Amalfi Coast
City Guide

Amalfi Coast

Italia · Best time to visit: May-Jun, Sep-Oct.

Guide coming in Español, English shown for now.
Recommended stay 1 days
Daily budget €90.00/day
Best season May-Jun, Sep-Oct
Language Italian
Currency EUR
Time zone Europe/Rome
Day-by-day plan

Choose your pace

Day 1

Vertigo and Turquoise — The Coast That Stops You Mid-Sentence

09:00

Positano Village Walk to Spiaggia Grande

Landmark
Duration: 2h Estimated cost: €0

From the SITA bus stop on Via Cristoforo Colombo, descend the staircase streets through cascading pastel houses draped in bougainvillea — the most photographed coastal village in Europe unfolds below you step by step. At the bottom, the green-and-yellow majolica dome of Chiesa di Santa Maria Assunta rises above Spiaggia Grande, where fishing boats still line the dark volcanic sand. Stand on the beach and look back up at the full vertical sweep of colour — this is the image that made you book the trip.

Tip: The best elevated photo of the entire village is from the bend on Via Positanesi d'America, about 3 minutes uphill from the church — the houses fan out below with the sea behind. Arrive before 09:30 and you will have the staircases nearly to yourself; by 10:00 the first tour buses empty and the narrow lanes become a slow shuffle.

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11:45

Cathedral of St. Andrew

Religious
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €0

Take the 11:15 ferry from Positano's beach pier (€10, 25 minutes) and walk straight through the harbour archway into Piazza del Duomo, where the cathedral's Arab-Norman striped facade towers above a dramatic 62-step staircase. The exterior is the spectacle: Moorish interlacing arches, Byzantine mosaics in the gable, and a bell tower tiled in the same majolica that echoes Positano's dome. Loop around Via Lorenzo d'Amalfi to glimpse the Chiostro del Paradiso arcade through the gate and browse artisan shops still selling handmade Amalfi paper.

Tip: The staircase faces roughly west, so morning light illuminates the facade beautifully — shoot from the bottom step with a wide angle. Skip the €5 interior ticket; the exterior and the free paper-making displays along Via Lorenzo d'Amalfi give you the full story with better light.

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13:00

Andrea Pansa

Food
Duration: 45min Estimated cost: €15

Step down from the cathedral staircase and turn left under the arcades — Pansa has occupied this corner of Piazza del Duomo since 1830. Order the delizia al limone (€5, a pillowy lemon sponge in limoncello cream) and a cuoppo di mare from the fried-seafood cart two doors down (€8, crispy calamari and baby shrimp in a paper cone) — eat standing at the bar or on a piazza bench to skip the €3-4 terrace cover. Budget €12-18 for a full coastal lunch in fifteen minutes.

Tip: The cuoppo vendors fry to order until mid-afternoon — ask for 'ben cotto' (well done) for extra crunch. Pansa's lemon granita is the best on the coast if you need cooling down; skip the gelato shops flanking the piazza, which charge tourist prices for industrial product.

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14:00

Atrani

Neighborhood
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €0

Walk east from the piazza, exit Amalfi's harbour wall, and follow the Lungomare dei Cavalieri footpath carved into the cliff above turquoise water — a breathtaking 10-minute walk where the rock face rises on one side and the sea drops away on the other. You emerge into the smallest municipality in southern Italy: Piazza Umberto I wedged between the sea and a vertical wall of houses, with no souvenir shops and no tour groups. The arched tunnel from the piazza to Atrani's pocket beach frames the most photogenic shot of the day — stand inside looking out for a composition that contrasts dark stone with bright sea.

Tip: Catch the SITA bus to Ravello directly from the stop on the main road above the piazza (every 30 minutes, €1.30, 15 minutes of hairpin switchbacks climbing 350 m). Buy the ticket at the tabacchi on the piazza before heading up — the bus driver does not sell tickets.

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15:30

Villa Rufolo

Landmark
Duration: 2h Estimated cost: €10

Step off the bus in Ravello's Piazza Duomo — after the coastal frenzy below, the hilltop silence hits you first. Villa Rufolo's 13th-century terraced gardens hang 350 metres above the sea; Wagner saw them in 1880 and composed parts of Parsifal on the spot, and when you reach the belvedere terrace and the full coastline unfolds — Amalfi, Atrani, Maiori, the sea dissolving into sky — you understand why. The lower Moorish garden, a cloister of pointed arches and tall palms, draws fewer visitors and frames the same view through centuries-old stone.

Tip: Afternoon light between 15:00 and 17:00 is ideal — the sun is behind you as you face the coast, giving saturated colours with no glare on the water. The lower terrace is less crowded and more photogenic than the main belvedere; most visitors never walk down.

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18:00

Cumpa' Cosimo

Food
Duration: 1h30min Estimated cost: €35

Exit Villa Rufolo, turn right, and walk 2 minutes along Via Roma to this family trattoria that has fed Ravello since 1929 — checkered tablecloths, bottles of house wine on every table, and food that makes you forget you are in a tourist town. Order the mista di primi (€14, a parade of seven handmade pastas on one plate — scialatielli al limone, gnocchi alla sorrentina, ravioli capresi, and more) followed by the scaloppine al limone (€16). Budget €30-40 per person with house wine; the complimentary limoncello at the end is homemade and potent.

Tip: Arrive by 18:00 to walk in without waiting — by 19:30 every table is full and the queue stretches outside. No need to reserve; they seat walk-ins efficiently and the back room is quieter. Warning: the restaurants flanking Ravello's bus stop are tourist traps charging double for frozen-and-reheated food — walk 2 minutes past them to Via Roma where the locals actually eat.

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FAQ

Frequently asked questions

How many days do you need in Amalfi Coast?

Most travelers enjoy Amalfi Coast in 1 days, with enough time for headline sights and a slower meal or museum stop.

What's the best time to visit Amalfi Coast?

The easiest season for most travelers is May-Jun, Sep-Oct, especially if you want good weather and manageable crowds.

What's the daily budget for Amalfi Coast?

A practical starting point is about €90 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.

What are the must-see attractions in Amalfi Coast?

A good first shortlist for Amalfi Coast includes Positano Village Walk to Spiaggia Grande, Villa Rufolo.