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How to experience Italy like a local this summer

How to experience Italy like a local this summer

BBC News3 days ago
There are a million reasons to go to Italy, so why do visitors always go to the same few places? Here are our favourite ways to shake up your Italian itinerary.
Does it seem like everyone is in Italy right now? Italy has been ranked as the top destination for American travellers in 2024 and 2025, according to a study by Price Waterhouse Cooper and the United States Tour Operators Association, but the honour should come as no surprise. The nation welcomes 80 million international visitors annually, drawn by its pastel-coloured villages, Renaissance treasures and Roman ruins.
From the Etruscans to the Romans to the Byzantines, each civilisation that has passed through this boot-shaped nation has left their own unique architectural stamp on the land, transforming its cities into open-air museums. Italy also enjoys a reputation for a deliciously laid-back lifestyle – especially in summer, when everybody's in the piazza and beach umbrellas stud the coastlines.
"Italy doesn't ask you to be a tourist; it invites you to feel something," says Ruben Sanpietro, CEO and founder of Visit Italy. "It's a country where chaos meets elegance, where silence in a mountain village can be as powerful as an opera at [Milan's] La Scala [theatre]. You can visit 10 times, and the 11th time still surprises you, not with something new, but with something ancient you hadn't noticed before. Italy doesn't entertain you. It transforms you."
A 2024 study by TourismA found foreign visitors stick to the same few popular cities – equaling just 1% of Italy's territory. Here are our favourite ways to explore the other 99% this summer.
Why Italy?
There are a million reasons to visit. Here are some of our favourites.
The Palio of Siena attracts history buffs with its recreation of a medieval horse race (2 July and 16 August), while Milan Fashion Week and opera season in Shakespeare's fair city of Verona are musts for culture vultures. Sports fans can experience the Giro d'Italia (9 May to 1 Jun in 2025) or the Formula One Grand Prix held in Imola (spring) and Milan (late summer).
Hack: Upwards of 30 million pilgrims are expected to head to St Peter's Basilica in Italy's already-overtouristed capital city to celebrate the Jubilee year for Roman Catholics. Visitors dreaming of Rome in 2025 would do well to skip summer and come during the shoulder months of October to March, avoiding the religious holidays of Easter, the Immaculate Conception (8 December), Christmas and the Epiphany (6 January).
For a detour from the bucket list art cities, visit the Dolomites. This limestone mountain range – spanning the Veneto, Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol and Friuli-Venezia Giulia regions – is beloved by Italians for its epic skiing and hiking, and lacks the tourist crowds of Rome, Florence and Venice.
"Limited time is an issue," admits Fiorenza Lipparini, DMO of Milan & Partners, which runs the website YesMilano. "There are no close international airports and a lack of accommodation – we're talking about very small villages."
The Dolomites, with their wild valleys, gorges and lakes offer thrilling hikes year-round. "They really are the most beautiful mountains in the world, from the Swiss Alps to [the valley of] Val Gardena," says Lipparini. "They're good in the summer almost as much as in the winter."
Meanwhile, Agrigento, Sicily is Italy's 2025 Capital of Culture. Explore its Unesco-listed Valley of Temples, and unwind on the stunning Scala dei Turchi beach.
Food & drink
Italian food is one of the most beloved cuisines in the world, but its superpower is its deep regionality. Tasting a familiar favourite like pizza in its homeland is a holy pilgrimage, but failing to try the deep culinary cuts is sacrilege.
When in Rome, enjoy pasta alla carbonara (pasta with egg yolk, pecorino Romano cheese and pork cheek) at Da Teo in romantic Trastevere or pasta cacio e pepe at Felice a Testaccio in Rome's ex-slaughterhouse district. Bistecca alla fiorentina – rare, ultra thick T-bone steak – in Florence is iconic (get a great one at Trattoria Mario on Via Rosina). Venice is famous for its cicchetti, baguette bites topped with a variety of seafood, meats and vegetables; they're delectable at Bar All'Arco in San Polo. Try traditional Milanese cuisine at Trattoria Masuelli San Marco, like osso buco (braised veal shanks) and risotto alla milanese (saffron-flavoured risotto).
Seaside Naples is the birthplace of pizza; get a perfect pie at the historic Antonio Starita. Bologna is the epicentre of stuffed pastas such as tortellini and lasagna bolognese; try them at generational pasta maker Sfoglia Rina on Via Castiglione. Be sure to sample artisanal products at the source; visit a caseificio (dairy) like the Caseificio di Biagio Staiano in Ravello to sample – and make! – fresh mozzarella, or one of Italy's 26 stunning national parks for the zero-kilometre culinary experience of a lifetime.
Oenophiles, you'd do well to venture past Tuscany. Sip volcanic island wines like the Biancolella in Ischia, or travel to the Russo family's Cantina del Vesuvio, at the foot of Mount Vesuvius, to try Lacryma Cristi ("Tears of Christ"), an ancient wine produced from Vesuvius' indigenous grapes, said to have been drank in Roman times.
How to fit in
Italy's monuments have attracted a lot of misbehaving tourists in recent years – don't be one of them. Keep your shoulders covered when visiting religious sites, and keep your hands off historical treasures.
Tipping is not expected or enforced in Italy (regardless of what the cheeky waiter might suggest).
Stick to traditional Italian mealtimes and food customs: a light breakfast of a pastry and espresso or cappuccino, lunch at 13:00, aperitivo (happy hour with snacks) from 17:00-19:00 and dinner after 20:00. Ask for a cappuccino after 11:00 and risk a wince from your barista.
Cultural attractions
Few are truly prepared for the magnificence of doomed Pompeii, and few visitors know that nearby Herculaneum was also destroyed – and preserved – by the eruption. Further south, the ruins of Paestum display exquisite temples and rare painted Greek tombs.
Art lovers usually head straight to the Sistine Chapel in Rome, but Renaissance masterpieces abound throughout Italy, like Leonardo da Vinci's The Last Supper at the Basilica di Santa Maria delle Grazie in Milan. "The Last Supper, like the Mona Lisa, is universal," says Lipparini. "[It's] an unparalleled theatrical scene where love and anticipation, suspense and betrayal emerge from the collective interaction of the masterful portraits of Jesus Christ and the 12 apostles."
In Naples, find the Baroque Cappella Sansevero and Giuseppe Sanmartino's reality-defying masterpiece, il Cristo Velato, depicting the slain, shrouded Christ. The incredible realism of what appears to be a thin veil sculpted in marble has confounded admirers for centuries.
Outdoor adventure
Soaring mountain passes and centuries-old forests mean incredible hiking and cycling. "Cycling is an ideal way to discover the city and experience a day out on two wheels," says Lipparini. Try tackling a tract of the Via Francigena, an ancient 6th-Century, 1,700km pilgrimage trail snaking from Canterbury, England to Puglia in Italy's deep south, or check out YesMilano's Lombardy-based bike routes. Trekkers hit the rainbow-hued expanse of the Cinque Terre National Park and skyscraping Path of the Gods on the lemon-perfumed Amalfi Coast.Italy's seaside culture has inspired countless films – and holidays. Today, its beaches range from family-friendly clubs like the sprawling white-sand San Vito lo Capo in Sicily to party beaches like Bazzano in Sperlonga on the Tyrrhenian Sea. You can explore Italy below the surface, too: take a guided snorkelling tour to discover underwater kingdoms like the sunken Roman villas of Baia or Ischia's underwater Roman city of Aenaria.
Shopping and markets
"Shopping in Milan is a unique experience," says Lipparini of the nation's fashion capital. "You'll find emerging brands – both in fashion and design." Apart from the ultra-luxe (and ultra-frequented) Quadrilatero della Moda, Lipparini suggests visiting the Isola and Nolo neighbourhoods, both blooming with vintage and secondhand shops, as well as the Tortona Design District. "Without neglecting the Sarpi [Chinatown] or [quirky] Navigli neighbourhoods," she adds.
At the other end of the shopping spectrum, the market – mercato – is an integral part of everyday Italian life. Most cities host a weekly street market, where shoppers can score anything from vintage clothing to fresh fish. La Pignasecca in Naples is renowned as a hotspot for Neapolitan street food.
Support Italy's artisans by shopping for handmade traditional goods, like Vietri pottery in Vietri sul Mare on the Amalfi Coast, intarsio (inlaid woodwork) in Sorrento, mosaics in Spilimbergo or Murano glass in Venice.
Day trips to experience the real Italy
Find wonders far from the main tourist crowds.
Top day trips from Rome
Classic: Trains (~35m) run regularly to the Castelli Romani; a group of cobblestoned towns beloved for their rustic eateries (fraschette). Ariccia is famous for its porchetta; get some at Osteria da Angelo.Detour: (2h) Head to Sperlonga, a seaside town halfway between Rome and Naples. Its white-and-blue Saracen ancient quarter has Santorini vibes, and its azure seas hide ancient Roman grottos.
Top day trips from Florence
Classic: Wander the russet-coloured streets of medieval Siena (1hr); head to the twin towers of San Gimignano.Detour: The Val d'Orcia (1.5hr) valley is home to excellent wellness centres and spas. Head to Palazzo del Capitano in San Quirico d'Orcia after a day of cycling.
Top day trips from Naples
Classic: (1hr) Wander Sorrento's historic centre and visit the Cataldi Lemon Orchard to sip flights of 100% organic limoncello.Detour: (33 minutes) Take the Cumana railway to Lucrino in the Campi Flegrei to snorkel the underwater ruins of a submerged Roman villa at the Parco Sommerso di Baia.
Top day trips from Milan
Classic: Italy's great Alpine lakes – Como, Maggiore and Garda – draw both tourists and locals for a Sunday stroll. "Take the train from Cadorna to Lake Como," advises Lipparini. "It takes an hour and you're on the famous lake where everybody wants to get married."Detour: Speed demons will appreciate visiting majestic Monza (15m); the site of the Autodromo Nazionale Monza racetrack.
Where to stay in Italy
Hospitality is in Italy's DNA.
Farm staysIdeal for families and groups. Enjoy farm-to-table meals prepared at hilltop La Fontaccia, a rustic property on 14 hectares of olive groves half an hour's drive outside of Florence.
Luxury accommodationsThe Grand Hotel Quisisana in Capri, built in 1845, overlooks the iconic Faraglioni rock formation and the Gardens of Augustus. It's filled with vintage tiled suites with opulent decor.
B&Bs, hotels and pensioniThe Cima Rosa in Venice offers five charming, modern suites in a 15th-Century palazzo.
HostelsBudget-minded travellers can find accommodations in Italy, especially in the larger cities. The Beehive in Rome near Termini Station is a friendly space with a shared kitchen and pleasant outdoor seating area.
Boutique hotelsBlink and you'll miss the entrance to Le Petit Palais on the steep Via Pedamentina in Naples' Vomero neighbourhood. It's a charming boutique guesthouse with sublimely decorated rooms and a breathtaking tiled rooftop terrace.
Unique traditional staysTravel back in time when you stay in Alberobello's ancient cone-shaped trulli and the sassi rock dwellings of Matera.
Getting Around
Italian cities are supremely walkable, but in ancient towns – particularly Amalfi Coast cities like Positano – be prepared to climb seemingly endless stone steps. Choose footwear that won't get tripped up by the cobblestones.
Public transportNavigate between cities with TrenItalia, the national train company, and regional bus companies (see their respective apps to check timetables and purchase tickets). Rome, Milan, Naples and most recently Turin also have metro systems.
DrivingNorth American drivers will need an International Driver's License. On the Amalfi Coast, scooters are the most convenient option, but with the area's torturous curves, intense summer traffic and devil-may-care attitude towards traffic laws, only attempt if you're already an experienced driver.Taxis are available on request but tend to be expensive.
When to visit
Summertime is beautiful in Italy, but time your trip for early to mid-summer to avoid inflated high-season costs, massive tourist hordes and suffocating heat waves. Avoid August, the month when Italians traditionally go on summer holiday, adding to crowds and the shutdown of many businesses and attractions.
Wonderful hikes are to be had in spring and autumn while some of the best swimming happens in October, after the tourists have cleared out and the heat has mellowed. In autumn, join the vendemmia (grape harvest); in winter, enjoy Christmas celebrations and partake in Italy's ski culture.
Off season means less crowds and lower costs, but also fewer services. Reserve accommodations and research ferry and bus times well in advance.
As overtourism continues to surge in many Italian destinations, travellers should explore what the other 99% of this spectacularly beautiful country has to offer.
"We're moving beyond the clichés," says Sanpietro. "The Italy of 2025 is bold, conscious, and deeply connected to its roots. You'll find ancient festivals reborn with new energy, culinary traditions elevated by the next generation of chefs, and small villages transformed into cultural hubs thanks to creative tourism and sustainable innovation. It's the year to come not just to admire Italy, but to understand it. To walk slower, ask questions, taste everything, and let the unexpected happen."
Want to explore even further? Check out BBC Travel's 25 Best Places to Travel in 2025 to find all the best destinations punctuating the globe right now.
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Inside London's secret wine cellars
Inside London's secret wine cellars

Times

timean hour ago

  • Times

Inside London's secret wine cellars

The grand hotels of London stand like sentinels across the city, guarding a certain version of the good life. Here, doormen gesture us through a portal to high-ceilinged lobbies and corridors unfurl towards fine restaurants and plush bars. They have much in common, these places. All, for instance, have plenty of delicious options in their cellars, and the visitor who wants vintage Krug, La Tâche or Romanée-Conti knows they have come to the right place. But a guest who wants something unique won't be disappointed either — each also prides itself on having something subtly different to offer the thirsty visitor. I descended into their cellars to find the bottles that make each of these places unique. 'We have about ten vintages of Domaine de la Romanée-Conti,' says the cellar master Aurel Istrate, 'and around 30 vintages of Pétrus' at prices ranging from £5,900 for the 1994 Pétrus to £45,000 for the DRC 1985 — some guests fly in specially for those. 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Between those wine fridges and the main temperature-controlled cellar, there's a small room with a round wooden table. This is where bespoke gatherings and the smaller private wine dinners, catered by the three Michelin-star Hélène Darroze team, happen. 'We discuss the wines with the winemaker, then match the food to them,' Reynaud-Paligot says. Upstairs, when a diner wants something unexpected, Reynaud-Paligot might suggest a wine from Sancerre, Savoie or the Jura — 'the grapes are getting riper, the wines richer, due to global warming' — and if they prefer classics, well, they've come to the right place. 'Our job is to curate our suggestions to make sure that the guest is happy,' Istrate says. 'It doesn't matter what we like, because we like everything that's good!' It isn't your average back of house that can boast two escalators, carrying staff and lucky guests down to the kitchen, then back up. The escalators are small but their destination isn't — the kitchens are the size of six tennis courts. Even though, of the hotel's four restaurants, China Tang has its own kitchen and the dishes for the three Michelin-star Alain Ducasse restaurant are only prepped here — they also have their own kitchen next to the restaurant. Just off this vast, bustling space, is a glass door: the wine vault. In cooled air, the hotel's most glamorous bottles — the Grand Cru Burgundy (the Coche-Dury Corton-Charlemagne 2016 is £15,000), magnums of vintage Champagne (£4,500 for the Cristal 2000) — glow alluringly across the long table. Beyond, through another door, is the chef's table. It works very well to have drinks in here before a dinner in there, says the head of wine Matteo Furlan. 'Some diners with a big budget just come in here and pick the bottles they want.' They also hold tastings, masterclasses and bespoke events for up to 12 people. One couple recently came in to learn how to pour their own Champagne tower at their wedding. Furlan is particularly proud of their selection by the glass: 30 Champagne and sparkling wines, 40 each of white and red. And of course, if you want a glass of La Tâche, the great Grand Cru Burgundy, then you can have it — although if you want more than one glass (on request, at £1,700), it probably makes more financial, and social, sense to buy the bottle (£10,000). But mark-ups are reasonable: 'We don't take a huge mark-up, or inflate prices over time' — even though older bottles will be worth a lot more now than when the team bought them. Until recently, the Dorchester held the record for Pétrus sales in the UK, and they have 1,200 labels, most stored in a larger, less fabulous cellar. 'We have 20,000-25,000 bottles, spread across the restaurants,' Furlan says. 'So if you don't see what you want on one list, we can just look elsewhere.' Once the War Office where Winston Churchill directed operations for the Second World War, this beautiful Whitehall building is now a 120-room hotel with a bewildering number of restaurants and bars. But the director of wine Vincenzo Arnese — assisted by six sommeliers — has everything under control. A quarter of the list is French, he tells me, but that leaves a lot of room to play. The flagship restaurant, plus a chef's table and Saison, an all-day Mediterranean restaurant, are by Mauro Colagreco, who has three Michelin stars at Mirazur restaurant on the Riviera and, now, one here. As anyone who has seen his magnificent French gardens knows, he is very keen on sustainability, so 'we like to have local wine,' Arnese says. Although what precisely that means depends on the outlet — they all have some English sparkling, but Saison focuses on a few Mediterranean wines, which change monthly. Meanwhile the Spy Bar downstairs celebrates James Bond with, among other treats, Château Angélus 007 (£145 by the glass or £870 by the bottle). Arnese enjoys a challenge, which is good, because Colagreco's tasting menus are magnificent — led by vegetables or sometimes, by flowers, with beautiful drawings of the star product presented with each course — but can't be easy to pair. 'I'm lucky, Mauro is open-minded. So many chefs just say, 'This is what I produce and it's your job to find a match'.' And Arnese likes daring matches: 'lobster with Masseto [the great single-vineyard Tuscan merlot] — 'sometimes you have to be bold!' 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Smitten Jennifer Aniston shows off holiday glow as her new love guru 'boyfriend' makes bold statement about romance
Smitten Jennifer Aniston shows off holiday glow as her new love guru 'boyfriend' makes bold statement about romance

Daily Mail​

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Smitten Jennifer Aniston shows off holiday glow as her new love guru 'boyfriend' makes bold statement about romance

Jennifer Aniston arrived back in the states on Monday following a vacation with her rumored new boyfriend, hypnotist Jim Curtis, in Mallorca, Spain. Aniston wore loose-fitting light wash blue jeans, a tight white tank top, and a beige sunhat while deplaning with Jason Bateman and other friends in Los Angeles. On the travel day, the 56-year-old actress' latest suitor broke his silence about the getaway, waxing poetic about love and joy. 'I am back from vacation and what an experience!' he wrote in his online newsletter. 'When I was sick, sad, stuck and in pain I never thought I would have the abundance, joy and love I now experience on a daily basis,' he penned, according to Page Six. He added in the correspondence: 'I just took one step, made one decision and the next followed — now I look back and realize, oh! That course, that life change, that pain, resulted in this magic.' The actress' latest suitor waxed poetic about love and joy on Monday as he used his online newsletter to reflect on life, writing, 'I am back from vacation and what an experience!' Although he did not detail any information about the Mallorcan getaway, which saw the duo getting cozy on a yacht, he noted that 'the same life that brings struggle also brings opportunity.' He reminded his subscribers, 'The possibility of something better — more aligned, more free, more meaningful — is always here.' In conclusion, the wellness enthusiast Curtis encouraged his fans to get involved in his coaching group, per the outlet. Aniston is reportedly in a 'very good place right now' amid her budding connection with Curtis. On Sunday multiple sources confirmed to People that the pair is 'casually dating and having fun.' 'They've been seeing each other for a few months now,' one insider shared with the publication. 'They were introduced by a friend and started out as friends.' The Friends star is said to have enjoyed one of his books and 'was familiar with his work' before they hit it off. 'She's really into self-help and wellness. They are dating, but it's still casual,' the source emphasized. 'She's been happy on her own, but she's also open to sharing her life with someone. As long as it feels right.' In comparison to Jennifer's past relationships with public figures — like ex-husbands Brad Pitt and Justin Theroux — the source said Curtis is 'very different from anyone she's dated before' and that 'Jen has read just about every self-help book worth reading and Jim coming into her life has felt like fate.' 'It's been a meeting of minds. Jen feels very connected to Jim as they have the same level of emotional intelligence, unlike some of her previous suitors,' one of the people close to the couple shared. Their loved-up Mallorca sighting came weeks after they holidayed in Big Sur in June. learned Aniston and Curtis stayed at the five-star eco-friendly resort Ventana Big Sur, where they put on a 'cozy' display. The pair were seen 'cuddling up' at the hotel's restaurant, according to onlookers.

Jennifer Aniston's 'boyfriend' Jim Curtis gushes about love after Mallorca holiday with the actress
Jennifer Aniston's 'boyfriend' Jim Curtis gushes about love after Mallorca holiday with the actress

Daily Mail​

time4 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Jennifer Aniston's 'boyfriend' Jim Curtis gushes about love after Mallorca holiday with the actress

Jennifer Aniston 's rumored new boyfriend, hypnotist Jim Curtis, waxed poetic about love and joy following their vacation in Mallorca, Spain. The 56-year-old actress' latest suitor used his online newsletter to reflect on life, writing, 'I am back from vacation and what an experience!' According to Page Six, he penned, 'When I was sick, sad, stuck and in pain I never thought I would have the abundance, joy and love I now experience on a daily basis.' He added in the correspondence: 'I just took one step, made one decision and the next followed — now I look back and realize, oh! That course, that life change, that pain, resulted in this magic.' Although he did not detail any information about the Mallorcan getaway, which saw the duo getting cozy on a yacht, he noted that 'the same life that brings struggle also brings opportunity.' He reminded his subscribers, 'The possibility of something better — more aligned, more free, more meaningful — is always here.' The 56-year-old actress' latest suitor used his online newsletter to reflect on life, writing, 'I am back from vacation and what an experience!' In conclusion, the wellness enthusiast Curtis encouraged his fans to get involved in his coaching group, per the outlet. Aniston is reportedly in a 'very good place right now' amid her budding connection with Curtis. On Sunday multiple sources confirmed to People that the pair is 'casually dating and having fun.' 'They've been seeing each other for a few months now,' one insider shared with the publication. 'They were introduced by a friend and started out as friends.' The Friends star is said to have enjoyed one of his books and 'was familiar with his work' before they hit it off. 'She's really into self-help and wellness. They are dating, but it's still casual,' the source emphasized. 'She's been happy on her own, but she's also open to sharing her life with someone. As long as it feels right.' In comparison to Jennifer's past relationships with public figures, like ex-husbands Brad Pitt and Justin Theroux, the source said Curtis is 'very different from anyone she's dated before.' 'Jen has read just about every self-help book worth reading and Jim coming into her life has felt like fate. 'It's been a meeting of minds. Jen feels very connected to Jim as they have the same level of emotional intelligence, unlike some of her previous suitors,' one of the people close to the couple shared. Their loved-up Mallorca sighting came weeks after they holidayed in Big Sur in June. learned Aniston and Curtis stayed at the five-star eco-friendly resort Ventana Big Sur, where they put on a 'cozy' display. The pair were seen 'cuddling up' at the hotel's restaurant, according to onlookers.

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