Cinque Terre

Destination

Cinque Terre

Five colourful fishing villages clinging to the Ligurian cliffs. Hiking trails, vineyards, and the bluest sea.

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Travel guide

Cinque Terre Travel Guide

The Five Villages of Cinque Terre

The Cinque Terre — literally "Five Lands" — is a string of five fishing villages along the rugged Ligurian coast between Genoa and La Spezia. For centuries, these villages were accessible only by sea or on foot, connected by mule paths that clung to cliffs above the Mediterranean. The railway tunnel, punched through the rock in 1874, changed everything, but the villages themselves barely changed at all: no high-rises, no wide roads, no sprawling suburbs. What you see today — pastel tower-houses stacked above tiny harbours, terraced vineyards held up by thousands of kilometres of dry-stone walls, olive groves and lemon trees on impossible slopes — is essentially what you would have seen a hundred years ago. UNESCO made the Cinque Terre a World Heritage Site in 1997, and the national park that protects it was established in 1999.

Monterosso al Mare

Monterosso is the largest village, the most resort-like, and the only one with a proper sandy beach. It is divided into the old town (the medieval centre with the striped church of San Giovanni Battista) and Fegina, the newer beach area connected by a tunnel. The beach at Fegina stretches for about 300 metres — half free, half with paid sun loungers (around 25 EUR for two chairs and an umbrella). For food, L'Ancora della Tortuga serves excellent fresh anchovies marinated in lemon, and the focacceria on Via Roma does some of the best focaccia in Liguria. Monterosso is the best base if you want beach time alongside your hiking, and it has more hotel options (and better accessibility) than the other villages.

Vernazza

Vernazza is widely considered the most beautiful of the five, and it is hard to argue. A natural harbour ringed by tall, narrow houses in every shade of ochre and terracotta, a medieval watchtower (the Doria Castle, 2.50 EUR entry, worth it for the views), and a piazza that doubles as a boat ramp. There is a small pebbly beach by the harbour — arrive before 10 AM in summer or forget it. Ristorante Belforte, built into the old castle walls, serves seafood with a view that justifies its prices. Vernazza is the most photographed village and consequently the most crowded between 11 AM and 4 PM; visit early morning or at sunset for the best experience.

Corniglia

Corniglia is the outlier — the only village not at sea level. Perched on a 100-metre-high ridge, surrounded by vineyards rather than water, it feels more like an inland hill town. You reach it by climbing 382 steps (the Lardarina) from the train station, or by a shuttle bus that runs every 20 minutes. The reward is the quietest village of the five, genuine vineyard atmosphere, and panoramic views in every direction. Corniglia has the fewest tourist facilities — a handful of small bars and restaurants — but that is part of its charm. If you want to taste real Cinque Terre wine without the tourist markup, the Cantina de Mananan wine bar on the main street is the place. Corniglia also has the closest access to Guvano, a secluded (officially closed but still visited) beach at the bottom of a cliff path.

Manarola

Manarola is the postcard. The cluster of coloured houses tumbling down a rocky spur into the sea, with tiny boats hauled up on the slipway, is one of the most recognisable images in Italy. The village itself is tiny — you can walk end to end in five minutes — but it packs in a 14th-century church, a few excellent trattorias, and the Nessun Dorma terrace bar, where the aperitivo view over the village at golden hour is worth every cent of a 12 EUR Spritz. Swimming is from the rocks below the harbour — bring water shoes. Manarola is also the starting point (or end point) of the Via dell'Amore, the famous cliffside lovers' walk to Riomaggiore; check current conditions as sections are periodically closed for landslide repairs. The village is an ideal base for a stay: compact, romantic, and central to all five.

Riomaggiore

Riomaggiore is the southernmost village and often the first one visitors see, since it is the closest to La Spezia. Tall pastel houses line a narrow valley that drops to a small harbour where fishing boats bob in startlingly clear water. The swimming here is excellent — follow the path past the harbour to a rocky cove with deep, clean water. For food, Dau Cila, right on the waterfront, does a superb fritto misto and trofie al pesto. Riomaggiore has a slightly more local, lived-in feel than Vernazza or Manarola, with a cooperative winery (Cantina Cinque Terre) where you can taste the rare Sciacchetrà dessert wine — an amber, honey-scented wine made from grapes dried on racks in the sea breeze, produced in tiny quantities. A half-bottle costs around 18–25 EUR and makes an unforgettable souvenir.

Hiking the Trails

Hiking is the soul of a Cinque Terre visit. The Sentiero Azzurro (Blue Trail, trail #2) connects all five villages along the coast and is the most popular route. The full walk takes about five hours, but most people hike it in sections. The stretch from Monterosso to Vernazza (about 2 hours, moderate difficulty) is the most scenic, with sweeping coastal views and wildflowers in spring. Corniglia to Manarola (1.5 hours) winds through vineyards and offers the best inland scenery. You need a Cinque Terre Card to hike the Blue Trail — available at train stations and park offices (7.50 EUR for a one-day hiking pass, or 16 EUR for the Cinque Terre Treno card which includes unlimited train rides between the villages). For a more challenging experience, the high trail (Sentiero Rosso, trail #1) runs along the ridgeline above the villages with views to Corsica on clear days — it takes a full day and requires good fitness and proper boots.

Getting Around Cinque Terre

Trains are the lifeline. They run every 10–20 minutes between the five villages and La Spezia, and each journey takes just 2–5 minutes. The Cinque Terre Treno card (16 EUR/day) gives unlimited rides and trail access — it pays for itself after about three single trips. Cars are not allowed in the villages (Monterosso has a small car park at the edge of town, and Riomaggiore has limited parking, but both fill before 9 AM in summer). In peak season (June–September), ferries run between Monterosso, Vernazza, Manarola, and Riomaggiore, offering a beautiful perspective from the water — a single ride costs about 5–8 EUR, or a day pass is 25 EUR. From La Spezia, you can also book private transfers on BlueKeys for airport connections to Pisa or Genoa.

Best Time to Visit Cinque Terre

Late April through mid-June and September through mid-October are the sweet spot. Wildflowers blanket the trails in spring, the sea is warm enough for swimming by June, and the terraced vineyards turn golden in October. July and August bring serious overcrowding — the villages can feel suffocating when cruise-ship day-trippers arrive in the thousands. If you must visit in peak summer, stay overnight (the villages transform after 6 PM when the day-trippers leave) and hike early in the morning. Winter is quiet and can be atmospheric, but many restaurants and hotels close, some trails are shut, and the weather is unpredictable. The grape harvest (vendemmia) in late September is a magical time to visit if you can time it.

Food & Wine

Ligurian cuisine is lighter than what you will find in southern Italy — olive oil instead of butter, fresh herbs, and an emphasis on vegetables and seafood. Pesto alla genovese was born in this region: the real thing is made with Ligurian basil (smaller-leafed and less peppery than other varieties), pine nuts, garlic, Parmigiano, Pecorino, and extra virgin olive oil. Order it on trofie (short twisted pasta) or trenette (flat ribbons). Anchovies are the local fish — served fried, salt-cured, or marinated in lemon. Focaccia di Recco (paper-thin dough stuffed with stracchino cheese) is a Ligurian obsession, and you will find good versions in Monterosso. For wine, the local white is Cinque Terre DOC — a blend of Bosco, Albarola, and Vermentino grapes that drinks crisp and mineral, perfect with seafood. The star, though, is Sciacchetrà, the passito dessert wine unique to these villages — complex, amber, and produced in such small quantities that a 375ml bottle costs 20–30 EUR. Pair it with a slice of the local honey cake.

Practical Tips

Pack light. Seriously. Every village involves stairs — hundreds of them. Rolling suitcases are a nightmare; use a backpack. Wear sturdy shoes even if you are not planning to hike, because the village streets are steep, uneven, and often slippery. Bring a refillable water bottle (there are public fountains in each village). Book accommodation well in advance for June through September — the villages have limited rooms and the best places sell out months ahead. Browse BlueKeys stays for curated apartments and rooms in the villages. Wi-Fi can be patchy in the villages. ATMs exist in Monterosso and Riomaggiore but not in Corniglia — bring cash. Respect the national park: stay on marked trails, do not pick flowers, and do not swim outside designated areas. Finally, consider exploring beyond the five — the nearby towns of Portovenere and Lerici, across the Gulf of Poets, are stunning and far less crowded. Check BlueKeys tours for boat excursions along the coast.

Practical info

Getting there

The Cinque Terre villages are connected by frequent trains along the Genoa–La Spezia line (5–15 minutes between villages). La Spezia is the main gateway, reachable by high-speed train from Milan (3h), Florence (2.5h), and Rome (4h). Pisa airport (PSA) is the nearest international airport, about 80 km away. Cars are not allowed in the villages.

Frequently asked questions

Where to stay in Cinque Terre?+
BlueKeys offers curated holiday homes and apartments in Cinque Terre. Book directly with local hosts and save 10-15% compared to other platforms.
What to do in Cinque Terre?+
Popular activities include boat tours, cooking classes, guided hikes, and cultural excursions. Browse our tours page for current availability and prices.
How to get to Cinque Terre?+
Most visitors arrive via Naples airport. BlueKeys offers private transfers directly to Cinque Terre. Ferry and bus options are also available.
When is the best time to visit Cinque Terre?+
May and September offer warm weather with fewer crowds. June is excellent but busier. July and August are peak season. October still has pleasant weather as the season winds down.
Can I book tours and services in Cinque Terre through BlueKeys?+
Yes! BlueKeys offers boat tours, private transfers, cooking classes, and more in Cinque Terre. Browse our tours and services pages for current availability.

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