the islands of Pantelleria and Lampedusa which are invaded by water and scuba-diving enthusiasts
each summer. The swimming is great here even in October since the latitude is
the same as northern Africa.
10. Since
naturist always find the best, isolated beaches,
I asked Fulvio, who has been
checking out Italy’s beaches for over
50 years, to give his vote.
His number one beach is Cala Coticchio ( the locals call it Tahiti) on the island of Caprera in Sardegna. I only knew Caprera as the refuge of Italy’s national hero Garibaldi, so its best to ask the experts.
Fulvio's second choice was Cala Brigantina , a fiord like beach where a French club even set up a resort. Both of these are reachable only by boat or after a long, hot walk .
His number one beach is Cala Coticchio ( the locals call it Tahiti) on the island of Caprera in Sardegna. I only knew Caprera as the refuge of Italy’s national hero Garibaldi, so its best to ask the experts.
Fulvio's second choice was Cala Brigantina , a fiord like beach where a French club even set up a resort. Both of these are reachable only by boat or after a long, hot walk .
Remember that
most Italian beaches are at their best
in July, September and on weekdays, rather than weekends.
The peak season of mid-August and the Ferragosto holiday will see you paying up to 50% more for rental accommodations. In late spring and other summer months you can save and enjoy better service.
Have you seen my newly redesigned website www.elegantetruria.com yet? Pop over for a look, you will be surprised at how much content, information it holds.
Thanks to Laura who updated it after 12 years !
This is one of the most popular posts on my blog ...if you found it interesting, helpful, why not leave a comment.
Thanks!
The peak season of mid-August and the Ferragosto holiday will see you paying up to 50% more for rental accommodations. In late spring and other summer months you can save and enjoy better service.
Have you seen my newly redesigned website www.elegantetruria.com yet? Pop over for a look, you will be surprised at how much content, information it holds.
Thanks to Laura who updated it after 12 years !
Thanks!
This is making me long for the warmer weather to come! Thanks for the wonderful suggestions :-)
ReplyDeleteSummer... summer... summer...
ReplyDeleteMy vote goes to Cala Goloritze' by the Tacchi dell'Ogliastra in Sardinia. Awfully hard to get to (about 1.5 hours hike down a mountain- and then up again!) but the water is crystal clear and full of fish!
Thank you Maria (in Sicily) and Giulia (in North Carolina).
ReplyDeleteWhat about you? What's your vote for the best beach in Italy?
Hello everybody, hello Mary Jane!
ReplyDeleteI d like to suggest some of the beaches I prefer here in Sardinia especially in the southern regions.
This is "Su giudeu" in Chia, one of my favourites:
http://farm1.staticflickr.com/35/93716865_60e3fb5bd7.jpg
This is Piscinas which is at the end of a sandy desert:
http://ristoranteilcorsaronero.it/uploads/foto/piscinas71.jpg
This is Tuarredda, a bit crowded in high season months (july, agoust) but still lovely: http://www.sardegnadelsudovest.it/portale/images/morfeoshow/i_sette_apic-3317/big/Spiaggia-di-Tuarredda.jpg
And this is Porto Pino:
http://www.francescaonline.it/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/Porto-Pino.jpg
Thanks Marra, so far Sardegna/Sardinia is winning the vote for best beaches. Let's hear it for some other areas.
ReplyDeleteEverywhere, and i mean EVERYWHERE, in "Costa Verde" and "Golfo di Orosei".
ReplyDeleteSardegna is truly beautiful, but the most magical place for me is Pantelleria. The colors and fragrances change with every season. The thermal waters energize in a way that I've never experienced elsewhere. The Nikà beach offers hot thermal waters that gently mix with the cool sea waters, and the colors are spectacular. In the evening, I usually go to the thermal lake, lago di Venere, for free mud treatments as I watch the sun set. It's not overrun with cheesy resorts, and understatement rules. Not a place for families with young children, as most of the beaches are rocky and some require climbing or walking. Great idea to collect people's special spots! I'll check back.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.comune.sanveromilis.or.it/Territorio/Ambiente/
ReplyDeleteSpiagge sarde nel comune di San Vero Milis
from FRancesca Ceci
From Francesca Ceci
ReplyDeleteThe best beaches in Sardegna are
http://www.comune.sanveromilis.or.it/Territorio/Ambiente/
Spiagge sarde nel comune di San Vero Milis
Rose beach!!!!!!!!!!!! My lovely land...sun, sea and relax... what else? :D
ReplyDeleteI appreciate your blog tips about Italian beaches as we are there often. Both of my daughters have been to Sardinia and highly praise the beaches there.
ReplyDeleteLast September, we spent several days at the beach near Lucca/Pisa as it was only a short drive from our house. We chose a wild beach which meant a short walk from the parking lot through some pine woods. It was really nice. It was south of Marina di Torre do Lago Puccini.
I really like Lido di Venezia in September... the Film Festival, the parties and the melancholy of the end of the summer...
ReplyDelete(but I live not far from Venice, my opinion counts for nothing!)
Dear Mary Jane
ReplyDeleteI have lots of favourite beaches in la Maremma in Tuscany, but if someone is visiting for the first time I always recommend:
1. The cove of Cala Violina not only because it well deserves its title as the most beautiful beach in Italy, but because the trek through the Mediterranean macchia of the Bandite di Scarlino to reach it with the ever so evident wild boar rootings of the night before, is part of the wonderful experience of visiting there. I first saw Cala Violina from a boat and swam ashore in the early morning. Having the place to myself for a couple of hours was simply magical.
2. The Gulfo di Baratti in Maremma Livornese because you can swim and sunbathe in one of Maremma's prettiest locations - its not the site of the only Etruscan city built by the sea for nothing - and then take a walk through the adjacent woods full of tombs to a necropolis that is simply stunning in the glow of an afternoon light. And then there is the medieval fortress on the hill, a view for miles along the coast and a bar for an aperitivo...
3. Capanna Civinini with its white medieval Torre Civette, where the beach of wide golden sands stretches far into the distance and you can beachcomb for miles and miles... and then watch the sunset over the Isola d'Elba.
4. But no mention of Maremma beaches isn't without the wild Marina di Alberese. It lies within Maremma's protected nature park and its white sands with their sculptural driftwoods are backed by a pineta that is home to wild boar - but then most of Maremma is! Its just a pity about the rubbish some people decide to leave there sometimes. I love it for the sight of the medieval look out towers on high points along the coast, fortifications built to guard against the devastation of frequent Barbary pirate raids.
Donna
Am partial to the beaches of the Aeolian Islands, home of my ancestors. There is a reason why Italians go there in vacanza! This is not to denigrate any of the beaches mentioned. There are so many beautiful beaches along the Tyhrennian Sea. The most secluded that I have visited is at San Frutuosso, just above Portofino.
ReplyDeleteHope the cruise liner is removed from off the coast of Tuscany without damage to the ecology.
Thanks Pensionato for your comments..its hard for any one of us to know the best of the Italian beaches. Usually we go back year after year to the same ones,to those near our homes... at least this is my experience. Visitors from abroad instead get a chance to pick and choose a different place each year, getting a better view.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteI have to admit when I start planning my summer holidays I have the mountains in mind. I am in love with the Dolomites. I just have not gotten into beach culture in Italy, though I did spend two weeks in southern Puglia one summer. Too many people and too many umbrellas. My heart is for the cold and wild Pacific Ocean. This year I am taking my husband to Catalina Island off the coast of California and the Sequoias. As for swimming in the summer in Italy, after a long and hot tour at the Vatican, I like to dive into the cool and refreshing depths of Lago di Nemi. I feel kissed by Diana.
ReplyDeleteReally helpful article! I will recommend it to my friends who are interested in this. Thanks for the information and the list!
ReplyDeleteThis is such a great resource that you are providing and you give it away for free,especially for whom wanted to go beaches. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteaj
Once you're in, you have the use of the beaches changing rooms, lockers, sun loungers and sometimes even the luxury of a life to take you directly down the cliff to the beach. No more struggling to work your way down those narrow winding paths! Some of these beaches can seem expensive at about EUR10-15 per person but once you're sunning yourselves on a beach like Eco del Mare, Fiascherino. You won't regret spending that little bit extra.
ReplyDeleteThose Italian beaches was so stunning! I love all of them. Wish I just have time to see those beach on person. Love it. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteGreat info on this blog as always Mary Jane!! Going to re read and take a few notes, Thank you for your efforts:)
ReplyDeleteAnother great info packed blog, Thank you Mary Jane!
ReplyDeleteAll the mentioned destinations are worthy to be visited at least once. Good recommendations!
ReplyDeleteThanks for the information regarding Italy. I m planning to visit Italy for which I got idea from an Italy Travel Video and trying to figure out the best places to visit in short period of time.
ReplyDeleteThanks Maria for sharing wonderful places of Italy. from your list of 10 beaches i visited Lido, Venezia which is awesome and i cant forgot the days which we spend here together. we was here in 2009 on Travel visa
ReplyDeleteGreat information about Italy.I appreciate your blog tips.It's great idea to visit this place.Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDelete