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The best beaches in Italy you must experience

The best beaches in Italy you must experience

The best beaches in Italy you must experience

The Call of the Mediterranean: Italy’s Beaches That Steal the Breath Away

Italy doesn’t just seduce with ancient ruins, steaming bowls of pasta, and rolling vineyards. It also whispers to the sea-lover in each of us with a coastline that spills elegance and surprise in equal measure. I still remember the first time I brushed sand from my feet in Cinque Terre — the sunlight catching on deep emerald waters, the scent of lemon trees floating over soft waves. Every beach in Italy tells its own story, and below are some that etched themselves into my memory like footprints in wet sand.

Tropea, Calabria – Where Cliffs Embrace the Sea

There’s something deeply cinematic about Tropea. Perched on a rocky promontory in Calabria, in the toe of Italy’s boot, this town leans into the Tyrrhenian Sea as if curious about its own reflection.

The beach here — white, fine sand bordered by turquoise-indigo waters — feels almost surreal against the dramatic backdrop of Santa Maria dell’Isola monastery clinging to cliffs overhead. As I sat beneath a parasol nibbling on a freshly made tartufo al pistacchio (a local ice cream specialty), a soft southern breeze slid over my shoulders and I understood why locals are reluctant to share this gem.

If you’re dreaming of spacious sands, crystalline waters, and views that stir Renaissance paintings in your mind, Tropea is a must. And don’t miss the aromatic red onions from the local market — sweet enough to eat raw, and beautifully odd to find on a beach salad plate.

Spiaggia dei Conigli, Lampedusa – The Beach of Rabbits (But Not Really)

Despite its curious name, don’t expect rabbits racing across the shore — though with Lampedusa’s surreal beauty, you might believe in magic of all kinds. Spiaggia dei Conigli consistently ranks among the world’s best beaches, and as someone who has walked its warm sand and floated in waters so clear my toes seemed part of a painting, I understand the devotion.

Hidden in a crescent-shaped bay on the tiny island of Lampedusa — closer to Africa than Sicily — the beach is a sanctuary for loggerhead turtles, especially during nesting season in summer. The walk down from the viewing platform is rocky but rewarding, and the sea greets you like a silk scarf: cool, translucent, welcoming.

I recommend arriving early, bringing your snorkel mask, and watching the sun shift the color palette of the cliffs from amber to peach to rose throughout the day. It’s nature’s theatre, quietly spectacular.

Baia delle Zagare, Puglia – Secret Arches and Midnight Blues

In the wild embrace of the Gargano coast, this beach is not one to stumble upon — you must seek it out. Nestled beneath imposing white limestone cliffs, Baia delle Zagare is accessible only to hotel guests nearby or via a steep path that zigzags through Mediterranean scrub and floral whispers of zagara, or orange blossom.

From above, the bay charms with its two sea stacks — natural rock arches rising dramatically from the water like ancient stone guardians. From below, it wraps you in an almost tropical serenity. The water is a deeper shade of blue here, especially striking come dusk when the cliffs darken and the sea reflects cobalt shadows under the moonlight.

I remember sitting there one early evening, barefoot, specks of salt crusting my skin, as an old fisherman sang softly to himself on a passing boat… poetry in real life. For those seeking solitude with a touch of legend, this place delivers.

Monterosso al Mare, Cinque Terre – Color and Pebbled Calm

Among Cinque Terre’s five colourful villages, Monterosso al Mare offers the most generous beach, making it a rare opportunity for a full-on seaside day without sacrificing the pastel charm that defines the region.

The beach is divided into two parts: one private (with blue-striped umbrellas in regimented lines), and one public, a bit wilder but no less charming. I like to switch between both—one for a proper nap, the other for spontaneous dips and conversations with friendly travelers carrying slices of focaccia.

After a swim, the salt in your hair seems to dance with the scent of basil drifting from nearby trattorias. Grab a cone of lemon gelato and sit on the rocks as the sunset paints the sky with strokes of tangerine and lavender. There’s something about Monterosso that invites gentle stillness — perhaps it’s the rhythm of the waves echoing against vineyard terraces above.

Cala Goloritzé, Sardinia – A Hiker’s Reward

Some places demand effort — but repay in kind. Cala Goloritzé is such a place. Located on Sardinia’s eastern coast, this beach is only accessible by boat or a 90-minute hike through dry scrub and ancient oak trees. But as your sweaty footprints finally meet its powdered shoreline, you’ll inhale sharply — because this beach doesn’t just impress, it stuns.

The limestone cliffs are jagged and stoic, out of which springs an improbably narrow rock spire (the Aguglia) that climbers worship. The water is impossibly clear — almost icy in hue — and filled with shimmering pebbles that invite quiet contemplation.

Swimming here feels like being reborn. The currents carry just enough freshness to awaken you, while the sun above toys with specks of light that dance on the seabed. Bring good shoes, water, and a sense of adventure — the beach’s relative inaccessibility means that even in summer, it retains a hushed reverence.

Camogli Beach, Liguria – A Seaside Painting Come to Life

Just a short sail west from tourist-heavy Portofino lies one of my personal favourites — the understated, utterly charming Camogli. This Ligurian fishing village has a pebbly beach kissed by waves and shadowed by towering, pastel-painted houses that seem ready to topple into the Mediterranean.

The shingle shore offers a satisfying crunch under your towel, and the water quickly deepens, ideal for strong swimmers. I once spent a whole afternoon with a book, a Negroni, and the hum of Italian chit-chat about weekend plans and who makes the best panini in town (Pasticceria Revello, if you ask me!).

Camogli feels lived-in, authentic. Less curated than other Riviera hubs, and that’s precisely its charm. For an unforgettable sunset, climb to Basilica di Santa Maria Assunta and let your eyes trace the waterline as the sky bows to dusk.

Torre dell’Orso, Apulia – The Legends of the Two Sisters

Apulia (or Puglia, in Italian), already known for its whitewashed villages and ancient olive trees, also hides some of the Adriatic coast’s most poetic beaches. Torre dell’Orso is one such treasure, flanked by a medieval watchtower and shaped by legend.

Named for the “Due Sorelle” — twin rock outcrops just offshore, said to be two sisters turned to stone after defying the gods for a forbidden swim — this beach is a blend of myth and magic. The sand is golden and soft, the sea a mix of jade and sky-blue, and the coastal breeze carried whispers of rosemary and wild thyme the day I visited.

Children build castles in silence, lovers linger at the water’s edge — even the gulls seem to soar a little more slowly here. Torre dell’Orso isn’t just a place to swim; it’s a reminder that sometimes, the soul also needs to float.

Finale Ligure, Liguria – Where Mountains Meet the Sea

Finally, one cannot talk of Italy’s beaches without acknowledging the stretch of coast where the Ligurian Alps tumble into blue. Finale Ligure combines the drama of the mountains with the warmth of a Mediterranean beach town that still moves on its own clock.

Here you’ll find a mix of everything: sandy public shores, rocky coves perfect for snorkeling, and alleyways filled with sun-bleached shutters and plates of seafood trofie. In the early morning, the mist clings to the cliffs, softening the horizon as the fishermen quietly pass by in their small boats.

I once bought a bag of handmade trofie pasta here, tucked it into my backpack still damp from the sea, and years later, the scent still reminds me of that morning: light salt air, coffee roasted nearby, the faint perfume of sunscreen and citrus.

Taste the Tides of Italy

Italy’s beaches are not just sun spots — they are poems, stories, and living frescoes kissed by tide and tradition. Whether you prefer cliffside drama, sandy symphonies, or pebbled whispers with a view, there is a beach that speaks your language… or better yet, your feeling.

So, which one has already started calling your name?

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