Amalfi Coast
Italy

Amalfi Coast

Italy's most photographed coastline

By Elena Marchetti/ Senior Travel Editor

Why Amalfi Coast, and why now.

The Amalfi Coast is gloriously inconvenient, and that is what preserves it. The roads are narrow, the cliffs are steep, and every restaurant seems to demand three hundred steps. But the geography is the glamour, Positano tumbling to the sea, Ravello floating above it. Logistics, not luxury, define your days here.

Where you base yourself sets the rhythm. Positano is energy and spectacle, Ravello is calm and altitude, Praiano is the quieter coast the locals keep. Choose by your ideal evening, and let the boats and the hotel shuttles handle the rest.

Top neighbourhoods

Positano

The vertical village, terracotta cascading to a pebble beach, boutiques, and the coast's best terrace views. Beautiful and busy. Book a hotel with a shuttle boat and you will forgive the climbs.

Ravello

High above the sea, cool air, the gardens of Villa Rufolo, and the summer festival. No easy swimming, but the calm and the views are unmatched. For a book, a terrace, and a long lunch.

Praiano

Between Positano and Amalfi, fewer tourists, genuine restaurants, west-facing sunsets, and enough quiet to hear the sea. The coast's underrated base.

Amalfi and Atrani

The only flat ground on the coast, the cathedral square, the ferry terminal, and tiny Atrani next door. Practical and central for boats to Capri and beyond.

Best time to visit Amalfi Coast

Late May to mid-June and the second half of September are the sweet spot: the sea is swimmable, the light is soft, and the coast road is not yet a car park. Easter week and August are miserable for logistics and priced at the peak. April and October are quieter and cheaper, though some hotels and restaurants are still opening or already closed, and the sea is cooler. For the best balance of weather and value, aim for September.

Best luxury hotels in Amalfi Coast