Perugia
City Guide

Perugia

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

Guide coming in Español, English shown for now.
Recommended stay 1 days
Daily budget €75.00/day
Best season Apr-Jun, Sep-Oct
Language Italian
Currency EUR
Time zone Europe/Rome
Day-by-day plan

Choose your pace

Day 1

Umbria's Hilltop Crown — From Etruscan Stones to a Sunset Over the Valley

09:00

Tempio di Sant'Angelo

Religious
Duration: 45min Estimated cost: €0

From the Minimetrò Pincetto station or the bus stop at Piazza Italia, take the escalator up and follow Corso Garibaldi north all the way to the city wall — a 20-minute walk through a residential medieval lane most tourists never see. Start here, at Perugia's northern tip: a 5th-century circular church built from recycled Roman temple columns, each one different. The morning light slants through the drum-shaped interior and the grass courtyard outside is empty of tour groups.

Tip: Walk a clockwise loop inside — the sixteen ancient columns are each from a different quarry, and you can see where the medieval masons shaved them down to match heights. Opens at 08:30; arrive by 09:00 and you will likely be the only visitor.

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10:15

Piazza IV Novembre & Fontana Maggiore

Landmark
Duration: 2h Estimated cost: €0

Walk back south down Corso Garibaldi, pass through the monumental Arco Etrusco (3rd century BC — the oldest gate of the city, pause here for a photo) and cut onto Via dell'Acquedotto, a raised medieval walkway built on top of a Roman aqueduct that floats above the streets below — a 15-minute secret route into the center. You emerge directly at Piazza IV Novembre, where the Fontana Maggiore by Nicola and Giovanni Pisano (1278) sits between the Duomo and the Palazzo dei Priori. Circle the fountain twice to read all fifty carved panels — zodiac, months, biblical scenes — then sit on the cathedral steps as locals do.

Tip: The best photo of the fountain is from the top of the Palazzo dei Priori staircase (the fan-shaped steps facing the piazza) — you get fountain, cathedral, and the entire medieval square in one frame. Before 11:30 the light is clean; after noon the duomo's shadow cuts across the fountain.

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12:30

Mastro Giorgio Torta al Testo

Food
Duration: 45min Estimated cost: €9

Thirty seconds off the piazza down Via Ulisse Rocchi — a tiny Umbrian street-food counter where locals queue for torta al testo, the region's flatbread cooked on a stone disk and stuffed hot. This is not tourist food; it's what Perugians actually eat for lunch. Eat standing at the marble counter or take it to the cathedral steps.

Tip: Order the torta al testo with salsiccia e erba (sausage and wild greens, €7) — the signature combo — and a glass of house Sagrantino (€3). Skip the prosciutto version; it's the sausage-and-greens that shows why this bread is Umbria's soul. Cash preferred.

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14:00

Corso Vannucci & Giardini Carducci Panorama

Neighborhood
Duration: 2h Estimated cost: €0

From Mastro Giorgio, walk back to the piazza and follow Corso Vannucci south — Perugia's pedestrian spine, flagstone-paved, lined with palazzi and the evening passeggiata crowd. In 400 meters it opens into Piazza Italia and then, at the very southern edge of the old city, the Giardini Carducci: a balcony garden that drops away into a 180° view across the Umbrian valley to Assisi, Mount Subasio and the Apennines. The afternoon light here is why you come to Umbria.

Tip: Walk to the eastern end of the terrace (by the Carducci statue) — from there you can see the pink silhouette of Assisi on the hillside opposite on clear days. Come back here at golden hour if you have time; the whole valley turns amber around 18:00 in spring/autumn.

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16:30

Rocca Paolina

Landmark
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €0

Walk 80 meters from the garden gate back to Piazza Italia — the entrance to the Rocca is the unmarked escalator descending from the piazza. What looks like a transit tunnel opens into a buried medieval neighborhood: Pope Paul III had an entire hilltop quarter entombed inside a fortress in 1540 as punishment for a revolt, and when the fortress was demolished the streets survived underground. You walk through actual medieval houses, archways and alleys in eerie half-light. Free, and one of the strangest sights in Italy.

Tip: Follow signs to 'Via Bagliona' — the main buried street — and look up: you can still see the stone doorframes and window ledges of houses that haven't seen daylight in five centuries. Pitfall warning for the evening ahead: avoid any restaurant on Corso Vannucci or Piazza IV Novembre with photo menus outside or staff calling you in — these are tourist traps charging €25 for mediocre pasta. Perugia's real restaurants are one street off the Corso, on side alleys like Via delle Streghe or Via del Forno.

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19:30

La Taverna

Food
Duration: 2h Estimated cost: €45

Back up through the Rocca escalators to Corso Vannucci, then a 4-minute walk north and left onto Via delle Streghe — 'Witches' Alley', a narrow medieval lane — where La Taverna has been serving Umbrian cuisine in a candlelit stone cellar for decades. White tablecloths, chef Claudio greeting tables, Umbrian wine list deep enough to get lost in. The proper close to a hilltop day.

Tip: Reserve 2-3 days ahead (they book out, especially weekends — phone +39 075 572 4128). Order the strangozzi al tartufo nero (hand-rolled pasta with Umbrian black truffle, €22) and the piccione ripieno (stuffed squab, €26) — both are dishes Perugia does better than anywhere in Italy. Ask for a table in the lower cellar room, not the upstairs one.

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FAQ

Frequently asked questions

How many days do you need in Perugia?

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

What's the best time to visit Perugia?

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

What's the daily budget for Perugia?

A practical starting point is about €75 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.

What are the must-see attractions in Perugia?

A good first shortlist for Perugia includes Piazza IV Novembre & Fontana Maggiore, Rocca Paolina.