Destination
Italy Segreta's annual guide makes a bold resolution: retire the basic Venice-Florence-Rome-Amalfi circuit and explore Italy's staggering, under-visited vastness. The 26 picks for 2026 include Matera's ancient cave dwellings, Trieste's Habsburg elegance, Cinque Terre alternatives like Liguria's Tellaro, Umbria's hilltop towns (Spello, Norcia), Sicily's Baroque triangle (Ragusa, Modica, Noto), and Sardinia's hidden coves. For northern Italy: the Dolomites' alpine lakes, Trentino's wine roads, and Verona's quieter charms. Southern highlights: Basilicata's ghost towns, Calabria's wild coast, and Campania's inland volcanic wine country (Irpinia). The guide argues that overtourism has made the "Big 4" less magical — long lines, inflated prices, and crowds that drown out local life. Meanwhile, lesser-known regions offer richer food, lower costs (30-40% cheaper in many cases), and authentic encounters with Italian culture. Whether you're chasing art, nature, food, or solitude, there's a corner of Italy that delivers — without the selfie sticks. The message is clear: 2026 is the year to venture off-circuit and discover the Italy that locals know.
Source: Italy Segreta
Guide
March in Venice is a sweet spot: post-Carnival calm, pre-Easter crowds, and mild spring weather. Visititaly.eu highlights Venice's lesser-known March traditions, starting with the city's ancient New Year celebration (March 1 in the Venetian calendar until 1797) — still marked by locals with processions and blessings at San Marco. Art lovers can catch new exhibitions at the Peggy Guggenheim Collection and Palazzo Grassi. Foodies should explore spring produce at Rialto Market (artichokes, asparagus, soft-shell crabs) and try sarde in saor (sweet-sour sardines) at bacari. For active travelers: rowing classes on the lagoon (way cooler than gondolas), walks through quieter sestieri (Cannaregio, Castello), and day trips to Burano and Torcello without summer mobs. Practical tips: book hotels now (prices 20-30% lower than April), pack layers (sunny days, cool evenings), and expect occasional acqua alta (high tides) — but nothing like November. March is Venice at its most livable: still a working city, not just a theme park.
Source: Visititaly.eu