How much does Italy actually cost in 2026? The answer ranges from €40/day (backpacker hostel in Sicily) to €1,200/day (5-star hotel in Portofino). This guide breaks down real, 2026-updated daily budgets by region and traveler type. No marketing fluff — actual numbers from Italians who live here.
Cost Variables: What Determines Your Italy Budget
Four factors create wildly different prices in Italy:
1. Region — Tuscany/Cinque Terre/Amalfi are 2x southern Italy. Sicily/Puglia/Basilicata are 40-50% cheaper than Lombardy/Tuscany. Rome and Venice are expensive on the same level.
2. Season — July-August are 60-80% more expensive than November-March. Easter spike +50% for 10 days.
3. Accommodation type — Hostels €25-50/night, budget hotels €60-100, mid-range €100-180, boutique €180-350, luxury €350+. Italian agriturismi (farm stays) offer best value: €80-150 with breakfast.
4. City vs Countryside — Rome city hotel €150-300 vs Lazio countryside agriturismo €80-120 for same comfort level.
Backpacker Budget: €50-80/day
Accommodation: Hostels (€25-45/night dormitory), couchsurfing, agriturismi in shoulder season.
Food: €15-25/day. Breakfast at bar (espresso + cornetto €2-3), pizza al taglio for lunch (€4-6/slice), trattoria fixed menu for dinner (€15-20). Free fountains for water (Rome's nasoni).
Transport: Regional trains (€8-25 between cities), city day passes (€5-7), avoid Frecciarossa fast trains (€40-80).
Attractions: €5-25/day. Many churches free, museum cumulative cards save 30%. State museums free first Sunday of month.
Realistic backpacker total Italy 7 days: €350-560.
Where backpackers thrive: Sicily (Catania, Palermo, Siracusa), Naples, Bologna, Florence (hostels everywhere), Rome (Trastevere area).
Mid-Range Budget: €120-180/day
The most common Italy traveler budget.
Accommodation: 3-star hotels (€80-130/night), B&Bs (€70-120), Airbnb apartments (€80-150).
Food: €50-70/day. Italian-style: breakfast at bar (€3-5), lunch at trattoria with wine (€20-30), dinner at osteria (€30-45). 1 nicer meal per trip.
Transport: Mix of Frecciarossa for long routes (Rome-Florence €30-60) + regional trains. Bus passes for city.
Attractions: €15-30/day. Skip-the-line tickets, guided tours occasionally, 1-2 special experiences per trip (Vatican private tour, Tuscan wine tasting).
Realistic mid-range Italy 7 days: €840-1,260.
Mid-range works everywhere except: Amalfi Coast in summer (€150+ minimum), Cinque Terre weekends, Venice during Carnival.
Comfort Budget: €250-400/day
Accommodation: 4-star hotels (€180-280), boutique (€200-300), historic palazzi conversions in Florence/Rome (€250-450).
Food: €100-150/day. Lunch at named restaurants, dinner at one Michelin-recommended place per region.
Transport: Frecciarossa first class (€60-120 between major cities), Trenitalia Executive lounges, occasional private drivers (€80-150 between cities or for day-trips).
Attractions: €40-80/day. Skip-the-line + audio guides included, semi-private guided tours, wine tastings at named cantine.
Realistic comfort Italy 7 days: €1,750-2,800.
Where comfort budget peaks: Amalfi Coast (need €350+ to book real hotels), Capri (everything 30% more), Portofino (€400+ basic), Venice in Carnevale (€500+ basic).
Luxury Budget: €500+/day
Accommodation: 5-star hotels (€500-1,500), Belmond properties (€800+), historic Roman palazzo (€1,000+), Amalfi private villas (€1,500+).
Food: €200-400/day. Michelin-starred lunch + dinner. Private dining experiences. Wine pairings at €100+/person.
Transport: Private drivers throughout (€500-800/day in major regions), helicopter transfers Amalfi to Rome (€2,000-4,000), private yacht charters.
Attractions: Private guides (€300-500/day), exclusive access experiences (Vatican private night tour €5,000+, Uffizi private dinner €15,000).
Realistic luxury Italy 7 days: €3,500-15,000+.
Top luxury destinations: Amalfi Coast (Le Sirenuse Positano, Belmond Caruso Ravello), Lake Como (Villa d'Este, Mandarin Oriental), Portofino (Splendido Belmond), Florence (Four Seasons, Villa San Michele), Rome (Hotel de Russie, Hassler).
Regional Cost Breakdown (mid-range traveler)
Cost per person per day for mid-range (3-star hotel, 2 meals, transport, 1 attraction):
| Region | Daily | Cheapest | Most Expensive |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sicily | €90-140 | Catania, Trapani | Taormina, Cefalù |
| Puglia | €100-150 | Inland villages | Polignano, Otranto |
| Basilicata | €90-130 | Whole region | Matera in season |
| Calabria | €85-130 | Inland | Tropea, Capo Vaticano |
| Naples + Campania | €120-180 | Naples city | Amalfi, Capri (€300+) |
| Rome + Lazio | €150-220 | Castelli Romani | Rome centro |
| Tuscany | €150-230 | Maremma | Florence, Chianti |
| Umbria | €110-160 | Whole region | Assisi peak |
| Veneto | €160-240 | Padova | Venice centro |
| Cinque Terre | €140-200 | Monterosso | Vernazza, Manarola |
| Lombardy + Lakes | €140-220 | Bergamo | Como, Bellagio |
| Piedmont (Langhe) | €130-190 | Asti | Barolo cellars |
| Dolomites | €150-230 | Trento city | Cortina (€300+) |
| Sardinia | €130-220 | Inland | Costa Smeralda (€500+) |
Money-Saving Tips That Actually Work
1. Travel in shoulder season (April-mid June, late Sep-Oct) — Save 30-50% on everything.
2. Eat the heavy meal at lunch — Most trattorie offer 'menu del giorno' (€10-15 with primo + secondo + water + wine) at lunch only.
3. Drink wine of the region, not bottled imports — €4 carafe of house wine is often the local DOC, fine for normal dinners.
4. Use regional trains — €15 Florence-Bologna regional vs €40 Frecciarossa. 30 minutes longer but same quality.
5. Stay outside city centers — A €70 B&B in Trastevere is much better value than a €150 hotel near the Colosseum, and you walk 10 minutes.
6. Aperitivo dinner trick — In Milan and Turin, €10 aperitivo includes unlimited buffet (often substantial). Many people eat dinner this way.
7. Free attractions exist everywhere — Churches, walking historic centers, viewpoints, beaches, hiking trails (Cinque Terre, Path of the Gods €0).
8. Italian credit cards have 0% foreign transaction fees — Use Revolut, Wise, or N26 card to avoid 2-3% conversion fees.
9. First Sunday of every month — state museums are FREE — Uffizi, Colosseum, Pompei, Vatican Museums excluded. Plan around this.
10. ItalyGo's free itinerary planner automatically suggests budget-appropriate options based on your inputs.