Cinque Terre

How many days in Cinque Terre?

Plan 3-6 days for Cinque Terre. It's a multi-stop area, so 3 days only covers the headliners; 6 lets you settle into one base and day-trip out.

The minimum

3 days

3 days lets you base in one anchor town and tick the top two day trips.

The sweet spot

6 days

6 days lets you split between two bases, fold in three day trips, and not feel rushed at any of them.

Slow travel

8 days

8 days is for slow-travel mode β€” one base, no daily transit, deep local rhythm.

The headline things to do in Cinque Terre

From the Cinque Terre guide β€” these are the items that anchor a 3-day visit. For the full breakdown, read the Cinque Terre travel guide.

  1. Vernazza Harbor & Doria Tower β€” Vernazza

    The most photographed village in Cinque Terre, Vernazza wraps around a small natural harbor backed by a medieval tower and a cluster of orange, pink, and yellow houses. The harbor is small enough to swim across but big enough for fishing boats to dock. Climb the Doria Tower (€1.50) for a panoramic view over the rooftops and coast, or simply sit at a harbor-side table with a SciacchetrΓ  and let the scene settle over you.

  2. Manarola Sunset from Nessun Dorma β€” Manarola

    Perched on the cliffs above Manarola's colorful harbor, the terrace bar Nessun Dorma has become one of the most iconic sunset vantage points in all of Italy. Order a spritz or a glass of Cinque Terre DOC white and watch the light turn the stacked buildings gold and amber. Arrive 30–40 minutes before sunset and be prepared to share the terrace. Trattoria Dal Billy is another excellent option nearby for a full dinner with the same panorama.

  3. Corniglia Clifftop Village β€” Corniglia

    The only village in Cinque Terre not directly on the water, Corniglia sits 100 meters above the sea atop a promontory reached by a steep 382-step staircase (the Lardarina) from the train station below. It is the quietest of the five and the least visited β€” which makes it exactly the right place to escape the midday crowds. From the belvedere at the edge of the village, you can see both Vernazza to the north and Manarola to the south.

  4. Monterosso al Mare β€” Old Town & New Town β€” Monterosso al Mare

    The largest and most developed of the five villages, Monterosso is divided by a sea tunnel into the Old Town (Paese Vecchio), a medieval tangle of lanes around the church of San Giovanni Battista, and the New Town (Fegina), home to the only proper sandy beach in the Cinque Terre. The enormous carved rock figure known as Il Gigante (the Statue of Neptune) stands at the boundary between the two halves β€” a giant Atlas figure that once supported a terrace washed away in a 1910 storm. The anchovy fishing tradition here is centuries old; buy them preserved in salt or oil.

  5. Riomaggiore Rainbow Waterfront β€” Riomaggiore

    The southernmost village and the first stop from La Spezia, Riomaggiore tumbles down a narrow gorge to a tiny harbor surrounded by multi-colored buildings stacked like building blocks above the water. Despite heavy foot traffic, the harbor retains a working character β€” local fishermen still haul boats up the concrete ramp by hand. The village is also the start of the famous Via dell'Amore, whose reopening status should be checked before your trip.

  6. Sentiero Azzurro β€” Blue Trail β€” Between all five villages

    The famous Blue Trail (Sentiero Azzurro / Trail 2) is the low coastal path linking all five villages, hugging the cliffsides with views over the sea. It has been partially or fully closed for years due to landslide damage β€” notably the catastrophic 2011 floods that killed 13 people in Vernazza and Monterosso. Segments reopen and close with the seasons. Always check current trail status at park offices or cinqueterre.it before planning routes. When sections are open, the Corniglia–Vernazza stretch is particularly spectacular.

  7. Sanctuary of Our Lady of Montenero β€” Above Riomaggiore

    A 16th-century sanctuary perched on the hillside above Riomaggiore at 341 meters, reached by a scenic but steep 45-minute hike through vineyards and olive groves. The interior is richly decorated with votive offerings from sailors and fishermen. The real reward is the view from the terrace: the entire southern Cinque Terre coast spread below, the Gulf of La Spezia beyond, and on clear days, the Apuan Alps to the south. Far fewer visitors make the climb compared to the waterfront.

Frequently asked

Is 3 days enough in Cinque Terre?

3 days is the minimum for a satisfying visit β€” you'll see the headline sights but won't have flex time. If you can stretch to 6, you unlock a day trip and the food walks that make the trip memorable.

Is 10 days too long in Cinque Terre?

10 days is for travellers who want to slow down β€” eat at neighbourhood spots tourists don't reach, take repeat day trips, and live in the city. If you're a tick-the-list traveller, 6 is enough.

What's the ideal trip length for first-time visitors to Cinque Terre?

6 days is the sweet spot for a first visit β€” long enough to cover the must-sees, eat at three good spots, take one day trip, and not feel like you're racing a checklist. Less than 3 usually feels rushed; more than 10 is into slow-travel territory.

Should I add Cinque Terre to a longer regional trip?

Yes β€” Cinque Terre works well as a 3-6-day stop on a longer regional itinerary. Pair it with a nearby destination via the trip planner so the transit days don't compress your time on the ground.

Plan your Cinque Terre trip