Como
City Guide

Como

Italia · Best time to visit: Apr-Oct.

Guide coming in Español, English shown for now.
Recommended stay 1 days
Daily budget €100.00/day
Best season Apr-Oct
Language Italian
Currency EUR
Time zone Europe/Rome
Day-by-day plan

Choose your pace

Day 1

From Villa Olmo to Brunate's Sunset — Como's Greatest Hits in One Sweep

09:00

Villa Olmo

Landmark
Duration: 1h30 Estimated cost: €0

From Como San Giovanni station, walk 15 minutes downhill along Via Borgo Vico — a quiet residential stretch where you'll catch your first glimpses of snow-dusted Alpine peaks framed between tiled roofs and wrought-iron gates. Villa Olmo's neoclassical facade faces the lake with symmetrical box-hedge gardens and a stone-balustraded terrace at the water's edge; start here at 09:00 while the dew still glazes the grass and the tour buses (which arrive at 11:00) haven't yet. The gardens are free, you'll likely have the lakeside terrace to yourself, and the low morning sun throws long shadows across the 1815 facade.

Tip: Walk through the central courtyard and straight out the back — that's where the postcard view of the Alps reflected in the lake is, not from the road-side entrance. Stand at the westernmost corner of the balustrade around 09:15; the sun from behind you lights up the Grigna peaks across the water and the cypress frame the shot.

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10:30

Tempio Voltiano & Passeggiata Lino Gelpi

Landmark
Duration: 1h30 Estimated cost: €0

Turn right out of Villa Olmo and walk 25 minutes east along Passeggiata Lino Gelpi, the lakefront promenade built on reclaimed shore — benches, swans, and the Grigna mountains on your left the entire way. You'll arrive at the Tempio Voltiano, a perfect white-marble rotunda built in 1927 for Alessandro Volta (inventor of the battery, born here). Right beside it rises the Monumento ai Caduti, a 33-meter rationalist stone tower by Giuseppe Terragni — two opposing eras of Italian architecture standing 80 meters apart, both best photographed in the hard 11:00 light that sharpens their geometry.

Tip: Don't stop at the temple — walk another 3 minutes out to the tip of Diga Foranea Piero Caldirola pier to the 'Life Electric' sculpture, a stainless-steel ribbon by Daniel Libeskind dedicated to Volta. It's the single best spot in Como to photograph the lake head-on with the old town behind, and 90% of visitors miss it because it's hidden behind the yacht club.

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12:00

Pizzikotto

Food
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €12

Cut two blocks inland to Via Cinque Giornate 62 — Pizzikotto is a bustling takeaway where Como office workers queue at noon for pizza al trancio baked on dark iron trays, cut into squares and weighed by the slice. Order a square of pizza marinara con alici (anchovy and oregano, €4) and a slice of focaccia di Recco (paper-thin cheese-filled flatbread from the Ligurian coast, €5) and eat on the stone bench across the lane. Fast, cheap, and exactly how Comaschi eat between meetings.

Tip: Arrive at 12:00 sharp to beat the 12:30 local office rush — after 13:00 the best trays (marinara, patate-rosmarino) are scraped clean. Point at what you want, they'll weigh it, cash is faster than card. Skip any place on Piazza Cavour with a 'Tourist Menu' sign outside; they charge €18 for worse bread.

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13:00

Duomo di Como

Religious
Duration: 1h30 Estimated cost: €0

Walk 5 minutes south through the arcaded Via Plinio into Piazza del Duomo. Como Cathedral is a 400-year build bridging Gothic, Renaissance, and Baroque — its white-and-pink marble facade studded with statues, including (uniquely in all of Italy) the two Plinys: Roman historians born here, not saints. At 13:00 the sun hits the facade dead-on, the rose window glows, and the carved details stand in sharp relief — perfect for photos. Circle round to the Broletto, the 13th-century striped marble loggia grafted onto the cathedral's left flank, once the medieval town hall.

Tip: The best facade shot is from the northwest corner of the piazza (in front of Caffè Duomo), not straight on — that angle catches both the rose window and the Renaissance dome in one frame. Walk around to Via Pretorio behind the apse for a restored Art Nouveau wrought-iron clock most guidebooks skip entirely.

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14:30

Funicolare Como–Brunate

Landmark
Duration: 4h30 Estimated cost: €7

Walk 8 minutes east along Lungo Lario Trieste to Piazza Alcide de Gasperi, where the 1894 red-wooden funicular car climbs 500 meters up to Brunate in 7 minutes — you rise above the rooftops as the entire southern basin of Lake Como unfolds beneath you. Up top, walk 10 minutes along Via Roma to the Belvedere terrace: Como town at your feet, the lake snaking north between Alpine walls, Bellagio just visible at the fork on clear days. Stay until sunset — from around 18:30 (Apr–Oct) the light turns the water bronze and the mountains violet, and the village below flickers on one window at a time.

Tip: Buy a round-trip ticket (€6.50) but save the ride down for after 19:00 — the day-trip tour buses leave Brunate at 17:00 and the terrace empties out completely. If you have energy, walk 25 minutes further up Via Roma to Faro Voltiano (a 1927 lighthouse you can climb free); almost no one makes the hike, and the 360° view includes Switzerland on a clear day.

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19:30

Ristorante Sociale

Food
Duration: 1h30 Estimated cost: €45

Ride the funicular down around 19:15 and walk 5 minutes through Piazza Volta to Via Rodari 6. Ristorante Sociale has fed locals since 1905 in a vaulted stone room tucked behind the Duomo — the kind of place where the waiters remember regulars but welcome strangers without fuss. Order the risotto al pesce persico (creamy risotto with Lake Como perch fillets in sage butter, €16) and the costoletta alla milanese (bone-in breaded veal chop, €24): both are Lombard classics done honestly, nothing plated for Instagram.

Tip: Reserve a few days ahead and ask specifically for a table in the 'sala grande' in the back — it has the original 1905 frescoed vaulted ceiling the front room lost in a 1960s remodel. PITFALL: avoid any restaurant on Piazza Cavour with a lakefront terrace, English-only photo menu, and a host waving tourists in from the sidewalk — they charge €28 for a plate of pasta that locals pay €12 for two streets inland. The rule in Como: the closer to the water, the worse the value.

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FAQ

Frequently asked questions

How many days do you need in Como?

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

What's the best time to visit Como?

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

What's the daily budget for Como?

A practical starting point is about €100 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.

What are the must-see attractions in Como?

A good first shortlist for Como includes Villa Olmo, Tempio Voltiano & Passeggiata Lino Gelpi, Funicolare Como–Brunate.