Italy's Big 3 in 1 Week
A perfect itinerary for squeezing the most out of Rome, Florence, and Venice in just one week
TOUR HIGHLIGHTS
Day 1-Rome: Piazza Navona, Sant'Agostino, San Luigi dei Francesi, Sant'Ivo alla Sapienza, Pantheon, gelato, SM Sopra Minerva, Galleria Borghese, Villa Borghese, Spanish Steps, Santa Maria del Popolo, passeggiata
Day 2-Rome: Roman Forum, San Pietro in Vincoli, Colosseum, San Clemente, Campidoglio, Capitoline Museums
Day 3-Rome: Vatican Museums, Sistine Chapel, St. Peters, Castel Sant'Angelo, Trastevere, Trevi Fountain
Day 4-Florence: Duomo, Brunelleschi's Dome, Baptistery, Piazza della Signoria, Uffizi
Day 5-Florence: Accademia/Michelangelo's David, Santa Maria Novella, Santa Croce, Ponte Vecchio, Pitti Palace
Day 6-Venice: Grand Canal, Accademia Gallery, gondola ride
Day 7-Venice: Piazza San Marco, St. Mark's Cathedral, bell tower, Doge's Palace, shopping, Peggy Guggenheim, Ca' d'Oro
Day 8-Venice: Touring the outlying islands - Murano, Burano, and Torcello
Day 9-Flying HomeHere is an itinerary that takes in all the best of Rome, Florence, and Venice in just a week. Tall order? Yes. But do-able.
There are two tricks to fitting all you can into such a short time here.
- A week lasts nine days (figuring you leave on Friday night for your overnight flight, and you don’t return until the following Sunday).
- You're going to fly "open-jaws" into Rome and out of Venice (well, most likely Venice-Milan-home). This will save you a full day of traveling back to where you started to pick up the return flight.
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 in Italy.
Where to spend each night
Hotels in Rome (days 1–3)
Hotels in Florence (days 4–5)
Hotels in Venice (day 6–8)
Don't forget to pay attention to the "Before you Leave Home " box at the end of the itinerary 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 and how to tweak them to fit your own schedule. Buon viaggio!
Day 1 - Rome

The Pantheon in Rome.Take a tour
If you prefer an expert guide for your sightseeing, here are some walking tours from our partners at Viator.com that cover many of the sights featured on Day 1:
• Best of Rome Afternoon Walking Tour
• Baroque Rome Small Group Day Tour
• Private Tour: Borghese Gallery and Baroque Rome Art History Walking Tour
• Skip the Line: Borghese Gallery and Gardens Walking Tour
• Skip the Line: Borghese Gallery Tickets
• Rome Photography Walking Tour: Learn How to Take Professional Photos
• Classical Rome Morning Tour
• Rome Angels and Demons Half-Day Tour
• Private Tour: Classical Rome Art History Walking Tour
• Ancient Rome Half-Day Walking Tour
• Rome Hop-on Hop-off Double Decker Bus Tour (no site entries)
Most transatlantic flights land in Rome in the early morning (around 8am), and by the time you collect your bags, go through customs/immigration, get downtown, and check into your hotel, it'll by 11am—plenty of time to check in, splash your face, and head out for an afternoon of sightseeing.
Just don't give in to the urge to lie down and take a cat-nap. Trust me. Those first-day "catnaps "have a nasty habit of lasting until 7pm, at which point it takes supreme willpower to drag yourself out of bed to find dinner. Best just to stay moving and stay awake.
Now I know the first day can be rough, what with jet lag and the fact that you probably didn't sleep well on the plane, so today, though it seems packed with activity, is really not all that taxing. It's mostly just poking around the greatest churches of the Tiber Bend, the center of the old city (plus one small museum). Plan to spend only about 10–15 minutes inside each church—give yourself permission just to look at the highlights and not to try and appreciate every altarpiece and architectural element—and you will keep on schedule and not feel too overwhelmed.
Piazza Navona.Going in reverse
You can do this (or any) itinerary backwards—starting in Venice. Just keep in mind when Monday falls and many museums will be closed.
If you do as most people do and fly over there on a Friday night (arriving Saturday morning), it'd be best to spend that first half-Saturday just as detailed for Day 6 in Venice (Grand Canal, Accademia Gallery, gondola ride).
Then spend Sunday doing the Day 7 activities (St. Mark's Cathedral, Doge's Palace) though since the cathedral is closed to non-worshipper in the morning, you'll have to hit the Palazzo Ducale first on the 9:55am tour, followed by the bell tower, clock tower and lunch all while waiting for San Marco to open at 2pm. However, you also get a bonus: by being in Venice on a Sunday, you have a chance to attend the cathedral's 6:45pm mass, the only time they illuminate all those amazing mosaics.
Save Monday for your day touring the outlying islands of Murano, Burano, and Torcello, where all the sights are open MondaysSitting down to a leisurely lunch will only exacerbate the jet lag, so just grab a quick bite en route to Rome's prettiest square, the gracious, fountain-studded, cafe-lined Piazza Navona.
Pop out of the north end of the piazza to see the church of Sant'Agostino (works by Caravaggio and Raphael inside), then head south past San Luigi dei Francesi (more great Caravaggios) to the courtyard hiding the curly-cue dome atop Sant'Ivo alla Sapienza. Walk through the courtyard, past the church, and out the east side of the building to Piazza Sant'Eustachio, home to the most famous cappuccino in Rome at the Caffé Sant'Eustachio. Don’t linger too long, or the jet lag will start to catch up with you (an extra cappuccino or two helps).
Just a bit farther east is the noble Pantheon, the only ancient Roman temple to survive the millennia virtually intact and one of the best sights in all of Rome (if you skip everything else on this day, at least see the Pantheon).
The area around the Pantheon is the best spot in Rome for ice cream fans, so don't forget to try some gelato (Italian ice cream) in between the sights (gotta keep your strength up, after all).
Just south of the Pantheon, on the piazza with the Bernini statue of an elephant carrying a tiny obelisk on its back, rises Santa Maria Sopra Minerva, a gothic church with Michelangelo's Risen Christ statue and Filippo Lippi frescoes inside.
Head north, past the baroque optical illusions in the church of Sant'Ignazio and the ancient Roman Column of Marcus Aurelius on your way to grab the 116 minibus to the Porta Pinciana (you'll see a park across the street; it's called the Villa Borghese).
Enter the park and take the first path on your right (Viale di Museo Borghese) to get to the Galleria Borghese by 3pm (TIP: you will need to purchase tickets in advance for this, or sign up for a 3pm tour; see the "Before You Leave" sidebar at the end of this itinerary). Tour its collections of amazing early Bernini sculptures and Raphael and Caravaggio paintings until the museum closes at 5pm.

The evening passeggiata along Via del Corso.Make your way through the Villa Borghese park to the top of the lively Spanish Steps. Mingle for a while, then window shop down fashionable Via dei Condotti and the surrounding streets.
If you make it all the way north to Piazza del Popolo before the fabulous church of Santa Maria del Popolo at the far end of the square closes (works by Raphael, Caravaggio, and Bernini inside), so much the better.
By the time you get to the Corso, one of Rome's main drags, the evening passeggiata see-and-be-seen stroll will be in full swing and you can strut your stuff with the Romans until it's time for a hearty and well-deserved dinner in the Old City.
(I know you're exhausted, but Italians eat late, so try to hold out until at least 6:30 or 7pm before heading to a restaurant).
» Stay: Rome
Day 2 - Rome

The Roman Forum.Take a tour
If you prefer an expert guide for your sightseeing, here are some walking tours from our partners at Viator.com that cover many of the sights featured on Day 2:
• Private Tour: Imperial Rome Art History Walking Tour
• Skip the Line: Ancient Rome and Colosseum Half-Day Walking Tour
• Private Tour: Ancient Rome and Colosseum Art History Walking Tour
• Ancient Rome Half-Day Walking Tour
• Capitoline Museums and Origins of Rome Walking Tour
• Private Tour: Ancient Roman Art History Walking Tour
• Imperial Rome Afternoon Tour
Rome's all about Caesars, right? Start off day two in Rome by crawling around the ruins of the Roman Forum, where orators once held forth, senators debated, and Julius Caesar strode the streets.
Unfortunately, little is left to see, but so much the better so you can be out by 11:30 and on your way to see Michelangelo's Moses in the church of San Pietro in Vincoli before it closes at 12:30pm.
After lunch, pay a visit to the Colosseum (you just kind of look at it, take a peek inside at the floor plan, and you're done) then walk several long block further to tour the church of San Clemente, with medieval mosaics glittering in the apse, Renaissance frescoes in the chapels, and a door leading to the first of several basements that lead you through Rome's layer cake of history: below the current church is a 4th century church, and below that a pagan temple to Mithras and the remains of several ancient Roman buildings and streets.
Catch a bus to head back to Piazza Venezia, at the north end of the Forum. Nearby is the elevated square Piazza del Campidoglio, where the Capitoline Museums will entertain you with ancient sculpture and Renaissance and baroque painting until 7pm.
Make sure that before sunset you nip around the back of the right side of the central building on Piazza del Campidoglio where you're treated to a surprise panorama of the Forum from above, with the Palatine Hill and the Colosseum as a backdrop. Have dinner in the Old City tonight.
» Stay: Rome
Day 3 - Rome

The Sistine Chapel cieling.Take a tour
If you prefer an expert guide for your sightseeing, here are some walking tours from our partners at Viator.com that cover many of the sights featured on Day 3:
• Skip the Line: Vatican in One Day
• Private Tour: Vatican Museums and St Peter's Art History Walking Tour
• Skip the Line: Vatican Museums, Sistine Chapel and St Peter's Basilica Half-Day Walking Tour
• Skip the Line: Vatican Museums Walking Tour including Sistine Chapel, Raphael's Rooms and St Peter's
• Skip the Line: Vatican Museums Tickets
• Private Viewing of the Sistine Chapel and Vatican Museums
• Private Tour: Vatican Museums Walking Tour
• Skip the Line: Vatican Museums and Sistine Chapel Tour
• Rome Angels and Demons Half-Day Tour
Today we spend on the other side of the river from the bulk of old Rome. Be up bright and early (I know, you never seem to get to sleep in) so that you beat the legions of tour buses to the Vatican Museums, which open at 9am.
Spend all morning in there, drinking in such artistic wonders as Raphael's Transfiguration, Caravaggio's Deposition, the Raphael Rooms, and Michelangelo's incomparable Sistine Chapel ceiling.
tip
Early risers who want to cram more in can visit St. Peter's first—it opens at 7am—spend 90 min. there, then walk around the Vatican walls to tour the Vatican Museums when they open at 9am. This'll free up more time later for Castel Sant'Angelo and some sights in Trastevere.They shoo you out in early afternoon, so grab a snack on your way around the Vatican walls to visit the grandiose church of St. Peter's. See Michelangelo's Pietà and tour the tombs of popes under the basilica before climbing its dome for a panoramic sweep of the city across the river.
If you finish with St. Peter's quickly, you may want to head to the pope's nearby Renaissance fortress, the Castel Sant'Angelo on the river, which has a nifty museum of arms and armor (though if, like most people, your one-week vacation started with a Friday night flight to Italy, today is Monday and the castle will be closed).
Either way, spend the evening in the medieval neighborhood of Trastevere, where you can find lots of excellent Roman restaurants. Afterwards make your way back across the Tiber River to the famous Trevi Fountain, into which it's tradition to toss a few coins in order to ensure that, one day, you'll return to the Eternal City.
» Stay: Rome
Day 4 - Florence

The Duomo.Take a tour
If you prefer an expert guide for your sightseeing, here are some walking tours from our partners at Viator.com that cover many of the sights featured on Day 4 (as a bonus, many include the Accademia, which would free up tomorrow morning):
All sights:
• Florence Half-Day or Full-Day Sightseeing Tour
• Private Tour: Florence Sightseeing Tour
Duomo:
• Skip The Line: Best of Florence Walking Tour including Accademia Gallery and Duomo
• Skip the Line: Florence Renaissance Walking Tour with Accademia Gallery
• Private Tour: Florence Walking Tour
• Florence Walking Tour
Uffizi:
• Skip the Line: Florence Uffizi Gallery Tickets
• Skip the Line: Florence Uffizi Gallery Tour
• Skip the Line: Uffizi Gallery and Vasari Corridor Walking Tour
• Skip the Line: Small Group Florence Uffizi Gallery Walking Tour
• Skip the Line: Florence Accademia and Uffizi Gallery Tour
Grab an early train to Florence and drop your bags by the hotel.
Head directly to the Duomo (cathedral) to climb Brunelleschi's ingenious and noble dome for a panorama across the city, then duck into the adjacent baptistery to marvel at the mosaics inside and the massive bronze doors outside—the ones facing the Duomo are so beautiful they became known as the Gates of Paradise.
Be sure you extricate yourself from the cathedral group by 1pm so that you can wander a few blocks south for a lunch on-the-go at I Fratellini, a traditional fiaschetteria, a hole-in-the-wall joint with no seats, just a counter selling wine by the glass and scrumptious sandwiches to patrons who stand in a crowd on the flagstones of the sidewalk and pedestrianized street.
Then continue a few more blocks to the stage set of Piazza della Signoria, filled with statues and lined by buildings the Medici would still recognize.
Opening off the south side of the square is world's premier gallery of the Renaissance, the Uffizi (TIP: another museums for which you'll want to purchase tickets before leaving home). Spend the rest of the afternoon communing with Giotto, Botticelli, da Vinci, Michelangelo, Raphael, Caravaggio, and Titian until they boot you out the doors at 7:30pm. Have a Tuscan feast at Il Latini before bed.
» Stay: Florence
Day 5 - Florence

Michelangelo's David in the AccademiaTake a tour
If you prefer an expert guide for your sightseeing, here are some walking tours from our partners at Viator.com that cover many of the sights featured on Day 5:
• Skip the Line: Accademia Gallery Tickets
• Skip the Line: Accademia Gallery Tour
• Skip the Line: Accademia and Uffizi Tour
• Skip The Line: Best of Florence Walking Tour, incl Accademia Gallery and Duomo
• Skip the Line: Florence Renaissance Walking Tour with Accademia Gallery
• Florence Half-Day or Full-Day Sightseeing Tour
• Private Tour: Florence Sightseeing Tour
• Florence Half-Day Sightseeing Tour
• Private Tour: Florence Walking Tour
Florence rule #1: Be in line at the Accademia when it opens to see Michelangelo's David before the crowds arrive. (Avoid the hour-long wait altogether by reserving your tickets.)
Don't linger since before lunch you need to swing by Santa Maria Novella church for a look at the first Renaissance painting to use perfect perspective and a Ghirlandaio fresco cycle on which a young apprentice named Michelangelo helped out.
After a quick lunch, and while the city is shut down for the mid-day riposo, make your way over to the Giotto frescoes in Santa Croce church (it stays open all day), Florence's version of Westminster Abbey and the final resting place of Michelangelo, Galileo, Rossini, and Machiavelli with an excellent leather school in the back.
On your way back over to the heart of town, stop by Vivoli for the best gelato (ice cream) the world has ever known. Licking your cone, head back toward the center of town to cross the jewelry shop–lined medieval bridge Ponte Vecchio over to the artisans' quarter known as the Oltrarno.
Here you'll find the Medici's grand Pitti Palace, whose painting galleries will keep you occupied until closing time at 7pm. The Oltrarno is full of good, homey restaurants where you can kick back, toast your 36 hours in Florence, and avow a return.
» Stay: Florence
Day 6 - Venice

The Grand Canal in Venice.Take a tour
Though no tours of the Accademia are offered, you can get book a gondola ride with our partners at Viator.com:
• Venice Gondola Ride and Serenade
• Venice Gondola Ride and Serenade with Dinner
• Venice Walking Tour and Gondola Ride
There's an 8:37am train from Florence that pulls into Venice around 11:30am so you can dive into the city of canals (not literally). Luckily, the vaporetto (ferry—kinda the public bus system of Venice) from the train station to all sights in the historic center cruises right down the famous Grand Canal.
Have a snack on your way to check into your hotel in the early afternoon, then spend the mid-afternoon perusing the Renaissance masterpieces in Venice's Accademia Gallery (yes, it has same name as a museum in Florence; this is because both are part of their city's "Academy" of Fine Arts).
If you have time (and for a chance of pace), also try to fit in an hour or so admiring the modern art—yes! Italy has modern art, too!—at the lovely Peggy Guggenheim museum nearby.
Take a gondola ride before dinner (yeah, it's a bit cheesy—and expensive—but you wouldn't want to have come all this way and not done it, either), and wander the quiet, romantic streets a while after your meal.
» Stay: Venice
Day 7 - Venice

The mosaics of San Marco in Venice.Take a tour
If you prefer an expert guide for your sightseeing in Venice, here are some walking tours from our partners at Viator.com that cover many of the sights featured on Day 7:
San Marco:
• Skip the Line: Venice Walking Tour with St Mark's Basilica
• Skip the Line: St Mark's Square Highlights Tour
• Skip the Line: Venice in One Day
Palazzo Ducale:
• Skip the Line: Venice Walking Tour with Doges PalaceIn the morning, head straight to one of Europe's prettiest squares, the canalside Piazza San Marco. Wander the glittering mosaicked wonderland of its Byzantine San Marco cathedral and ride the elevator up the bell tower for a sweeping view across the city and its canals.
Take the "Secret Itineraries" tour of the Doge's Palace at 10:45am for a behind-the-scenes look at Venetian history and intrigue from its Renaissance days as the world's trading and shipping powerhouse.
(It’s wisest to book this tour ahead of time, but not necessarily from home before you leave. Dropping by the afternoon before or even first thing in the morning before touring San Marco, should be sufficient. Still, just in case you want to be sure you get a ticket by booking in advance, I've spelled out the process here.)
tip
If any of your days in Venice happens to be a Sunday, do not miss the 6:345pm mass in the Cathedral of St. Mark's—the only time they throw on all the light switches to illuminate all of those amazing gold mosaics.Spend the afternoon however you’d like: shopping for Venice's famous glass trinkets, popping into more museums (my votes: the Peggy Guggenheim of 20th century art and the Ca' d'Oro, the grandest of the Renaissance palazzi along the Grand Canal) and churches, or simply have fun getting lost in the twisting, confounding, unspeakably beautiful back streets of Venice.
» Stay: Venice
Day 8 - Venice

The outlying island of Murano in Venice.
Take a tour
If you prefer an expert guide for your day on the outlying islands, here are some tours from our partners at Viator.com:
• Murano, Burano and Torcello Half-Day Sightseeing Tour
• Private Tour: Murano, Burano and Torcello Half-Day Tour
Spend today doing my favorite thing in Venice: take off on a ferry tour of the outlying islands in the Venetian Lagoon.
First up: Murano, where the glass industry started and a bit like a Venice in miniature. After two hours or so (time to tour a glass factory, visit the little churches, and maybe grab lunch), catch another ferry on to Burano, a fishing village of riotously colored houses along miniature canals. Spend an hour wandering it's postcard-perfect canals before hopping the ferry over to Torcello, where a single mud-banked canal leads to a clutch of ancient buildings and churches at the island's center, including another cathedral swaddled in golden mosaics.
If you time things just right, you should be motoring back to downtown Venice (and a celebratory canal-side final dinner) right as the setting sun sends sparkling streamers across the waters of the lagoon with the bell towers of Venice as a backdrop. Perfect.
» Stay: Venice
Day 9 - Home
Before you leave home:
Book plane tickets
Book hotels
Check train times
Book entry tickets:
Rome: Galleria Borghese
Florence: Uffizi, Accademia (David)
Venice: "Secret Itineraries" tour
Learn more about Italy
Practice your Italian
Most 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.)
Related pages
- The main sections for: Rome, Florence, Venice
- Getting the best deal on airfares
- Getting about Italy by train
- Hotels & other lodging options in Italy
- Sights you need to book ahead of time
- Foolish assumptions - How these itinerary is designed to work
This material was last updated February 2011. All information was accurate at the time.
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