Destinations in Italy — where to go
Where to base yourself, for how long, and what each city actually feels like.
Italy rewards picking a few bases and slowing down rather than sprinting between cities. Rome (3–4 days) for ancient history and food, Florence (2–3 days) for Renaissance art and Tuscan day trips, Venice (2 days) for the only city on Earth with no cars, and the Cinque Terre (2–3 days) for cliffside villages and hiking. A classic first-timer route links all four by train in under two weeks.
Italy has a way of making every itinerary feel too short, no matter how long you planned it. The trick is picking a handful of bases that genuinely complement each other and resisting the urge to add 'just one more city' — Italy's train network makes it tempting, and it's also exactly how people end up seeing everything from a moving window. Here's every major destination, with an honest take on how much time it actually deserves.

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.












































