A Cinque Terre day trip from Florence is one of those things that sounds ambitious on paper and ends up being one of the best days of a trip to Italy. I know because I’ve done it — and then gone back. The five cliff-side villages of the Ligurian coast are only about two and a half hours from Florence by train, which makes them genuinely doable in a day even if it makes for a long one.
This guide has everything you need for 2026: how to get there, what the Cinque Terre Card actually covers and what it costs this year, which villages are worth your limited time, and the biggest update of the last couple of years — the Via dell’Amore finally reopened after twelve years of closure. It changes what a day trip looks like, and it’s worth knowing about before you go.
2026 update: The Via dell’Amore (Path of Love), the famous coastal walk between Riomaggiore and Manarola, reopened in July 2024 after being closed since 2012. Access is now timed and ticketed — details below.

Yes — with caveats. If you’re based in Florence and don’t have time to stay overnight in the Cinque Terre villages, a day trip is absolutely worth doing. The train is straightforward, the villages are walkable, and even a few hours on that coastline leaves an impression that sticks.
The honest caveats: you will be tired by the time you get back to Florence. It’s a long travel day on top of a full sightseeing day. And in July and August, the villages are very crowded — not in an occasional-tourist way but in a shoulder-to-shoulder, queue-for-gelato, hard-to-find-a-seat way. If you have any flexibility with timing, avoid peak summer. If you can stay overnight in the villages even for one night, do it — the evening light and the mornings before the day-trippers arrive are a completely different experience.
But if Florence is your base and Cinque Terre is calling? Go. It’s worth the effort.

The train is the only practical way to do this trip. There is no direct train from Florence to the Cinque Terre villages themselves — the journey is done in two legs.
You depart from Florence Santa Maria Novella (SMN) and travel to La Spezia Centrale. This is the main transport hub for Cinque Terre and your connection point. Journey time is roughly 2 hours to 2 hours 30 minutes depending on the service.
There are two train options:
For a day trip, the regional train is usually the right call unless you want to maximise time at the destination. Book your outbound train as early as possible — aim to arrive in La Spezia by 9am to get ahead of the crowds.
From La Spezia Centrale, you board the Cinque Terre Express — a local train that stops at all five villages in order: Riomaggiore, Manarola, Corniglia, Vernazza, and Monterosso al Mare. Journey from La Spezia to Monterosso (the furthest village) takes about 20 minutes.
This is where the Cinque Terre Card comes in, because it covers unlimited rides on this train for the day.
Pro tip: Check train schedules on Trenitalia.com before you leave. The first trains from Florence to La Spezia depart around 6am. Book both legs in advance — the Cinque Terre Express doesn’t need pre-booking if you have the Card, but your Florence-La Spezia train should be confirmed.
The Cinque Terre Card is the ticket system managed by the Cinque Terre National Park. In 2026 it uses dynamic pricing — the cost changes by season and demand period rather than being fixed. It’s only required between 14 March and 2 November 2026. Outside those dates, the trails are free and no card is needed.
| Card Type | What’s Included | 2026 Price Range |
|---|---|---|
| Cinque Terre Train Card (1 day) | Unlimited Cinque Terre Express train rides between La Spezia and Levanto + access to paid hiking trails + Via dell’Amore (timed reservation required) | €14.80 (low) to €32.50 (high season) |
| Cinque Terre Train Card (2 days) | Same as above, over two consecutive days | €27.60 to €59.00 |
| Trekking Card (no train) | Trail access only, no train rides | €7.50 to €17.00 |
For a day trip, the 1-day Train Card is the right option. It covers your local train rides between villages (if you take the train even twice in a day, it almost always works out cheaper than buying individual tickets in high season) plus trail access.
Buy the card at La Spezia Centrale station, at the park offices in any village, or in advance on the official Cinque Terre National Park website. Buying online in advance is worth it during summer — the queues at the station can eat into your day.
What the Card does not cover:

This is the biggest update for anyone visiting Cinque Terre in 2026. The Via dell’Amore — the famous paved coastal path connecting Riomaggiore and Manarola — reopened in July 2024 after being closed since 2012 following a landslide. It had been off-limits for twelve years.
It’s a 950-metre walk along the cliff face with the sea directly below you. The name means “Path of Love” and the views justify every lock-on-a-railing cliche that’s been attached to it over the decades. Walking time is about 20 minutes at a relaxed pace.
Book your timeslot on the official Via dell’Amore booking site. Do this before your trip date — popular morning slots fill weeks ahead in summer.
Pro tip: Book the earliest available timeslot (9am or 9:30am) to walk it before the midday crowds arrive. You’ll exit in Manarola, which is the perfect village to start exploring after the walk.
You won’t see all five villages properly in a single day — not if you actually want to spend time in them rather than photograph them and leave. The honest recommendation for a day trip is to pick two or three and do them well. Here’s what each one offers.
The southernmost village and the starting point if you’re walking the Via dell’Amore. It’s the most visited village because most people arrive here first from La Spezia. The colourful houses stacked up the hillside are exactly what you’ve seen in photos. It’s worth an hour — walk up the main street, look back down at the marina, then continue to Manarola via the Via dell’Amore if you have a slot booked.
Many people’s favourite of the five. It has the most dramatic setting — the houses seem to grow directly out of the rock above the water. The natural swimming area is good on calmer days. Manarola is also known for Sciacchetrà, the local sweet dessert wine made from dried grapes. If you’re going to sit somewhere with a glass of wine and look at the sea, do it here. The evening light here is particularly beautiful — one more reason to stay overnight if you can.
The only village with no direct sea access — it sits on a promontory above the water and you reach it by climbing around 370 steps from the train station (or taking a shuttle bus). It’s the quietest of the five, the least visited, and the most authentically local-feeling. Worth a stop if you want to escape the tourist concentration in the other villages. Good for lunch.
Widely considered the most beautiful village and the best one to base yourself in if you’re spending more time. It has a proper natural harbour, a castle you can climb for views over the rooftops, and the widest selection of restaurants. The main square, Piazza Marconi, sits right at the water’s edge. If you only have time for two villages, Vernazza and Manarola are the pair most people leave happiest having visited.
The largest and most developed of the five villages. It has the best beaches — proper sandy beaches rather than the rocky access points in the other villages. If beach time is part of your plan, Monterosso is where you want to be. It’s also the least “village-feeling” of the five, with more hotels, restaurants, and tourist infrastructure. The old town (separated from the new town by a tunnel) is the prettier half.
Best combination for a one-day trip:
The Cinque Terre National Park has a network of marked trails connecting the villages. The most famous is the Sentiero Azzurro (Blue Trail), which runs along the coast linking all five villages. It’s split into four sections of varying difficulty.
On a day trip, hiking the entire Blue Trail is too ambitious unless you’re an early starter and a fast walker. Pick one or two sections and do them properly. Trail access is included in the Cinque Terre Card — trails are checked at entry points.
Check trail conditions before you go: Sections of the Blue Trail close periodically due to maintenance or weather damage. Check the official park website for current trail status before your visit.

Cinque Terre sits in Liguria, and Ligurian food is genuinely distinct from the rest of Italian cuisine. A day trip is a good enough reason to eat well.
Restaurant prices in Cinque Terre are higher than inland Italy, and they’ve increased in recent years with the rise in tourism. Budget around €15-€25 for a sit-down meal with a drink, or spend significantly less eating focaccia and fried things on the street.
6:00am
Depart Florence SMN Take an early regional or Frecciargento train to La Spezia Centrale. Book this in advance on Trenitalia. Bring breakfast from a bar near the station — you won’t want to stop once you arrive.
8:15am
Arrive La Spezia Centrale Pick up your Cinque Terre Train Card at the station if you haven’t bought it online. Head straight to the Cinque Terre Express platform.
8:45am
Arrive Riomaggiore Walk the main street down to the marina. Take the photos. Get your bearings.
9:00am
Walk the Via dell’Amore Book the first timeslot (9:00am or 9:30am) in advance. Walk the 950m path from Riomaggiore to Manarola. Twenty minutes of coastline views at their most peaceful, before the crowds build.
9:30am
Manarola Explore the village, swim if the weather allows, have a coffee and a focaccia. If you want to try Sciacchetrà, some wine bars open mid-morning. Spend 1.5 to 2 hours here.
11:30am
Train to Vernazza Take the Cinque Terre Express two stops to Vernazza. Walk through the village, climb to the castle (Doria Castle) for views, and find a table somewhere in or near Piazza Marconi for lunch.
1:00pm
Lunch in Vernazza Order pesto pasta. Take your time. This is the part of the day you’ll remember.
2:30pm
Optional: train to Monterosso If you want beach time, take the train one more stop to Monterosso and spend an hour or two on the sand before heading back.
4:30pm
Head back to La Spezia Give yourself plenty of time to connect to your Florence train. The Cinque Terre Express runs frequently but platforms get crowded in late afternoon.
7:00pm
Back in Florence Tired, probably sunburned, and glad you went.
Best months: May to early June, and September to mid-October. The weather is warm enough for swimming, the trails are fully open, the Via dell’Amore is in season, and the villages haven’t yet hit peak-summer capacity. These are genuinely the sweet spots.
Avoid: July and August. This is the peak of Italian summer and the Cinque Terre villages are at maximum capacity. The trails are crowded from early morning. Queues form for everything. The heat on exposed coastal paths with no shade is significant. It’s not impossible, but you need very early starts and realistic expectations.
Off-season (November to March): Quieter and cheaper, but some restaurants and accommodation close, the Via dell’Amore is out of season (no Card required and no trail access fee), and weather can be unpredictable including rain and rough seas. If you’re fine with that, it’s a beautiful and peaceful time to visit.
Weekday vs weekend: Cinque Terre gets significant day-tripper traffic from Milan, Genoa, and Turin on weekends — on top of the international visitors. If you can visit on a Tuesday or Wednesday, you’ll notice the difference.
The return journey follows the same route in reverse: Cinque Terre Express to La Spezia Centrale, then a direct or connecting train to Florence Santa Maria Novella. Check your return train time before you leave for the villages in the morning and set a reminder to start heading back with enough time to spare.
If you miss your booked train, regional train tickets are usually flexible and you can take the next available service. Frecciargento and Intercity tickets are date and time specific — check the terms on your booking.
Useful links for planning:
Two to three is realistic if you want to actually experience them rather than just photograph them. Riomaggiore, Manarola, and Vernazza is the combination most people leave happiest with — especially now that the Via dell’Amore connects the first two.
You can buy it on arrival at La Spezia station or in the villages. In July and August it’s worth buying online in advance to skip the queue. The Via dell’Amore timeslot is a separate booking and should always be done in advance in season.
For a day trip: yes, almost always. If you take the Cinque Terre Express between two or more villages, the Card costs less than individual tickets during medium and high season. It also includes trail access that you’d otherwise pay for separately.
Yes. Manarola has a good natural swimming area on the rocks (small ladder into the sea). Monterosso has the only proper sandy beach. Most villages have some form of sea access, but it’s rocky swimming rather than beach swimming except in Monterosso.
Yes. It’s a heavily visited national park and tourist area with good infrastructure. The trails carry some standard hiking risks — sun, uneven terrain, occasional rockfall on poorly maintained sections — but the well-marked routes are appropriate for anyone in reasonable fitness.
A realistic budget for a comfortable day trip in 2026: Florence to La Spezia return (~€30 regional train), Cinque Terre Train Card (~€20-€30 depending on season), lunch and snacks (~€20-€30), incidentals. Total: roughly €70-€100 per person. You can do it for less by packing your own food and booking trains far in advance.
A Cinque Terre day trip from Florence is genuinely one of the better day trips you can do in Italy. The logistics are manageable, the scenery delivers, and with the Via dell’Amore back open, you can now walk the most iconic stretch of the coast that’s been off-limits for over a decade.
The key to a good day: book early, leave Florence early, and don’t try to see all five villages. Pick two or three, slow down in them, eat well, and save Vernazza for lunch. That’s the version of this trip that people talk about when they get home.
If you’re planning a longer stint in Italy and want more destination ideas for study abroad students or long-term travelers, the best cities to study abroad in Europe guide has more on building a base from which day trips like this one make the most sense.

Hey there, I'm Angelique!
I'm a Filipina-American, Chicago native living abroad and running my online design agency from Chiang Mai, Thailand. Over a decade of traveling in, and yes, I still pinch myself. With family split between the US, UK, and SE Asia, travel has always been part of my story. This blog is where I share the honest side of living and traveling abroad, the places I explore, and the little hacks that make this life actually work. Glad you're here, friend!
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