How to spend the perfect week in Apulia

An itinerary for squeezing the most out of one week in the Puglia region of Italy

BARI — GARGANO PENINSULA — ALBEROBELLO/VALLE D'ITRIA — BRINDISI LECCE

Here is an itinerary that takes in all the best of Apulia (called Puglia or Le Puglie in Italian), the stiletto heel of the Italian 'boot" and the best concentration of all that makes Southern Italy great.

There is a trick to fitting all you can into such a short time here: A week lasts nine days (figuring you leave home on Friday night for your overnight flight, and you don’t return until the following Sunday). » more

Here's the basic itinerary. It's pretty packed—a lot of early morning wake-ups, a lot of churches and museums—because there's simply so much to see and do.

Don't forget to read the "Foolish Assumptions" page about how these itineraries are meant to work. One assumption I make in this itinerary is that you will be exploring Apulia by car—far better than trains and buses for regional travel, especially to get the most out of hopping from town to town and visiting vineyards, villages, isolated castles in the countryside. Have fun!

Where to spend each night
Hotels in Rome (days 1-5)
Hotels on Amalfi Coast (day 4 option)
Hotels in Florence (days 6–9)
Hotels in Cinque Terre (day 10)
Hotels in Venice (days 11–13)
Hotels in Verona (day 13 option)
Hotels in Sirmione (day 13 option)

Hotels in Milan (days 14-15)
Hotels on Lake Como (day 15 option)

TK Tour: Day by Day

Day 1 - Getting to Apulia

The Pantheon
The Pantheon.
TK getting there. Most transatlantic flights land in Rome in the early morning (around 8am), and by the time you get you bags, get downtown, switch to a train to TK

Day 2 - TK

TK-IMG TK-TOURSMORNING: TK

AFTERNOON: TK

Day 3 - TK

TK-IMG TK-TOURSMORNING: TK

AFTERNOON: TK

Day 4 - TK

TK-IMG TK-TOURSMORNING: TK

AFTERNOON: TK

Day 5 - TK

TK-IMG TK-TOURSMORNING: TK

AFTERNOON: TK

Day 6 - TK

TK-IMG TK-TOURSMORNING: TK

AFTERNOON: TK

Day 7 - TK

TK-IMG TK-TOURSMORNING: TK

AFTERNOON: TK

Day 8 - TK

TK-IMG TK-TOURSMORNING: TK

AFTERNOON: TK

Day 9 - Heading home

TMost flights back to the U.S. leave either in the morning or early afternoon. Either way, the day's largely a wash. You'll spend the morning getting to the airport and the day in the air.

(Remember: if you have a 3pm flight, you have to check in by 1pm, which means you have to head to the airport by noon, which means you have to leave your hotel by 10:30... The day's pretty much shot by the time you wake up.)

 

Tips & links

Consider a tour

I'm all for planning your own trip‚ and this website is set up to help you do just that—but some people might just as well prefer to leave all the planning, logistics, transportation, lodging, and gathering of information to the professionals and simply sign up with a guided tour.

Nothing wrong with that. Just take my advice and choose a tour that emphasizes small groups over large crowds, local transport over big tour buses, and fun cultural experiences over sightseeing checklists. You'll have a better time, and probably spend less for it. Here are a few of my favorite tour companies who emphasize just that.

1-5 days

1-2 weeks

Useful links
How it all fits into 1 week

A tall order for just one week? You bet. But there are three tricks to fitting all you can into such a short time here.

  1. One week actually lasts 9 days (figuring you leave on Friday night for your overnight flight, and you don’t return until the following Sunday). » more 

  2. You're going to fly "open-jaws" into Rome and out of Milan.This will save you a full day of traveling back to where you started to pick up the return flight» more 

  3. You are going to take some guided daytours to visit the towns and sights outside the big cities in order to (a) pack as much sightseeing as possible into a limited amount of time, (b) get a professional guide, and (c) provide all transportation so you can spend your time seeing the sights and not waiting on train and bus connections.

Don't forget to pay attention to the "What to do before you leave" section (next) covering all the details you need to take care of before leaving home—and be sure to read the "Foolish Assumptions" page about how these itineraries are meant to work.)

What you need to do before you leave home
Don't overplan

I will freely admit to being as guilty as anyone of this, but: Please try not to overplan your trip to Italy. That's a two-fold plea:

  1. Plan everything, but don't feel compelled to stick to the plan. I think it's a fine idea to work out all the details of what you plan to do—if nor no other reason than it will help you get a handle of what you are able to get done, and start making the hard choices of what you have time for and what you should leave for the next trip to Italy. (Always assume you will retrun!)

    But then do not book absolutely every second in advance (that leaves no room to adjust things as you go to accommodate changing interests, sudden festivals, or unexpected invitations), and please do not attempt to stick to the schedule if it turns out to be overly ambitious and startrs making you miserable.

    Rememeber Clark W. Griswold, the Chevy Chase dad in the Vacation movies, always bound and detemrined to get to WallyWorld come hell or dead aunties? Yeah, don't be that guy. No one in that family was having any fun.
  2. Don't try to pack too much in. A vacation is not meant to be all about checking sights off a list or dashing from place to place to fit in as much as humanly possible. It's about enjoying yourself.

    So do that. Enjoy yourself. Take a hint from the Italian concept of la bel far' niente—the beauty of doing nothing—and take a break from the sightseeing every once in a while.

    Leave some time to stop and sip the cappuccino.

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Highlights
  • Reliving the ROME of the Caesars at the Colosseum and Roman Forum (Day 2)
  • St Peter's, The Sistine Chapel, & the Vatican Museums in ROME (Day 3)
  • ROME's Pantheon, Trevi Fountain, and the Spanish Steps (Day 1)
  • The ancient ghost city of POMPEII (Day 4)
  • Capri & the AMALFI COAST (Day 4)
  • Boticelli's Birth of Venus at the Uffizi in FLORENCE (Day 6)
  • Climbing Brunelleschi's Dome on the cathedral of FLORENCE (Day 6)
  • Sipping wine in the CHIANTI (Day 7)
  • Climbing the Leaning Tower of PISA (Day 7)
  • Touring that Medieval Manhattan town of towers SAN GIMIGNANO (Day 7)
  • Michelangelo's David at the Accademia in FLORENCE (Day 8)
  • Giotto's frescoes in ASSISI (Day 9)
  • Hiking the Cinque Terre on THE ITALIAN RIVIERA (Day 10)
  • Crusing the Grand Canal of VENICE (Day 11)
  • The glittering cathedral of St. Mark's VENICE (Day 12)
  • Leonardo da Vinci's Last Supper in MILAN (Day 14)
  • A day on LAKE COMO (Day 15)
 


Useful links
TK
Train tix

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