Use this page to pick an Italy city, choose a trip style, and jump into planning. Rome is live now, and more cities are being added.

Quick picks:
Fast plan
Cities
Trip types
Rome spotlight
Tickets & tours
FAQ

Fast plan

  1. Pick a city (start with Rome).
  2. Book the time-slot anchor for that city (Colosseum first for many Rome trips).
  3. Choose a day plan and keep each day in one area.
Slow plan
  1. Pick 1–2 bases for the whole trip (fewer hotel moves).
  2. Lock one time-slot anchor per base, then build days around it.
  3. Add one buffer day and decide on day trips last.

Cities

Pick a city hub to start planning. Rome is live now.

Rome

Timed-entry anchors, 3–5 day itineraries, and practical planning pages.

Open Rome →

Florence

Art, museums, and compact historic-center days.

Venice

Canals, islands, and route planning that avoids backtracking.

Milan

City breaks, shopping, and day trip options.

Naples

Food-focused days and access to nearby highlights.

Amalfi Coast

Coastal bases, transport choices, and day-by-day pacing.

Tuscany

Hill towns, wine-country routes, and base planning.

Cinque Terre

Trail timing, train logistics, and village planning.

Bologna

Food, walkable days, and easy rail connections.

More cities are in progress.

Trip types

Start with a trip style, then open the pages that match it.

First trip (classic route)

Use one city base and a day-by-day plan, then add extras only if you have time.

History-first (Ancient Rome)

Anchor the trip around a timed Colosseum entry, then build the rest of the day around nearby sites.

Family trip

Plan shorter blocks, protect nap/meal windows, and pick visits that don’t require long cross-city moves.

Seasonal planning + packing

Pick the month first, then match clothes and walking pace to weather and daylight.

Food-focused days

Use one main sight as the anchor, then keep the rest of the day built around meals and short walks.

Museums + architecture

If you want indoor blocks and structure, plan museum time early and keep walking routes compact.

Rome spotlight

Rome is the first Italy hub on Howdy Europe. If you want a simple starting point, begin here and follow a day plan.

Start with Rome

Everything in one place: what to book first, itineraries, planning essentials, and key links.

Open the Rome hub →

Colosseum (timed entry)

If you book one thing early in Rome, it’s usually this. Pick tickets vs a tour first, then choose a time slot.

Choose your pace

Use a day plan to keep mornings anchored and reduce cross-city transit.

Tickets and tours (Rome first)

Rome is the first live city hub on the site, so this is the fastest way to start booking time slots and building days around them.

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Want a clean starting point? Open Rome, then go straight to the
Colosseum page.

FAQ

How do you plan an Italy trip if you only have one city picked?

Start with one city hub and build a day plan that keeps sights grouped by area. Once that base works, you can add a second base or a day trip without redoing everything. If you’re starting now, begin with Rome.

How many days do you need in Italy for a first trip?

It depends on how many bases you want. One base can fill 3 to 5 days comfortably, while two bases usually needs a longer trip so travel days don’t eat your time. If you’re deciding pace, start with the Rome options: 3 days, 4 days, 5 days.

What should you book before you arrive in Italy?

Book anything that uses a timed entry as soon as you know your dates, because those time slots shape the rest of the day. In Rome, that often means starting with the Colosseum, then adding other fixed-time visits.

Should you plan Italy around cities or regions?

Cities work well if you want walkable days, museums, and easy rail links. Regions work well if you want smaller towns and flexible pacing, but they often require a car or longer travel times. If you’re not sure, start with one city base first, then add a region later.

How many bases should you choose for one trip?

For a simpler trip, choose 1 to 2 bases and take day trips from there. More bases can work, but it increases packing and transit time. If you want fewer hotel moves, use the “Slow plan” on this page and keep the rest flexible.

Is it better to book tickets or guided tours in Italy?

Tickets are a good fit if you prefer self-paced visits and mainly need timed entry. Tours are a good fit if you want context and a clear plan on-site. For the biggest Rome decision, compare Colosseum tickets vs Colosseum tours.

What’s the cleanest way to start planning Rome inside an Italy trip?

Open the Rome hub, pick a day plan, then lock your timed entry for the Colosseum early. After that, you can add food, museums, or a day trip based on energy and weather.