Best of Italy in 17 Days Tour

rick steves tour best of italy

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  • Enjoy cruising in Lake Como by ferry
  • Visit South Tyrol Museum of Archaeology andFlorence's Accademia Gallery
  • Discover Orvieto City and San Brizio Chapel tour
  • Explore Colosseum tour
  • Visit Vatican Museum & Sistine Chapel

What's this trip about?

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Travel themes.

  • Hiking & Walking
  • National Parks
  • Nature & Wildlife

Destinations

Attractions.

  • Cinque Terre
  • Doge’s Palace
  • Piazza San Marco
  • Sistine Chapel
  • Vatican City
  • Historic sightseeing
  • Ruins & Archaeology
  • Short Cruise
  • Trains & Rail
  • Winetasting

Trip includes

  • A small, friendly group of 24–28 people — half the size of most tour groups
  • Full-time services of a professional Rick Steves guide and local experts who will make the fascinating history, art, and culture of Italy come alive for you
  • All tours and admissions — at no extra cost — covering at least 26 group sightseeing events , Lake Como ferry pass , South Tyrol Museum of Archaeology (Ötzi the Iceman) , Venice walking tour , St. Mark's Square and Basilica , Renaissance Florence walking tour , Florence's Accademia Gallery including Michelangelo's David , Uffizi Gallery tour , Pisa visit , Pesto demonstration , Orientation for "vacation" day in Cinque Terre , Hill town visit , Siena walking tour , Siena Duomo tour , Siena contrada visit and dinner , Artisan workshop visit , Assisi walking tour , Basilica of St. Francis tour , Umbrian wine tasting , Orvieto orientation and San Brizio Chapel tour , Ancient Rome walking tour , Colosseum tour , Forum tour , Pantheon , Vatican Museums , Sistine Chapel , Evening walk through Rome including Trevi Fountain…and more
  • All group transportation from Varenna to Rome
  • 16 nights accommodations in memorable, centrally located hotels
  • All breakfasts and half your dinners
  • All tips for guides and driver
  • Rick Steves Travel Store credit to use toward guidebooks for your trip
  • Guaranteed tour price, locked in the moment you make your deposit
  • Optional single supplements — this tour has a limited number of private rooms for solo travelers for an additional fee
  • Tour alum discount of $50 for each tour you've taken prior to 2017
  • 50% discount on a consulting appointment with our in-house experts to assist with your pre- or post-tour travel plans
  • Flexibility should you need to transfer, or cancel/interrupt your tour
  • Fine print: You are responsible for the cost of your drinks and free-time sightseeing. See our Tour Conditions Agreement for important details regarding everything listed above.

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Travel Map

The sleepy Lake Como village of Varenna is a quick, easy train connection from Milan. At 5 p.m. you'll meet your guide and fellow tour members at our hotel for a get-acquainted session. We'll then take a village orientation walk, pointing out places for dinner on your own tonight. Sleep in Varenna (2 nights). No bus. Walking: light.

Equipped with your included Lake Como ferry boat pass, you'll have the entire day and evening free to explore the villages and waterways of romantic Lake Como, including the elegant town of Bellagio. Or hike up into the Alpine foothills for unforgettable vistas. At breakfast, your guide can help you plan your day. No bus. Walking: light to strenuous (your choice).

Today we'll hit the road and drive high into Italy's Dolomite Alps, where locals speak German first, Italian second. Our destination is Europe's largest (and arguably most beautiful) Alpine meadow, the Alpe di Siusi. This evening, we'll share a hearty Tirolean dinner together at our mountain retreat. Sleep peacefully in the Alpe di Siusi area (2 nights). Bus: 6 hrs. Walking: moderate.

Breakfast is provided, but there are no group activities today. It's a breeze to reach Rome's airports by taxi or train. Your guide will help you with any post-tour planning, leaving you well prepared for the road ahead. Grazie e ciao!

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  • You choose budget, destinations, activities, transport & lodging type
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Dates & Availability

Check Current Availability, prices, specials with Rick Steves .

The total tour cost includes the tour price (regular or promotional) and the compulsory local payment. The promotional price is subject to change. Check directly with the operator for the latest price offer. The tour operator requires you to pay only the tour price to purchase your travel. The compulsory local payment will be paid when you join the trip. All prices are based on double, twin or triple share occupancy. Solo passengers will be accommodated in a double, twin or triple room according to availability with a passenger(s) of the same gender. Single supplement only needs to be paid if the passenger does not want to share and requests their own room. Discounts can only be applied at the time of booking and cannot be added at a later date, regardless of any changes made to the original booking.

Prices may vary due to local taxes and trip seasonality. Click "Request Info" to inquire directly with the tour operator for the final trip price.

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Rick Steves Reviews & Ratings

Our rick steve's "best of italy tour," starting in varenna, october 18, through rome, november 3, 2015..

We flew into Milan and toured the town on our own a few days. Then we took the train to Varenna on Lake Como to formally start our Rick Steves tour with our guide, L...

Other Rick Steves Reviews

This is about the store not the tours.

We purchased two backpacks from Rick Steves Europe. One of them arrived damaged and unusable. Their website says that you must contact them if you receive damaged me...

A Perfect 10

Sicily is Pure Eye Candy :: Will Leave You Wanting More :: Seamless Way To Travel The Island

A perfect "10" for the Rick Steves' Best of Sicily 11-Day Tour. My 1st tour with any company. This was a perfect combination of scheduled time and free time .. with ...

Longtime Travelers

Terrible Covid Experience

We are in Ireland now, traveling with Rick Steves Tours and a group of 27. Two days ago a member of the group tested positive for Covid, and we had all been exposed....

See all Other Rick Steves reviews

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Tour operator, rick steves.

Our mission is to inspire, inform and equip Americans to have European trips that are fun, affordable and culturally broadening. We value travel as a powerful way to better understand and contribute to the world in which we live. We strive to keep our own travel style, our world outlook and our business practices consistent with these values.

About Rick Steves

Guidebook author and travel TV host Rick Steves is America's most respected authority on European travel. Rick took his first trip to Europe in 1969, visiting piano factories with his father, a piano importer. As an 18-year-old, Rick began traveling on his own, funding his trips by teaching piano lessons. In 1976, he started his business, Rick Steves' Europe, which has grown from a one-man operation to a company with a staff of 80 full-time, well-travelled employees at his headquarters in Washington state. There he produces more than 50 guidebooks on European travel, America's most popular travel series on public television, a weekly hour-long national public radio show, a weekly syndicated column, and free travel information available through his travel center and website. Rick Steves' Europe also runs a successful European tour program. Rick Steves lives and works in his hometown of Edmonds, Washington. His office window overlooks his old junior high school.

--We research and write European guidebooks, produce a public television series and a public radio show

--We organize and lead energetic tours throughout Europe

--We sell select travel bags, guidebooks, maps, DVDs, and other travelers' supplies

--We offer travel consulting and trip planning services

--We teach do-it-yourself travel seminars

--We provide a wealth of free information about travel in Europe via our Travel Center and Website

--We travel a lot

What we don't do

--We are not travel agents, so we don't book flights, hotels, or rental cars

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  • International Flights
  • Passport and Visa Charges
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Sightseeing on Your Own

If you arrive in Italy before your tour begins, visiting Milan is a logical choice as we don't spend any time there during the tour. Use the Rick Steves Italy guidebook to get oriented. Ride the public transportation, try out a few words of Italian and get over your jet lag with lots of fresh air and exercise.

Here are suggestions for sightseeing in Milan: Leonardo da Vinci's Last Supper (reserve from home; details in the Rick Steves Italy guidebook) and Europe's third-largest cathedral, the Duomo. Milan is about an hour by train from Varenna, our tour's departure point, making it an easy pre-tour day trip.

The tour includes a Lake Como ferry pass on Day 2, allowing you to explore the many pleasant towns, such as Menaggio and Bellagio. But if you want more time to explore or hike, you may also want to cruise the lake before the tour begins.

Spending extra time after the tour in Rome? Here are a few suggestions for sightseeing that we do not do as a group: Borghese Gallery (reservations required), Spanish Steps, Capuchin Crypt, National Museum of Rome, Ancient Appian Way (great for biking), and catacombs.

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  • Blog: Cameron's Travels

Italy’s Best Destination: Anywhere

If you’re going to Italy, it’s tempting to hit the biggies: Venice, Florence, Rome.  But don’t forget that there’s so much of Europe to see, beyond its marquee cities. To mix things up, seek out some lesser-known towns that are, in their own way, just as satisfying but have a fraction of the crowds.

Finally returning to Europe just a few months ago, in addition to some old favorites (like the Cinque Terre and Siena), I made time for a few new places that most tourists miss . And I must stay, I liked them at least as much as the biggies. These four examples — Modena, Lucca, Treviso, and Trento — all happen to be in the northern part of Italy. But lesser-known gems like these are everywhere…and not just in Italy. 

On this trip, I finally made it to Emilia-Romagna, Italy’s most renowned culinary region. Foodies have discovered Emilia-Romagna, but so far it’s largely off the radar of mainstream tourism. Bologna is the capital and leading city, but I stopped off in three smaller towns — Modena, Parma, and Ferrara — that are more accessible while offering a culinary and cultural landscape that’s just as impressive. And my favorite of these was Modena .

rick steves tour best of italy

If you’ve heard of Modena, it’s probably because of food. This is the production center for the top-quality balsamic vinegar of Modena (aceto balsamico tradizionale modenese) — a thick, oozing, luxurious, black liquid that explodes on the tongue with decades of barrel-aged flavor. Modena is also the home of the world’s best restaurant , Osteria Francescana, owned and operated by the animated Massimo Bottura. If you’ve watched any “foodie TV” about Emilia-Romagna, you’ve surely seen Massimo mugging for the camera as he shaves delicate curls from gigantic wheels of Parmigiano-Reggiano. (I have no evidence that Massimo is contractually obligated to appear in every single Netflix series relating to food. But I have my suspicions.)

It was the food that brought my wife and me to Modena. We couldn’t get a table at Osteria Francescana — and anyway, we weren’t up for the €500-per-plate price tag. But we did reserve at Massimo’s casual bistro, Franceschetta 58 , which offered a sampling of that world-renowned fare for one-tenth of the price. While the five courses were a bit hit-or-miss, the highlights — including delicate, handmade tortellini in a Parmigiano-Reggiano fondue sauce — were astonishingly good.

rick steves tour best of italy

In fact, every meal we had in Emilia-Romagna was sensational. Italy has great food, but in its über-touristy towns, I find that I miss just as often as I hit. (Frankly, I can’t remember a single truly great meal I’ve had in Florence or Venice.) But in the untouristy towns, restaurants cater to locals rather than visitors, which gives them incentive to turn out excellent food at reasonable prices.

I was in Modena for a Sunday night, when virtually every trattoria and osteria in town was closed. After checking five or six, I landed on my “last resort” — the only place I could find that was actually open: Trattoria da Omer. I set my expectations low, simply relieved to find an alternative to a meager picnic dinner in my Airbnb. But it turned out to be far from an act of desperation; it was one my favorite meals of the trip. The owner brought out a big chalkboard menu, then proceeded to ignore it as he personally talked me through the options to craft my ultimate dinner. Strange as it sounds, it was at least as good as Massimo’s place.

rick steves tour best of italy

But Modena is more than food; that’s just a trojan horse for attracting travelers to one of Italy’s finest and most livable small cities. The streets feel manicured; the mismatched riverstone cobbles gleam in the hot sun. Arcades are populated by intriguing shops and delightful cafés. And the big, beautiful main square is a classic Italian piazza, with a church bell tower facing down a city hall tower over al fresco café tables. Later, an Italy aficionado told me that the church interior is also impressive. I wouldn’t know, because I didn’t bother to go inside; I was too busy enjoying the simple act of wandering around.

rick steves tour best of italy

By the way, one thing I notice about these “untouristy” towns is that they’re full of bicycles. Locals commute on streets and alleys, right through the center of town. From a “leaping out of the way of an oncoming bike” perspective, Modena felt like Amsterdam or Copenhagen. I don’t see this in the more touristy Italian cities — I imagine because their infrastructure is oriented more toward visitors than commuting locals.

In untouristy towns like Modena, another thing you notice is the near-total lack of souvenir stands. Instead of spinning racks of postcards and tacky T-shirts and shot glasses, you see pharmacies, fashion boutiques, midrange chain stores, hole-in-the-wall alimentari, and kitchen-supply shops. In short, places where locals do their shopping. While touristy towns have restaurants with exclusively Italian menus, the untouristy ones have a wider variety: Hawaiian-style poke is all the rage, and I spotted several sushi restaurants in Trento, of all places. I also noticed far more people of color in Modena (and other cities of Emilia-Romagna) than in Italy’s tourist hotspots, dispelling the misconception that Europe is an entirely white continent.

In Tuscany, my wife and I stopped off for lunch in Lucca — which has long been one of my favorite Tuscan towns . I liked it even more this time around. It feels approximately the same size, bustle, and quaintness of Siena, where we’d had lunch the previous day. And, while not exactly “undiscovered,” it was noticeably (and enjoyably) less crowded than Siena.

rick steves tour best of italy

This got me thinking about why places become popular, or don’t. Lucca is perfectly placed to not become a tourist town, while still remaining convenient for tourists — an improbable feat. Lucca sits in the northwest corner of Tuscany, rather than along the central Florence-Siena-Rome corridor. There is one place people venture out here to visit, and it’s just a half-hour from Lucca: Pisa. The Field of Miracles is stunning and worth seeing. But its popularity has transformed Pisa (or, at least, that little corner of Pisa) into one of Italy’s crassest and most grotesque tourist traps.

And yet, there sits Lucca. In the time it takes me to drive from my house to my office each morning, you can go from the Leaning Tower to uncrowded Lucca. Far from being “overshadowed” by Pisa, this works to Lucca’s advantage, for those of us who enjoy less touristy towns. If you’re enjoying a picnic and ants or bees are driving you crazy, you set out a little dish of sugar water to distract them while you happily munch away on your food. Pisa is the sugar water; Lucca is the main course.

rick steves tour best of italy

Farther north, I spent a couple of nights in Treviso, which is as close to Venice as Lucca is to Pisa. But I didn’t go to Pisa on this trip, and I didn’t go to Venice, either. Instead, I enjoyed simply exploring Treviso, which I had entirely to myself. The only other American tourist I spotted was a gentleman from Atlanta who lives part-time near Lake Como and, like me, is an aficionado of untouristy Italy.

Why did I go to Treviso? I asked myself that several times before I arrived, and the answer was entirely practical: Because it was the only place between Milan and Croatia that had a direct flight to Prague, where I was heading next. (Plus, I’d read an intriguing New York Times article about Treviso a couple of years ago, which makes many of the same points I’m making here.)

rick steves tour best of italy

Treviso is unspectacular, yet it’s delightful. People moon over Treviso’s canals, but that’s an overstatement — motivated, I believe, by a sort of inferiority complex relative to Venice. Treviso’s canals are pretty, but there aren’t that many of them, and anyway, I’ve been to plenty of cities with canals that still manage to be miserable. The Chicago stockyards have canals.

Don’t go to Treviso for the canals; go because it’s simply a pleasant, beautiful, untouristy town. Maybe it’s because I was in Treviso to wander, rather than to work, but I never even began to get a handle on the curling snarl of streets that make up its historical core. It’s small enough that you can enjoy getting lost without getting nervous. Mainly I enjoyed sitting at the café tables that fill the enormous loggia on the main square. (In fact, I sat there as I wrote this blog post.)

rick steves tour best of italy

One thing I love about these untouristy towns is that each one has its quirky claims to fame, which it’s extremely proud of. Treviso is, reputedly, the birthplace of tiramisù and of Benetton. I enjoyed one of the former during my time here and, not coincidentally, have put on enough pandemic weight not to be too interested in the latter at the moment.

Speaking of which, I had several great meals in Treviso — again, far more than I can remember having in Venice, where I’ve spent many times as many days. After doing just a little homework, I found that I simply couldn’t miss — each meal was a masterpiece, and very affordable.

rick steves tour best of italy

Would I go out of my way to visit Treviso? Probably not. But my goal was simply to melt into Italy for a couple of days. And for that purpose, Treviso was ideal. Some suggest staying in Treviso and day-tripping to Venice — just 30 minutes by train. While that would be a great strategy for the right traveler, this traveler didn’t bother going into Venice, and didn’t miss it one bit.

I also enjoyed stopping off for a lunch in Trento , on my way between Emilia-Romagna and Castelrotto, in Italy’s Dolomites. Trento is the capital of Trentino, a region that acts as a sort of hinge between the Germanic far-north and the rest of Italy. While Castelrotto and Alto Adige (a.k.a. Südtirol) feel absolutely Germanic, Trento feels like a Germanic city populated by Italians. This produces something of an identity crisis for the trentini. In the Germanic world, pedestrians wait patiently at red lights. In Italy, those lights are flagrantly disobeyed. I noticed a strange reluctance in Trento: Standing at a red light, with not a car in sight, everyone waited for about five seconds…then, once one person walked, they all did.

rick steves tour best of italy

Trento has handsome, wide streets with marbled sidewalks. Each one stretches toward forested peaks and is lined by skinny, stony townhouses with big shutters and faded frescoes. Traffic-free lanes are lined with stone arcades and all of the hallmarks of an untouristy town: big chain stores with no interest in tourists, locals commuting by bike, and lots of people sitting at cafés sipping cappuccinos or bright-orange spritz cocktails. Trento’s cathedral feels like a castle, right down to the crenellations along its roofline, and it’s topped with an Austrian-style onion dome.

The list goes on and on. I stopped off at a few other new-to-me places that I also enjoyed. One was Bassano del Grappa, where I had a fine stroll and a coffee on the piazza before continuing on my way. I mention it only because I have a really cool photo of the place:

rick steves tour best of italy

Of these four places — Modena, Lucca, Treviso, Trento — only one of them is covered in the Rick Steves guidebook, or appear on a Rick Steves tour itinerary: Lucca. (That also happens to be the most touristy — or, I guess, “least untoursty” — of the bunch.) After visiting each one, I wondered whether I should pitch Rick on adding them to the book. But that would make our overstuffed Italy book even more gigantic. Unless you want to start buying your guidebooks in volumes, we need to keep them selective.

More important, I don’t think a guidebook is necessary to enjoy these towns. None of them has a single “must-see” sight, or an artistic masterpiece that people travel miles for. Sure, if you’re bored, you can get a list of museums and churches from the TI. Or you can just relax, enjoy, toggle out of “tourist mode” and into “temporary European” mode…and melt into Italy.

rick steves tour best of italy

As you plan 2022 travels, consider doing just that — maybe not the entire trip, and not necessarily these four towns in particular. But at some point, mix in a day or two in a place that you never imagined you’d visit. A place your friends have never heard of. You may find those are the places you’ll never forget.

What about you? What are your favorite untouristy towns?

If you enjoy out-of-the-way places, pick up a copy of my new travel memoir, The Temporary European — packed with travel tales and insights. You can get it now in Kindle version , and it’ll be available everywhere on February 1.

56 Replies to “Italy’s Best Destination: Anywhere”

How do we get the latest accurate information regarding Covid restrictions? We’re planning on traveling to Rome in March.

I would keep a close eye on the US embassy site in Italy, as things change very quickly. We were in Italy in September-October 2021 and felt very safe, but much has changed since then.

Lisa is correct. We are in Florence now and rules change frequently. Several times each day, we are asked for Green Passes, have to wear high-quality medical masks and remain outside to await turns in shops, museums, etc. I rather enjoy feeling I’m in the safest country, one that is doing everything to keep people safe. The only people I have observed arguing with the police (always a bed idea) are Americans. We will be here a total of three months and actually get great information from the NYT Coronavirus Newsletter. Sometimes closures are not announced, so stay flexible and relaxed.

Try Sherpa. We are traveling to Italy next week and all of the restrictions, requirements and forms are there for us to fill out.

Great read. We are spending a month in Bracciano for the month of September. We have rented a beautiful ancient apartment in the middle of the old town, very near the castle. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.

Awesome article Cameron!!!

That was a good article. We traveled north after leaving the Cinque Terra heading towards Austria and happened on a little town called Sabionetta! It had one hotel and a wonderful place to eat! We found the piazza where they were holding a mission festival. Bought some great wine and jellies from the nuns! A very non-touristy town. I think we were the only English speaking ones there!

Happy to see your photo and one line about Bassano! It is a beautiful area around the Ponte di Alpini and a stop at the grappa museum is fun. Shhh! Don’t tell anyone but… In nearby Possagno you can visit the church dedicated to hometown hero Antonio Canova who has art all over Italy and even a statue in The Louver. Picturesque Asolo and the prosecco wine region of Valdobbiadene round out the experience just north of Treviso. It is a wonderful area, but I hope it remains untouristy as well.

The Venato has many small treasures, including Bassano del Grappa, where Hemingway has a museum opened on the weekends only. Ferrara is also beautiful and Padova with the BO University of Padova with a very old Medical School and the unusual 4 architectural types of the St Anthony of Padova Cathedral. Also the Scrovenci

Thank you for this article. Treviso was our home base when we traveled to Italy. What a wonderful, friendly town. Incredible food that was reasonably priced. We traveled to and from Venice several times, took the train to Florence, and to Verona for an opera at the magnificent arena. The only tour we took was to the hill towns of the Veneto. The best of the best was Bassano del Grappa. Fascinating history, the wonderful Ponte Vecchio designed by Palladio, the grappa museum and shop, and the most wonderful shops, and town square. It’s absolutely lovely in the spring and summer with each building decked with flowers and the Dolomites as a back drop. The smaller towns are worth the effort!

Marcia… we just found out our cruise will not end in Venice as previously scheduled because of a new law regarding cruise ships. We will disembark in Treviso. Do you have any recommendations for places to stay for a couple of nights?

While author John Grisham is best known for his novels about lawyers, he also wrote the fun “Playing For Pizza.” A washed-up third-string NFL quarterback finds himself as the starting quarterback for a team in . . . Parma, Italy. Grisham’s descriptions of the food and culture of Emilia-Romagna are SO evocative and make me want to visit there someday!

That was a fun read!

Cameron- Si, si, si ! After two trips to Italy during fall 2021, including an afternoon in Lucca and a whole week in Bologna, couldn’t agree with you more. Bologna in particular was an incredible surprise. My adult daughter and I chose Bologna as our base specifically because of its central location in the Emilia-Romagna region (translated: food), and because it is a beautiful and varied city in its own right. Bologna’s historic center is big enough (roughly 1.5 miles across) to provide endless options for walking, shopping & dining for all budgets, dining, and a variety of under-appreciated sights, attractions and activities. Not to mention miles and miles of porticoes that have made the city a UNESCO World Heritage site (see https://whc.unesco.org/en/list/1650). They also help when it rains. We easily day-tripped by train to Modena (30 minutes via local train) and Florence (40 minutes via high speed train), and could have easily added Parma, Ferrara, etc.). As sure as Tagliatelle Bolognese is delicious, and visiting a different cafe and gelateria every day is a worthy task, Bologna and surrounding towns are indeed worth a few pages in Rick’s guidebooks.

Totally agree with your comments – only thing I would disagree with is your suggestion to included Bologna and surrounding towns in R.S.’s guidebooks. It is one area of Italy that is very enjoyable due to being “non-touristic”.

Totally agree with Bob’s comments – only thing I would disagree with is your suggestion to included Bologna and surrounding towns in R.S.’s guidebooks. It is one area of Italy that is very enjoyable due to being “non-touristic”.

Bob – love to hear that you had a great week in Bologna recently! I am taking my 2 college aged sons there next month. We will be there 4 nights before heading to Rome. In addition to the food, there is great interest in the automotive industry and history there. We have a tour booked at the Pagani factory and will also visit Ferrari museum. Any tips for day trips, restaurants, etc would be welcomed!

I’m about to move to the Roero region, southeast of Torino, and have traveled fairly widely in Italy. I always urge Americans to see what they “should,” and then to venture outside the big three. If you happen through Bassano del Grappa again, there’s an interesting museum celebrating the Alpini (the Alpine soldiers) next to the covered bridge.

Bassano del Grappa is also home to the Poli Grappa Museum. From there I also enjoy taking day trips to Asolo and Asiago a couple of more non-touristy places especially Asolo. And a short ride to Marostica is also recommended. I have unfortunately only been there in odd numbered years so I have never gotten to witness the human chess game in the main piazza. https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/3f/Marostica6.JPG

Awesome article and so true. There are many “under the radar” locations throughout Italy that we hope to explore. A little surprised at the comment of having difficulties finding high quality meals in Florence and Venice. My wife and I were in both cities as recent as November 2021 and had two of the best meals of our life in Venice (Veno Vero and Trattoria Alla Scalia). Also went back twice to our favorite restaurant in Florence (Rosso Crudo) which seems never to be busy. As Rick has always promoted, we get to know the locals and find our best recommendations from just talking to them. And sometimes we get lucky and stumble upon (off the beaten path of course) what becomes one of our favorites not only because of the delicious food, but also the atmosphere and staff. We seriously love Italy like our second home and stay in touch with friends we have made through our travels. To all of the Rick Steves staff, writers, guides, and all those involved in producing the fantastic content and for keeping our dreams alive…THANK YOU!

I lived and worked in Rome in 1978-1979 I knew Rome like the back of my hand. I returned in 2019 to find it like a Turkish ” bazaar” . No more small ” alimentari” the monument of Victorio Emanuelle looked like a beehive. I couldn’t see the monument from the street and on the streets around and inside was full of card readers card tricks. After 3 days in the city I figured I better go to Venice. It was February so It wasn’t loaded with busful of tourists. 1 thing for sure foreigner regardless where they from they order ” pizza”. And I order ” bisteca Romana or exelent seafood in Vernazza”

We loved Vincenza – no tourists, but where Palladian lived and worked, and every building and cathedral glows with his style. An easy train ride from our favorite ‘base camp’ Verona. Mantua, Moderns, Padua, Vincenza, and a foray into the alps to Bolzano. Vincenza is worth a day, the others could be several days.

I have been to all of these towns, and your assessment is spot on…Ferrara BTW has the oldest wine bar in Italy, make it a stopping point the next time.

I discovered Ferrara about 5 years ago when I needed to choose a place on the map to stop the night before going to Venice. Fell in love with it and love thinking about the other off the beaten path towns you mention and likely so many more.

Hard to believe UNESCO world heritage sites could possibly be “under the radar.” They are all fantastic, however.

Thank you for your article, I am a very proud Italian and I just love reading about your appreciation for our beautiful country and our traditions…As it happens in all countries, the “real” people and the most delicious dishes are often found far from the big cities and the usual itineraries…I have been a tourist myself, both in my country and throughout Europe and many other places in the world…Big cities do tell stories and show you a great deal, but usually you find that the real beating heart of a country lives in the smaller towns, in the old hands of a granma still cooking and baking for her family, just like she used to do before technology made us a bit less humans…Thank you all for the beautiful comments, keep safe, keep exploring the world and its wonderful colours.

Love Lucca! Our hope is to spend an entire month there at some point in the future to really appreciate daily life in Italy. Best memories of our two days there…the young man at the gelato shop who appreciated our attempts at Italian, so he took us in the “back” to show us what he was making and give us samples; the bakery where we bought the best focaccia served by guy who roared with laughter when we told him he looked like Nicholas Cage; and the crowd that gathered on the street, in the rain, to ooh and aah as a truck attempted to make a turn on one of the very narrow streets. It still makes me smile.

If one has any interest in historic Italian automobiles, Basano del Grappa has the lovely Museo dell’automobile Bonfanti-VIMAR; Modena has the lovely museum devoted to Stanguellini who built beautiful winning race cars from common FIATs. Of course not far from Modena is Maranello, home of Ferrari but head out of town in the opposite direction and one can visit Lamborghini.

Go to Bologna, the town with the oldest university in the western world. Medieval towers, great food, and (sorry to say) even shops where you can buy distinctly local clothing. When I went there a few years ago, before a hiking trip through Tuscany, Rick’s guide book said, “Don’t go here; go to Ravenna.” WRONG. Where else do you get authentic spaghetti Bolognese? Slow down, and enjoy the town.

Lucca was a favourite of ours. I could go back any day and bike or wander across the city walls.

Your stories of un-touristy restaurants reminded me of our time in Olcio just outside of Como. Our friends made a happy mistake and booked us in a B&B in Olcio. We arrived in the evening and the B&B made us a reservation at some local restaurant. Ridiculously good unforgettable multi course home style authentic Italian meal fo 15 euros. We loved it so much we went back the next night. We were the only tourists there with a couple of tables of locals. One of the top meals of our lives and as you say, the unknown parts of Italy are almost always the best.

Very timely as we will be in Venice for four days in April between our RS Sicily and Rome tours. I can see a change in plans on the horizon. Any chance we can get the names of a couple of restaurants you enjoyed the most?

PS: love your new book, The Temporary European!

In whatever city you’re visiting just wander down the narrow, quieter side streets and look for the small cafes & restaurants with only a few tables outsides. The places with menus only, or mainly, in Italian and avoid places with menus that include picture of food. These are the places where the locals eat. You cannot go wrong.

I disagree with the suggestion that one cannot find a good meal in Venice or Florence. Some of the best meals I’ve had in Italy were in those cities. For food lovers I suggest looking into a cooking class. My friend and I signed up for one that took us shopping for our ingredients at the local markets then spending the rest of the day learning, cooking, making new friends and eating fabulous food with wine pairings. One of my favorite memories from Eataly.

Thank you for the article. I agree with everything. Sarteano is a good place from which to see Tuscany with day trips. It is such a big help to go with Italian speakers to the smaller towns. The Cinque Terra, Florence, Venice, and Rome have changed so much since the 80’s. My Italian brother-in-law says to go in the winter to miss the tourists.

We spent a week in San Pietro en Cariano which is about 30 minutes outside of Verona. We had a couple of the best meals of our lives there. There are also wonderful wineries making Amarone and Valpolicello. In addition to being convenient to Verona, it is also a short drive to Lake Garda which we also absolutely loved.

My favorite less-visited city was Salerno. It’s at the bottom of the Sorrentine Peninsula on the coast. (It was much less touristy than Sorrento.) We went in mid-November 10 years, to see Paestum. The Christmas lights were up, and as we stayed over the weekend many people came in the evening to enjoy the lights and Christmas shopping. There are buses to the Amalfi coast from Salerno, but we didn’t have enough time.

Downloaded your kindle ebook… Can’t wait to read it!

Hi Cameron. This is Gary, the “gentleman from Atlanta who lives part-time on Lake Como” that you mentioned in this blog. I really enjoyed the short chat we had in Treviso back in September 2021, maybe if we meet up again some day, we’ll have time to stop for an espresso or a Aperol spritz. I enjoyed reading your take on Trento and Modena and they are on my list of out of the way towns to visit in the near future. My plan is to return to Italy March 15 -May 18. Happy travels to you!

Gary! So great that you found this post. I really enjoyed bumping into you and having a chat. Hopefully we’ll cross paths again someday. Happy Travels!

My paternal grandparents emigrated from Lucca in 1913. My wife and I had the great fortune to go back and visit Lucca 100 years later, in 2013. We spent several days there walking the streets and enjoying everyday life, imagining what it must have been like for them and knowing that Lucca probably hadn’t changed much since they were there. We also took a train to my grandfather’s home town of Castelnuovo Di Garfagnana and spent two days there. Thanks to the incredible kind and generous hosts at the TI we were able to locate old commune records listing his parents and siblings and also hiked to a hillside that overlooks the valley where he was raised. This entire experience was so richly rewarding and emotional. We had also visited the “usual” tourist sites on a wonderful Rick Steves Heart of Italy tour prior to this side trip and as spectacular the tour was, nothing could beat our time spent in the Lucca Province and reconnecting with my paternal roots. Thanks for highlighting my family’s special part of northern Italy! My next trip needs to be to Pulia to connect with my mother’s family roots.

My family is from a small town in Calabria called San Vito Sull Ionio. It is a small well kept town and is near the ionio Sea beach area called Soverato! Love going to Italy and we are raking our family there this summer all 11 of us. We had planned this trip in 2020 to celebrate our 50th Anniversary! We are going to Venice, a Tenuta in Tuscany, then on to Rome.My children leave and we continue our trip down to the hometown to visit family. I have your books and love them!

We loved this village in Umbria… nice wine and lots of related Agritourism within shouting distance of Assisi.

This village, Torre del Colle, is a medieval castle recently renovated with all the needs of tourists: a beautiful locale, close to other tourist areas, hostel, B&B, and restaurant(s) along with outdoor activities. We did not stay here, but wish we had.

The first time we visited Italy – with our green Rick Steves Guidebook – everywhere we went in Siena and the Cinque Terre we saw the green book sticking out of someone’s backpack. This was back in the 90s, and both those places were very ‘untouristy’ at the time. I hate to say this, but inclusion in the green book makes the place a destination for thousands of tourists.

So we love you guys – but you don’t have to include every lovely Italian town in the guidebook. ;^)

Why don’t you or Rick offer a tour to these lesser- known places not just as side triip suggestions?

We Love Italy and have been there several times, inspired by Rick Steves to enjoy major sites, as well as to move on to back door places. From Rick’s back doors, we have found our own in this amazing country. Of towns described in this great article, we have only visited Lucca, though we’ve been to Verona and the Dolomites on one trip. We love to ride bikes on the Renaissance walls of Lucca right after checking in to our B&B. We’ve always wondered about the mountains we saw from the northern part of the wall. In 2014, we decided to do a Northern Tuscany trip. Wonderful! We picked up a car at the Florence airport and drove a southern route to Lucca, looping to the Medici Villa dei Poggio a Caiano, one of 12 villas the Medici owned. Only three other visitors all afternoon! We got over jetlag in Lucca with art, music, and food for a few days. Then drove through the Garfagnana to our base in Barga, where we stayed in a small villa across the valley with a view of the duomo and its huge trees against a backdrop of the Apuane Alps. We walked along an ancient cobbled road into Barga for dinners. We did a day trip to Fortezza delle Verrucole, which guarded the pass from France to Italy in the middle ages, and other drives to the Grotta del Vento (Cave of the Wind), and Isola Santa (a small village partly submerged by a modern reservoir with an interesting church and a lovely stream with white marble chips instead of gravel on the shores). One one mountain drive, we emerged from a reeally loong tunnel to a stunning view of sky, the Ligurian Sea, and marble mountains dotted with quarries. On to Pietrasanta, our coastal base where we saw Botero statues and frescoes. We took a day trip to tour Carrara quarries, eat lardo (amazingly good), and do an abbreviated Cinque Terre hike (Corniglia to Monterosso al Mare). We stopped for one night in Pistoia (silver altar at duomo, wonderful museum in city hall, place where the pistol was invented!) on the way to Florence for 5 days. We always stay in a RS-suggested place in the centro of Florence and enjoy strolling from dinner to our B&B after most tourists have left. We make reservations to avoid frustration. I recommend Jane Fortune’s To Florence Con Amore for backstreet sites such as Last Supper frescoes in refectories around the city. I have a severe and chronic case of Stendhal Syndrome!

We’ve been fortunate to have been in Italy seven times. Last year we finally made it to Lucca and stayed for three days. We loved it. The wall, the towers, the walks inside the city, churches, museums, beautiful homes, and the food as well. Maybe my personal favorite part was walking all the way around the top of the wall which is amazingly tall and wide with terrific views into and out of the city. It will take you a while but the views are extraordinary. Go. It’s a terrific city.

Rovereto, near Trento, is magnificent! On our visits there we saw no tour groups. It‘s a marvelous place for wandering. We love the Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art and the Casa D‘Arte Futurista Depero, which made us aficionados of this terrific, prolific artist with his graphic design, textiles, puppets and more. There are a botanical garden, parks, turrets, hills, small producers, castles, vistas, hiking opportunities, vineyards, and a weekly market. Highly recommended!

In the north of Italy, my favorite ‘not in Rick’s book’ place is Bergamo. I was lucky enough to spend two weeks there about ten years ago, and loved the architecture, the the neighborhoods, the food and the wine… And in the south, my favorite is Caserta, with its stunning royal palace, and its older incarnation, Casertavecchia, full of twisty medieval lanes.

I completely agree with your comments to visit the less touristy locations, too. I always add a couple to an itinerary. In Italy, we’ve been to Moena in the Dolomites – charming, Grosseto – had a fun unexpected night local music festival and an amazing dinner, Lucca, Arezzo – attended their jousting festival and my B&B host recommended a fantastic tiny restaurant, Stresa – lovely and stayed last time at a boutique hotel on Isola Bella, Parma – memorable meal at La Forchetta & my favorite Italian cathedral. 2020 & 2021 cancelled itineraries are happening this year, so Bergamo, Mantova, Modena (nice you mentioned it, too!), Ferrara and Spello are coming up in a few months!

On the flip side, I really feel sorry for Cinque Terre, and to an extent, what’s happened to Venice. We enjoyed the leisurely hiking & boating and general relaxing ambiance of Cinque Terre many years ago. There’s a delicate balance between tourist dollars & local living.

Thanks for this article, Cameron. It makes me want to extend our September tour in Tuscany, which ends in Lucca. We’ve been there before and love it. Maybe we’ll venture out a little from Lucca…. I want to mention Cremona, which is a train ride (1 hour) from Milan. Yes, it’s a bit out of the way but there is a violin museum there that is fantastic. Also, the squares have pianos and the students walk up and play at will. Great experience, off the beaten path.

Probably not considered “untouristy“ but not your typical place people visit when going to Italy for the first time, we spent two days in Orvieto and were totally charmed! We traveled with friends but they stayed in Rome and then we all met up in Florence. We still think about Orvieto and going back, taking our friends this time so they can experience the charming little hilltop town as well:)

My daughter will be studying in Rome for 6 weeks. We plan on visiting and making a trip to Modena. Does anyone have any recommendations for accommodations? We will be ctaking the train in from Venice. I have no idea where to begin. Thank you for your time.

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rick steves tour best of italy

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Rick Steves Best of Italy

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Rick Steves

Rick Steves Best of Italy Paperback – November 3, 2020

There is a newer edition of this item:.

Rick Steves Best of Italy

  • Expert advice from Rick Steves on what's worth your time and money
  • Two-day itineraries covering Venice, the Cinque Terre, Florence, the Hill Towns of Central Italy, Rome, Naples, Sorrento, and the Amalfi Coast
  • Over 80 full-color maps and vibrant photos
  • Rick's tips for beating the crowds, skipping lines, and avoiding tourist traps
  • The best of local culture, flavors, and haunts, including walks through the most interesting neighborhoods and museums
  • Trip planning strategies like how to link destinations and design your itinerary, what to pack, where to stay, and how to get around
  • Suggestions for day trips to Milan, Lake Como, Pisa, Verona, and Padua
  • Coverage of Venice, Milan, Varenna, Lake Como, Verona, Padua, Riomaggiore, Manarola, Corniglia, Vernazza, Monterosso al Mare, Florence, Pisa, Siena, Montepulciano, Montalcino, Assisi, Orvieto, Civita di Bagnoregio, Rome, Naples, Sorrento, Pompeii, Capri, and the Amalfi Coast
  • Updated to reflect changes that occurred during the Covid-19 pandemic up to the date of publication
  • Print length 536 pages
  • Language English
  • Publisher Rick Steves
  • Publication date November 3, 2020
  • Dimensions 5 x 0.88 x 8 inches
  • ISBN-10 1641712732
  • ISBN-13 978-1641712736
  • See all details

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Rick Steves Best of Italy

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  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Rick Steves; 3rd edition (November 3, 2020)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 536 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1641712732
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1641712736
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.27 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5 x 0.88 x 8 inches
  • #47 in Travel Dining Reference
  • #129 in general Italy Travel Guides
  • #407 in Tourist Destinations & Museums Guides

About the author

Rick steves.

Guidebook author and travel TV host Rick Steves is America's most respected authority on European travel. Rick took his first trip to Europe in 1969, visiting piano factories with his father, a piano importer. As an 18-year-old, Rick began traveling on his own, funding his trips by teaching piano lessons. In 1976, he started his business, Rick Steves' Europe, which has grown from a one-man operation to a company with a staff of 100 full-time, well-travelled employees at his headquarters in Washington state. There he produces more than 50 guidebooks on European travel, America's most popular travel series on public television, a weekly hour-long national public radio show, a weekly syndicated column, and free travel information available through his travel center and ricksteves.com. Rick Steves' Europe also runs a successful European tour program. Rick Steves lives and works in his hometown of Edmonds, Washington. His office window overlooks his old junior high school.

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Acclaimed writer Rick Steves talks Bellingham, travel tips ahead of Village Books event

Rick Steves sits on the beach in downtown Edmonds in April 2020.

BELLINGHAM — Rick Steves might love Bellingham as much as your grandmother loves Rick Steves.

“Bellingham’s just a place where, I think, Kathmandu (in Nepal) is a household word,” the famous travel writer said in a phone call with the Bellingham Herald. “People are outward looking, people prioritize for travel, and people are thoughtful.”

That last detail is especially important for the “Europe Through the Back Door” author, who views his job as inspiring thoughtful travel.

“The mindless traveler, they just walk down the main street in Amsterdam, Damrak it’s called. And right there between Hooters and the Hard Rock Cafe, they find a box office selling tickets to commercial gimmicks,” Steves said. “They’ll buy those tickets and they’ll think that’s what there is to do in Amsterdam here — the torture dungeon, and the wax museum, and the Dalí exhibit.”

Steves is coming to town on April 4, for a talk hosted by Village Books at Bellingham High School. The Edmonds-based author has a history of making the drive an hour north, dating back to his days as a self-published author in the 1980s. More recently, he’s given talks at Village Books, which he called “one of the most beloved bookstores in the United States.”

“For about 20 years or more, I think, I’ve been coming up to Bellingham to give a talk with Village Books,” Steves said. “We try to do this each year and share the latest on European travel, so people can learn from my mistakes rather than their own and travel smartly.”

How COVID changed European travel

Steves, who just returned from a trip to Italy, said he plans to focus his talk on the ways travel in Europe has changed since the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Europe’s always changing, my job is to make mistakes, take notes,” Steves said. “When I get ripped off I celebrate, they don’t know who they just ripped off. I’m going to learn that scam and pack it into my talk, and come home and share it with people.”

Over the pandemic, tourist hot spots grew to appreciate the controlled crowds caused by COVID-19 safety protocols, according to Steves, and many kept them in place.

“In Europe, they are enjoying the not being in a pandemic with gusto, it’s just wild and crazy. But one thing they kept is a lot of formerly crowded sites appreciate being able to require people to have timed entry, so they don’t have a mob scene at their front door,” Steves said.

Travelers who haven’t adjusted to these new protocols risk a trip full of delays and pivoting on the fly.

“If you didn’t know that, you might very well go to the Sagrada Família church in Barcelona, or to Anne Frank’s house in Amsterdam, or the Borghese Gallery in Rome and think you can just walk in,” Steves said. “But no, you cannot buy a ticket at the door, you’ve got to have it in advance at a lot of these places.”

That’s a problem for Steves, who’s made a career of advocating for well-planned travel.

“A trip, if it’s well-planned, can be a life-changing experience,” Steves said. “I love the idea of transformational travel, that just involves a little bit of planning.”

Where, when and how to get tickets

Where: Bellingham High School, 2020 Cornwall Ave., Bellingham

When: The event starts at 7 p.m., April 4.

Tickets cost $10. Get them here.

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  • Question about Be...

Question about Best of Italy Tour

My 70 yr old parents want to see Italy - they have never been to Europe before, so thinking that the RS Tour would be perfect for them.

A couple of questions:

With the tour format, will they be able to skip the schedule and just choose to walk around and take it easy, if they so decide? The main reason for the tour is so that they dont have to worry about trains, local transportation etc. But once situated, they might want to slow down and do their own stuff.

how international are these tour groups? My parents love to meet folks from other countries and was wondering if the mix of folks on the tour is mainly US based or also from Asia, Europe etc ?

While participants can opt out of anything if they choose, the tours are definitely active, and they will have to handle their own luggage.

There might be a few Canadians, but pretty much just Americans.

Maybe a My Way tour would suit? https://www.ricksteves.com/tours/italy/my-way-italy

oh wow - just read about “my way” I think they will love the format! will be sure to share with them!

thanks much.

I haven't been on that particular tour but I've been on many, including in Italy.

Generally people participant in most/all activities. Occasionally an activity might be skipped if someone isn't feeling well or an activity is more physical than someone is able to do but the guide has to be informed beforehand. We did skip one museum tour in Rome because we had already been to the museum the year before. The guide told us when they'd be done and where to meetup with the group.

There are generally at least a few hours of free time every day. In the morning the guide will post suggestions of thing to do during free time or restaurant options for meals on your own.

If you are just looking for transportation and hotels have you looked at https://www.ricksteves.com/tours/italy/my-way-italy .

Typically most tours have a large contingent from the greater Seattle area where Rick Steves is based but there are people who live all over the US. We live outside of Boston.

I just did the Best of Italy this fall. I'm 73 but had been on a number of Rick Steves tours and knew what to expect. I think I might have been the oldest member because I generally was assigned hotel rooms on the ground or first floor.

Here's my Trip Report.

https://community.ricksteves.com/travel-forum/trip-reports/best-of-italy-sept-30-october-16-2022

I did go off on my own several times. I skipped the group walk in Venice because I'd been there before and skipped the 1st afternoon activities in Rome because again, I'd done it before and was going to meet friends for dinner. There is absolutely no problem going off on your own but they'll want to let the guide know what they are doing as well as their "travel buddies", a RS tour standard where each tour member checks to see if another is there when it's time to leave.

There are some times when they will need to stay with the group, usually that will be on a transit day when you've stopped to see a sight, have lunch on your own and then head to the bus which may be parked a bit away from the city center.

Our tour had 4 Canadians on it but that is the extent to "global" coverage by and large.

How good a shape are your parents in? I was walking 6 miles a few days a week before my tour. I did not do enough stair work for Italy and I knew it going it. There are a lot of hills.

If they don't want something this intense, they might look at Road Scholar and carefully assess the "activity level" for tours in which they are interested. I've not done a Road Scholar tour of Italy but I have done a number in France and England.

this is all very helpful - ty!

just to provide more context about their plans ( which I am making…)

They fly into Zurich.. head to Interlaken and spend a few days there. I think they can handle Switzerland on their own.

I am thinking from there they will go to Milan start the RS Tour - and then fly out of Rome.

This past summer travelled from Venice to Interlaken - so should be able to provide the details they need.

Planning for Aug/Sept 2023

For their pre-tour time, I"d probably have them stay in the mountains either in Lauterbrunnen or up on the mountainside in Muerren or Wengen rather than not in the mountains in Interlaken.

I'd give them 2 nights minimum in Milan depending on what they want to see. If they want to see the Last Supper they'll need tickets well ahead. Buy from the museum itself. I added the English tour for an extra 8E and was glad I did. Very helpful and the tour guide was excellent. They can also get tickets ahead for the Duomo to access the inside of the cathedral, the rooftop, the excavated area under the Piazza and the Museum. There are also interesting museums there if they like.

I'd go to Varenna a day ahead just to get in place and to give them some flex time in case of a train strike.

They might enjoy an extra night or two in Rome although many on my tour left on the last day. I stayed an extra day to see the Aurea Domus (Nero's palace that is now underground) and the Borghese Gallery.

TBH, if they are new to European travel, I'd go with the full group tour and not the My Way. It's easier to manage because someone else is doing the hard work of getting tickets to all the sights, etc.

My wife and I did the Rick Steves Italy My Way tour in 2012. The most difficult portion was the first day landing in Venice, making our way to the island, and finding our hotel. We arrived two days early before the tour started. We did far too much walking those first few days as we had never been to Italy before and wanted to take it all in. As for the tour, you can skip any or all suggested activities in each city. Yes, you will need to walk to the bus with your own luggage and climb stairs at the hotels. In Monterosso in the Cinque Terre region it is a bit of a walk from the train station to town where the hotels are located.

We just recently completed the Best of Europe in 21 days tour with Rick Steves which of course is a guided tour. (Our guide was Andy Steves). Comparing that to a My Way tour, we now prefer the guided tour as we missed so much being on our own each day. However, if you are concerned about how strenuous these tours are, perhaps My Way is the best choice. You will enjoy Italy either way.

We took the RS Best of Italy tour and absolutely loved it!

Here’s a few things to consider: If they’re going to take the My Way Italy tour, to begin in Venice, I would recommend taking the train to Stresa for two nights and then take the train to Venice. That would split the train time in half. Stresa is very relaxing and has a gorgeous garden on Isola Bella - a 5-minute ferry ride, and a beautiful setting of grand historical hotels.

If they decide on the Best of Italy tour, they can head to Varenna after Switzerland.

Taking the My Way tour, they will miss the gorgeous Dolomites that are on the Best of Italy tour, but they will have spent time in Switzerland’s mountains already.

Would they be tired if they were taking a 2-hour active walking tour of their nearest large city? If so, definitely choose the My Way tour.

If your parents love to meet people from other countries, they will be meeting local Italian tour guides on the Best of Italy tour in Florence, Assisi & Rome. Learning as much Italian as possible before their trip (and using it) while doing the My Way tour can also help.

About those "walking tours". My experience last summer on two different RS tours was that they quickly became "standing tours." Not an issue if standing is not difficult for your parents, but I found that standing that much began to wear on me. Near the end of the second tour I was opting out of the last hour of these types of tours when held in a museum.

I do agree that you learn a great deal on a guided tour and that most of the local guides are excellent in what they present. I just had a few too many of these walking tours by the time I had done 2 back to back tours. I also found that some of my tour mates would ask "rabbit" questions and the tour guides would follow those rabbits for about 10 minutes while we stood there. I am pretty sure that even the person who asked about local smoking habits never anticipated a 10 minute answer involving the history of cigarettes.

If it’s there first time, I’d recommend the guided tour. The guides and the local guides really add to the experience in my opinion. While I’ve not done Best of Italy, my husband and I have been on several tours, our last one at age 71. We walk regularly and have never felt like any of the walking tours were too much. Most of our tours have included several members 70+. Several times members have skipped a scheduled tour due to being tired, not interested, other plans, etc. in Switzerland, one woman with a heart issue stayed at our hotel (it was a vacation day and she was worried about doing too much at the altitude) and our tour guide arranged for the hotel to provide lunch. Regularly there have been tour members using a cane and no issues. If they like planning, do the My Way. If they prefer the guides, do the regular one—they will still have time on their own.

You've had plenty of comments about being 70 on the tours, and being able to skip group activities. I wanted to comment on the mix of folks. Yes, the vast majority of tour members will be from the US, and a large number of those from the Seattle area.

But... we have also had tour mates from Canada, the Philippines, South Africa, Iran, Mexico, Puerto Rico, and Australia. We have had guides from the US, England, France, Scotland, Greece, the Netherlands, Spain, Italy, and Germany.

We've met Americans from states ranging from Alaska to Florida, Arizona to Massachusetts. And we've been on tours with people ranging in age from 9 to 85. Singles, couples, families, gay, straight, black, white, and brown.

Have them sign up; they'll fit right in and have a wonderful time.

This topic has been automatically closed due to a period of inactivity.

rick steves tour best of italy

Rick Steves Named His All-Time Favorite Country And It Isn't Even In Europe

I t's no secret that Rick Steves is devoted to Europe. He's spent 100 days a year there every year since he turned 18 (bar two COVID-19 years). Steves loves London, has a passion for Prague, and adores Ærøskøbing in Denmark. Steves' love of travel doesn't end at Europe, however. He's hit up destinations as diverse as Central America, Iran, and Papua New Guinea. 

But surely, Steves' favorite destination will be in Europe, right? Nope. On his blog , Steves wrote how he used to travel in Asia just as much as in Europe. And then he confesses: Rick Steves' all-time favorite country is India. He promises that he isn't saying India for the shock value. Steves claims that "India wallops anyone's self-assuredness. India rearranged my cultural furniture." The country humbled Steves and made him a better person, he wrote.  

Steves' first trip to India was in 1978. In an article on his website, he recounts a journey full of breakdowns, wonder, and loose stools when traveling on land from Istanbul to Kashmir. Sadly, we're unlikely to retrace that journey now, with Afghanistan, in particular, being one of the world's most dangerous countries for foreigners . But we can go straight to India to experience what Steves calls "pure decadence" in terms of culture shock.

Read more: 12 Most Underrated Travel Destinations Around The World

Culture Shock And Making Connections

In an episode entitled "First Impressions of India," broadcast on Steves' radio show " Travel with Rick Steves ," Steves talked to guidebook writer Sarina Singh about traveling the country. He calls India "fragrant, mystifying, and challenging." Steves' love for the country is clear, though he recognizes that India can be confronting for first-time visitors. In this episode, there's a wealth of advice about tapping into the culture that Steves loves so much and dealing with feeling overwhelmed. 

One bonus of traveling in India is that English is widely spoken, so you should be able to converse with many people you meet. Singh recommends brushing up on your cricket knowledge. While not a popular sport in the U.S., cricket is beloved in India and being able to strike up a conversation on the topic will give you an "in" with many. Another excellent way to immerse yourself in India is by enjoying the cuisine. Steves recommends going vegetarian and eating with your hands, as both practices are common in India.

Finally, if you need an escape from India, Steves and Singh have some tips and tricks. One is to find a five-star hotel and sit in the lobby, whether you're a guest or not. Steves also recommends slipping into a movie theater and enjoying one of Bollywood's finest. The theater will be air-conditioned, and it's a great way to enjoy another aspect of Indian culture.

Rick Steves Wants You To Go Here In India

Steves and Singh go on to give more specific advice about where to go in India. They say that visitors can have vastly different experiences depending on their destination. For many first-timers, the choice is to concentrate on the lush, tropical south or the blockbuster destinations of the north, like the Taj Mahal and the palaces of Rajasthan.

Both Steves and Singh recommend visiting the south first. Singh remarks that traveling in southern India is easier, as the pace is more relaxed. There are fewer touts than in northern India, making traveling in the south a less stressful or awkward experience. Steves agrees, naming the southern state of Kerala as his favorite part of India. This underrated state boasts serene backwaters, verdant tea plantations, and beaches to rival any in the Caribbean. It's also home to magnificent temples where ancient rituals allow you a glimpse of Hindu culture.

Concentrating on a small area of India is also a way to go deep into the culture with less shock. Steves and Singh recommend not trying to pack too much into your time in the country. Instead, they advise taking it slow and realizing that in India, you're not in control.

Read the original article on Explore

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