Capri
Italie · Best time to visit: May-Jun, Sep-Oct.
Choose your pace
One Day on the Bluest Rock — Cliff Edges, a Chairlift to the Sky, and Sunset Through Marble Columns
La Piazzetta (Piazza Umberto I)
LandmarkFrom Marina Grande take the Funicolare di Capri — a 3-minute climb that emerges directly into Piazza Umberto I, the island's open-air drawing room. Arrive now, before the 10:30 day-tripper ferries land, and the square still belongs to islanders in linen sweeping their doorsteps under the white clock tower. The four pastel cafes look like postcards but charge like them too; orient yourself, then keep moving — you have an island to circle.
Tip: The four cafes on the Piazzetta charge €8-10 for an espresso at the table. Walk 80 m down Via Le Botteghe to Bar Tiberio's standing counter — same coffee, €1.50, and the bar where Capri's shopkeepers and fishermen actually start their morning.
Open in Google Maps →Gardens of Augustus & Belvedere di Tragara
LandmarkExit the Piazzetta down Via Vittorio Emanuele past the Quisisana, then turn onto Via Camerelle and the boutique-lined Via Tragara — 20 minutes of bougainvillea and pastel facades before the path opens onto Belvedere di Tragara, the sea-level shot of the Faraglioni sea stacks (morning sun lights them from the east, water at maximum electric blue). Loop back via the small road to the Gardens of Augustus for the counterpoint: the same three rocks from above, with Via Krupp's serpentine staircase corkscrewing 100 m down the cliff at your feet.
Tip: Via Krupp itself has been closed for rockfalls since 2014 — photograph from above, don't try the gate. Inside the gardens, walk past the main belvedere where every cruise group lines up and continue to the small terrace at the southern end: identical Faraglioni view, half the people. The €1.50 entry is cash only.
Open in Google Maps →Raffaele Buonocore
FoodWalk back up Via Vittorio Emanuele — 8 minutes uphill, you'll smell the frying pastry a block before you see the storefront. Buonocore has been pressing caprese panini and frying sfogliatelle through this same window since 1971; the queue is constant but moves in three minutes. Take everything to go and walk two minutes to the cool stone steps of the Certosa di San Giacomo — Capri Town's only genuinely quiet bench, a free belvedere over the Faraglioni from yet another angle.
Tip: Order the caprese panino (€8 — Sorrento mozzarella, sun-dried tomato, basil on warm focaccia) and one sfogliatella riccia (€2.50 — ask for it warm, ricotta version not custard). Skip every sit-down place on Via Camerelle: the same panino on a tablecloth costs €22 and won't taste any better.
Open in Google Maps →Seggiovia del Monte Solaro
LandmarkFrom Piazzale Cerio catch the orange ATC bus to Anacapri (15 min, €2, departures every 20 min), get off at Piazza Vittoria and walk 100 m to the chairlift base. The 13-minute open-air ride lifts you alone in a single seat over lemon orchards and whitewashed roofs to the island's 589 m summit, where the entire Bay of Naples opens out — Vesuvius across the water, Sorrento Peninsula curling east, the Faraglioni 600 m straight below your feet. Afternoon haze has burned off by now and visibility is at its sharpest.
Tip: Sit on the right side going up for the full bay panorama. At the summit, skip the bar's jammed terrace — walk 5 minutes behind it on the marked dirt path to the ruined hermitage of Santa Maria a Cetrella, the only spot on the island where you see the Faraglioni from above. Chairlift is €14 return, runs continuously 09:30-17:00; the last descent is 16:30 sharp — set an alarm or you walk down the mountain.
Open in Google Maps →Villa San Michele Terrace
LandmarkFrom Piazza Vittoria walk up Via Capodimonte — 7 minutes through residential Anacapri, past lemon trees and a stone-arched lane that opens onto the gates of Villa San Michele. You're skipping the interior; the magic is on the public terrace at Piazzetta San Michele, where Axel Munthe's marble columns frame Vesuvius and the Bay of Naples as the western sun lights everything orange. Stay the full hour — the colour temperature shifts every ten minutes from gold to copper to rose.
Tip: The €12 museum ticket buys access to Munthe's interior and the sphinx — but the famous 'columns over the bay' photograph is taken from the public Piazzetta San Michele next door, which is free and open until dusk. Arrive by 17:00 to catch the angle when light rakes the columns from the west; by 17:45 the columns are silhouetted and you've missed the shot.
Open in Google Maps →Trattoria Materita
FoodWalk down Via Capodimonte and turn right onto Via Giuseppe Orlandi — 5 minutes through Anacapri's residential heart and you reach Materita, a vine-shaded courtyard of twelve tables where the Cacace family has cooked since 1986. This is the place Anacapresi come for proper Caprese cooking — the dishes Marina Piccola tourist traps charge triple for and serve frozen. Sunset filters through the lemon leaves above your table while you eat; the rhythm is unhurried, the bill is honest.
Tip: Order the ravioli capresi (€14 — fresh ricotta, marjoram, in a tomato sauce simmered four hours) and the pezzogna all'acqua pazza (€26 — local sea bream poached in tomato-garlic-caper broth). Reserve the day before by phone; the courtyard is small and walk-ins get the indoor tables. PITFALL: Never eat on Capri's Piazzetta or at Marina Piccola — €40 spaghetti and views of other tourists; one Marina Piccola lounge famously charges €30 just to sit on a sunbed. Anacapri's prices stay honest because locals still eat here. If catching the last ferry to Naples or Sorrento same-day, confirm departure at the port that morning — last fast ferry is typically 19:30 in summer, 18:00 off-season.
Open in Google Maps →First Glimpse of Paradise — Cliffs, Lemon Groves and the Faraglioni at Golden Hour
Funicolare & Piazzetta (Piazza Umberto I)
LandmarkStep off the overnight quiet of Marina Grande and ride the four-minute funicular straight up the cliff face — the bay opens beneath you, Vesuvius on the horizon. You arrive in the Piazzetta before the 10:30 ferries unload day-trippers, when the bell tower of Santo Stefano still casts a long shadow across empty café tables. Wander the lanes off Via Le Botteghe while the boutiques are rolling up their shutters.
Tip: Use the Piazzetta as a passing landmark, not a coffee stop — sitting at Bar Tiberio or Gran Caffè means a €2 espresso plus a €6 'service charge'. Locals stand at the counter inside Bar Caso for a €1.50 cappuccino instead.
Open in Google Maps →Certosa di San Giacomo
MuseumFrom the Piazzetta, head down Via Vittorio Emanuele past the Quisisana hotel — six minutes of cypress-shaded descent before a stone gate opens into a 14th-century Carthusian monastery hidden between two cliffs. The two cloisters are silent at this hour; almost no one finds their way here, leaving you alone with bougainvillea, Roman statues from the Blue Grotto, and a back terrace that hangs straight over the southern sea.
Tip: Closed Mondays — open Tue-Sun 10:00-14:00 only, so this is the one window. Walk through to the rear garden (Parco Filosofico) for the head-on Faraglioni view that Gardens of Augustus visitors don't realize exists.
Open in Google Maps →Trattoria Verginiello
FoodClimb back up Via Vittorio Emanuele and turn left onto Via Lo Palazzo — five minutes uphill to a vine-covered terrace looking down on Marina Grande bay. A family kitchen running for three generations: order the ravioli capresi (€16), pillows of caciotta and marjoram in fresh tomato that were invented on this island, and the totani e patate (€18), a squid-and-potato stew that tastes of the rocks below.
Tip: Ask explicitly for 'la terrazza' when you sit down — the indoor room has no view. Arrive by 12:30 sharp; by 13:30 the small terrace is full and they stop seating walk-ins for the next two hours.
Open in Google Maps →Gardens of Augustus & Via Krupp Viewpoint
ParkFrom Verginiello walk south down Via Vittorio Emanuele then Via Camerelle — eight minutes through Capri's chic shopping spine, all Prada and lemon-print linens. The terraced gardens cascade over the cliff: Faraglioni rising from cobalt water on the left, the white zigzag of Via Krupp carved into the rock below on the right. Afternoon light strikes from the west — this is the postcard angle that has sold Capri for a hundred years.
Tip: Stand on the lower-left terrace for the framed Faraglioni-with-Krupp-switchbacks shot — the upper terrace looks like every Instagram photo. Via Krupp itself is gated due to rockfall; ignore guides offering 'private access', it's permanently closed.
Open in Google Maps →Belvedere di Tragara
LandmarkWalk Via Matteotti and Via Tragara — fifteen minutes along Capri's most elegant lane, villa walls dripping with bougainvillea, the scent of jasmine pressing down from above. The clifftop terrace at the end delivers the closest, most cinematic head-on view of the Faraglioni: three sea stacks lifting out of the water like a sculpture. From 17:30 the western light turns them gold; by 18:30 they glow rust-orange.
Tip: If your legs feel strong, descend the 300 stone steps below Tragara to Da Luigi ai Faraglioni at sea level for an Aperol Spritz against the rock arch — but the climb back up takes 25 minutes of straight stairs and there is no taxi alternative.
Open in Google Maps →Aurora Capri
FoodTwelve minutes back along Via Camerelle, now lit by shop windows, brings you to Via Fuorlovado and a hundred-year-old Capri institution. The 'Pizza all'Acqua' (€22) — thin, blistered, mozzarella and a streak of pepperoncino — is the dish even Sorrento locals ferry over for. The grilled catch of the day (€38, priced by weight) arrives whole, deboned tableside, with nothing but lemon and Anacapri olive oil.
Tip: Reserve a day ahead for a table on Via Fuorlovado, not the inner room — say 'tavolo esterno'. Pitfall warning for Capri Town: avoid every restaurant whose tables physically sit on the Piazzetta — they add €8 per person 'service' on top of inflated prices, and the food is the worst on the island.
Open in Google Maps →Above the Bay — Anacapri's Electric Blue, Lemon Light and a Sun That Falls Into the Sea
Grotta Azzurra (Blue Grotto)
LandmarkWalk down to Marina Grande pier and board the first 08:30 boat to the cave entrance on the island's northwest cliff — twenty minutes around the coastline as the sea is still glass. At the entrance you transfer into a tiny rowboat and lie flat as the boatman pulls you through a one-meter opening; inside, sunlight refracts through an underwater arch and turns the whole chamber electric, glowing blue. Going first means no bobbing queue of fifty boats — by 11:00 the wait is two hours.
Tip: Cash only at the cave (€18 entry + rowboat fees, plus ~€15 boat from Marina Grande). Check the morning sea report at the pier kiosk — even a 1m swell closes the cave with no refund. If it's closed, take the bus directly to Anacapri and skip ahead.
Open in Google Maps →Villa San Michele
MuseumTake the small boat back to Marina Grande, then the orange bus up the dizzying Scala Fenicia road to Anacapri — alight at the Capodimonte stop, fifty meters from the gate. This was the clifftop home of Swedish doctor Axel Munthe, full of Roman antiquities he traded for medical care in the 1890s. The pergola walk leads to a sphinx terrace that may be the most photographed viewpoint on the island — the entire Bay of Naples sweeps below to Vesuvius.
Tip: Touch the sphinx's left flank with your left hand and make a wish without looking at the sea — the local superstition Axel Munthe wrote about. For the photograph, position yourself at the western end of the colonnade so the sphinx silhouettes against the bay rather than the sky.
Open in Google Maps →Trattoria Il Solitario
FoodWalk down Via Capodimonte to Anacapri's Piazza Vittoria, then three minutes south on Via G. Orlandi — the entrance is an unmarked archway you'd walk past three times. Inside is a hidden lemon garden where tables sit beneath fruit-laden branches. Order the linguine al limone (€18), made with Anacapri lemons picked that morning, and the coniglio all'ischitana (€22), the slow-braised rabbit that is the true signature dish of this side of the island.
Tip: They take no reservations and sit guests strictly in arrival order — be there by 13:00 or wait 40 minutes. Insist on 'il giardino' (the garden); the indoor dining room has none of the magic and serves the same food.
Open in Google Maps →Seggiovia Monte Solaro Chairlift
LandmarkFour minutes back to Piazza Vittoria, where a single-seat chairlift drifts silently up the mountain — thirteen minutes alone above terraced vegetable plots, lemon groves and somebody's grandmother hanging laundry. At 589 m the entire shape of the island unrolls below: Faraglioni to the east, Sorrento across the water, the Amalfi peaks behind, and on a clear day the smudge of Stromboli volcano on the southern horizon.
Tip: Ride up after 14:30 when the day-tripper buses are heading back to ferries — you'll often have a chair to yourself. Last chairlift down is 17:00 (15:30 in winter); miss it and the only way back is a 1.5-hour walk down rocky steps in fading light.
Open in Google Maps →Faro di Punta Carena (Lighthouse)
LandmarkFrom Piazza Vittoria take the small bus marked 'Faro' — twenty minutes along Anacapri's western edge through pine forest and past abandoned watchtowers. A red-and-white lighthouse stands on the island's southwestern tip, the only point where Capri faces open ocean, not the bay. This is the single place on the island where you watch the sun sink directly into the water — around 19:30 in summer, 17:15 in winter — with no land in the way.
Tip: Arrive 45 minutes before sunset to claim one of the flat rocks above the lighthouse — the platform fills fast. Lido del Faro below has cocktails with the same view (€15 Spritz) but their food menu triples normal prices; drink only and eat back in town.
Open in Google Maps →Le Arcate
FoodTake the same 'Faro' bus back to Piazza Vittoria, then a five-minute walk down Viale T. De Tommaso to a corner trattoria with stone arches and an outdoor terrace under fairy lights. The Anacapri locals' choice — wood-fired pizza and grilled fish at a third of Capri Town's prices. Order the pizza Margherita DOC (€11) made with Agerola mozzarella, and the spaghetti alle vongole (€18) heavy with island clams.
Tip: The wood oven only fires up after 19:00 — pizza isn't available before. Pitfall warning for Anacapri: street vendors near Piazza Vittoria offering 'free limoncello tasting' charge €15 for a thimble afterward — buy a sealed bottle at Limoncello di Capri's main shop on Via Capodimonte for a fraction of the price.
Open in Google Maps →Plan this trip around Capri
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Frequently asked questions
How many days do you need in Capri?
Most travelers enjoy Capri in 1 days, with enough time for headline sights and a slower meal or museum stop.
What's the best time to visit Capri?
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 Capri?
A practical starting point is about €110 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.
What are the must-see attractions in Capri?
A good first shortlist for Capri includes La Piazzetta (Piazza Umberto I), Gardens of Augustus & Belvedere di Tragara, Seggiovia del Monte Solaro.