
Italy
Everything you need to plan a great trip — from the Colosseum to a Tuscan vineyard — without the guesswork.
Italy rewards a slower pace: 10 days minimum, 12–16 days ideal. Combine Rome (3–4 days), Florence (2–3 days, plus a Tuscany day trip), and Venice (2 days), with the Cinque Terre as a scenic add-on if you have 14+ days. Best months are April–June and September–October (mild weather, thinner crowds than summer). US/UK/Canadian/Australian/NZ passports currently enter visa-free for up to 90 days in any 180-day period; ETIAS becomes required starting Q4 2026. Budget from $90/day backpacking, $180–300/day mid-range.
Italy has a habit of making other trips feel slightly beige by comparison — it's ancient history, Renaissance art, and some of the best food on the planet, all packed into a country you can cross by train in a day. It's also crowded, expensive in the wrong neighborhoods, and full of well-worn tourist traps, which is exactly why an honest guide matters more here than almost anywhere else.
This guide covers everything: where to go, how many days each place actually needs, when to fly, what it costs in USD and EUR, and the entry rules for your specific passport — including the incoming ETIAS system most other guides haven't caught up on yet. Written to be genuinely useful, and updated through the season.
Destinations
All Destinations ←
Rome
3–4 days, stay in the historic center, and budget real time for lines.

Florence
2–3 days, walkable and compact, with Tuscany right outside the door.

Venice
2 days, no cars anywhere, and a city built entirely on water.

Cinque Terre
Five cliffside villages, best as a slower 2–3 day add-on, not a rushed day trip.
Attractions
All Attractions ←Food
All Food ←Practical Info
All Practical Info ←
Italy Visa & Entry Requirements (2026)
The real answer, broken down by passport — plus what ETIAS actually changes.

Money, Safety & eSIM in Italy
Cash, cards, real safety risks, and staying connected.














































