Rome
City Guide

Rome

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

Guide coming in Español, English shown for now.
Recommended stay 1 days
Daily budget €55.00/day
Best season Apr-Jun, Sep-Oct
Language Italian
Currency EUR
Time zone Europe/Rome
Day-by-day plan

Choose your pace

Day 1

Ruins to Wishes — The Eternal City in One Straight Line

09:00

Colosseum & Roman Forum Overlook

Landmark
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €0

Morning light hits the Colosseum's eastern travertine facade at its warmest — this is the golden hour for photos, and tour buses haven't arrived yet. Circle the full perimeter (the western side is crowd-free), stop at the Arch of Constantine, then walk the length of Via dei Fori Imperiali with the Roman Forum ruins spreading out on both sides below you. Every step covers two thousand years of ground.

Tip: Stand at the railing on Via dei Fori Imperiali at the midpoint — it's the best free viewpoint of the Forum, better than the €16 paid entrance. Skip the men in gladiator costumes, they'll demand €20 for a photo.

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11:00

Trevi Fountain

Landmark
Duration: 30min Estimated cost: €0

From Piazza Venezia, cut north through Via di San Marcello into the narrow backstreets — you'll hear the thundering water before the fountain suddenly reveals itself between the buildings, which is half the magic. The fountain faces south, so late-morning sun lights up Neptune and the sea horses directly. Toss a coin over your left shoulder with your right hand, take your shots, and keep walking.

Tip: The fountain is quietest before 8am and after 11pm. At 11am you won't have it to yourself, but you get direct sunlight on the sculptures. Do not eat at any restaurant visible from the fountain square — 100% tourist markup, mediocre food.

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12:00

Pantheon

Landmark
Duration: 45min Estimated cost: €5

Head southwest from Trevi through Via delle Muratte, 8 minutes to Piazza della Rotonda — and the Pantheon's portico columns stop you mid-step. Go inside (€5, queue moves fast): at noon the sunbeam through the 9-meter oculus hits the floor at its most vertical and dramatic angle. 1,900 years old, still the world's largest unreinforced concrete dome, and the reason every capitol building on earth has a dome.

Tip: Since 2023 entry is €5 with timed tickets that sell out on weekends — book at pantheon.cultura.gov.it the night before. Free on the first Sunday of each month. The dome walls are thinner at the top than a basketball to reduce weight.

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13:00

Antico Forno Roscioli

Food
Duration: 30min Estimated cost: €8

Walk south from the Pantheon through Via dei Cestari, 6 minutes to this bakery the Roscioli family has run since 1824. Point at the pizza bianca (white pizza, impossibly crispy and airy, ~€3/etto by weight) — it's non-negotiable. Add a supplì al telefono (fried rice ball with stretchy mozzarella, €2.50) for your Roman street food initiation. Eat at the counter, total damage under €8, back on the road in 15 minutes.

Tip: Pizza is priced per etto (100g) — point at what you want, they cut and weigh. Say 'ben cotta' if you like it crispy. Don't confuse this with Roscioli Salumeria restaurant next door — that's sit-down and triple the price.

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14:00

Piazza Navona

Landmark
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €0

From the bakery, weave 5 minutes north through the alleys and the elongated oval of Piazza Navona opens up — built on the footprint of Domitian's chariot-racing stadium, which is why it's shaped like a racetrack. Bernini's Fountain of the Four Rivers commands center stage while Borromini's Sant'Agnese church towers behind it — Rome's greatest artistic rivalry immortalized in stone. Afternoon light warms the ochre facades. Grab a bench, breathe, then drift south through Campo de' Fiori and across Ponte Sisto toward Trastevere.

Tip: Don't sit at Tre Scalini café for their famous tartufo — it's €18 at a table. Buy the identical tartufo for €5 at their takeaway counter inside. The portrait artists quote €30 then demand €80 when finished; politely walk past. Anywhere between here and the river with a photo menu outside is a tourist trap.

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19:30

Da Enzo al 29

Food
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €28

Cross the Tiber at Ponte Sisto and lose yourself in Trastevere's ivy-draped lanes — you've earned this. Da Enzo is a shoebox-sized trattoria where the cacio e pepe (€10) is a masterclass in what three ingredients can do when you don't cut corners, and the carciofo alla giudia (Jewish-style deep-fried artichoke, €7) shatters like a golden flower on your plate. No reservations, no website, no nonsense — line up at 19:15, the queue moves fast, and by the second glass of house wine you'll understand why people live in this city.

Tip: If Da Enzo's queue is over 40 minutes, walk 3 minutes to Trattoria Da Teo (Piazza dei Ponziani 7a) — same neighborhood quality, shorter wait, order the amatriciana. Iron rule for all of Trastevere: any restaurant with someone outside waving a menu at you is a tourist trap; the real ones have a handwritten menu and a queue.

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FAQ

Frequently asked questions

How many days do you need in Rome?

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

What's the best time to visit Rome?

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 Rome?

A practical starting point is about €55 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.

What are the must-see attractions in Rome?

A good first shortlist for Rome includes Colosseum & Roman Forum Overlook, Trevi Fountain, Pantheon.