Explore 100 handpicked hotels in Italy

Sicily
Perched on a cliff in the hilltop town of Taormina, this former Dominican convent has spent the better part of six centuries collecting remarkable guests: Oscar Wilde, Audrey Hepburn, Greta Garbo, D.H. Lawrence and, more recently, the cast and crew of The White Lotus. The building is as extraordinary as its guest list: two wings – one medieval, one 1896 Liberty-style – frame stunning gardens, a Michelin-starred restaurant and a 21-metre infinity pool suspended above the Ionian Sea. It's immaculate, polished and more than a little bit swanky – but it's the 600-year history really wins your heart.

Sicily
Southwest Sicily doesn't feature in most first-time itineraries, but that's exactly what keeps it interesting. Wedged between the archaeological wonder of Agrigento and the port of Sciacca, this stretch of coast is quieter, more rugged and considerably less photographed than its more famous cousins. And so, amid 230 hectares of olive groves and citrus orchards, Rocco Forte dreamed up his only purpose-built resort: a collection of low-rise terracotta-and-ochre pavilions that look as though they've always been here. Days tend to revolve around the Irene Forte Spa, eight restaurants serving food largely grown on the estate, two championship golf courses and a two-kilometre stretch of private beach. Bliss.

Puglia
In the countryside beyond Fasano, where silvery olive trees stretch toward the horizon, sits this exquisitely renovated 16th-century masseria. The thoughtful redesign by Olga Polizzi brings together cool stone floors and whitewashed walls with chic contemporary elements, creating an atmosphere that feels both authentically Pugliese and utterly luxurious. The property's historical character provides the perfect backdrop for leisurely afternoons by the pool or romantic sunset cocktails on the rooftop, while the surrounding countryside beckons with opportunities for golf, hiking or horseback riding. When the Adriatic calls, a short shuttle whisks you to the private beach club for a day of Mediterranean bliss.

Siena & Val d'Orcia
The property boasts Italy's only private golf club, a renowned Brunello di Montalcino winery, gourmet dining, and a serene spa. Despite world-class amenities, the estate maintains an intimate atmosphere where guests can experience the timeless beauty of Val d'Orcia while enjoying exceptional privacy and personalized service.

Capri
Positioned above the Marina Grand, this boutique gem designed by Michele Bonan delivers sophisticated coastal living with a refreshingly homely touch. The crisp white walls provide the perfect canvas for bold blues, sleek monochrome tiles, and tasteful modern artwork. Design-conscious travelers will appreciate the wealth of coffee table books scattered throughout, while those seeking relaxation can revel in the large swimming pool or book a Sisley treatment at the spa. With a select number of rooms and staff who pride themselves on attentive yet unobtrusive service, you'll find yourself slipping into island time with remarkable ease. This is five-star luxury that feels like coming home – if your home happened to have breath-taking Mediterranean views from every angle.

Lake Garda
On Lake Garda's western shore, olive groves and lemon terraces tumble down to the water, and high above is the flagship wellness resort of the Leali family, Lefay Resort & SPA. Opened in 2008, it's still the lake's headline act for serious spa-retreaters and the signature wellness method pairs Classical Chinese Medicine with Western methods that play out across a variety of programmes, longevity consultations and treatments from an in-house doctor. It's set in a stunning 11-hectare private park above Gargnano, and you'll also find two accomplished restaurants with a proper sommelier for when you're not ensconced in the 4,300 square-metre spa.

Bologna
Step off one of Bologna's narrow medieval lanes, push open a discreet wooden door, and you'll find yourself standing beneath a soaring glass cupola. The palazzo of Hotel Corona D'oro has been woven into the city's fabric since the 13th century when it belonged to the noble Azzoguidi family, and has been welcoming guests since 1890. With only 40 rooms, flagstoned cloisters and a pretty, vaulted breakfast room it's a more intimate version of the city's grander options. The location is hard to fault too, with the Two Towers are literally round the corner and Piazza Maggiore five minutes on foot.

Naples
Standing proudly on Naples' seafront since 1882, this iconic establishment has been welcoming illustrious guests through its stately doors for generations. Positioned in the heart of the city with unrivalled views of Castle dell'Ovo and the glittering Bay of Naples, you'll be immersed in both history and luxury from the moment you arrive. Belgian financier Oscar du Mesnil was so captivated by Naples' beauty that he built this waterfront gem during the city's grand urban transformation. Today, the hotel maintains its heritage charm while discreetly incorporating modern comforts. Whether you're sipping prosecco at the panoramic Sky Lounge as the sun sets over Mount Vesuvius or enjoying a morning espresso on your private balcony, you'll understand why celebrities and travellers alike have made this their Neapolitan pied-à-terre for over a century.

The Dolomites
Corvara is the epicentre of Dolomite tourism. In 1938, Italy's first ski lift was built here, the very same year that the Pezzei family opened their doors. Nearly nine decades on and not much has changed in terms of hospitality and heart. The hotel is right in the centre of the village, a short stroll from the gondolas that connect to the legendary Sellaronda circuit and over 1,200 kilometres of slopes. And it's not just about snow either: in summer, swap your skis for hiking boots or a road bike and tackle the same jaw-dropping passes. The Ladin culture in this corner of South Tyrol is also fascinating — three languages, a fiercely proud identity and food that borrows from neighbouring Austria and the Italian classics.

Portofino
Portofino (all 500 metres of it!) has charmed royals and Hollywood stars since the 1950s – and the famous Eight Hotel charms just as many today! Set inside a renovated Ligurian townhouse on a sleepy side street, the boutique hideaway is a lovely alternative to the grand dames on the water: small, quiet and just a couple of minutes' stroll from the harbour's colourful chaos. Breakfast happens under the chestnut trees in the private garden, there's a heated jacuzzi on the deck for aperitivo hour, and a complimentary shuttle will whisk you down to the emerald cove of Paraggi when the beach calls.

Sardinia
A land of helichrysum and juniper, of vast spaces and vibrant colours, Sardinia amazes and captivates. In the silence of a centuries-old park, your gaze turns to the immensity of the crystalline sea, and reality becomes a dream. A whisper of luxury awaits you in the whiteness of spaces furnished with care and passion, where refined culinary experiences marry with ancient traditions, renewed to create perfect images, cut out on the light paper of dreams. Make a wish, you're in L'ea Bianca

Chianti & Central Tuscany
Villa Bordoni is a ‘Patrician Villa’ – the former country residence of the Bordonis, a family of wealthy merchants from the city of Florence. The villa was acquired by David and Catherine Gardner in 2002, and lovingly restored over a period of more than 3 years to create a beautiful country hotel and restaurant in this historic villa, overlooking the valley of Greve and commanding exceptional views of the Chianti landscape.

Perugia
On the Umbria–Tuscany border, the Bolza family spent three decades on a project most hoteliers wouldn't touch: restoring an 11th-century castle and its 3,700 acres of wilderness, one step at a time. Count Antonio bought the estate in 1994 and since then, his son Benedikt (handily also an architect), has designed nearly every object, fabric and fixture on the property. The result feels like you're stepping into someone's astonishingly beautiful home — and one that comes with a candlelit subterranean Bathhouse carved from the old wine cellars and a stable of Spanish purebreds, too! It opened in 2021, and (impressively) already holds Three Michelin Keys, the guide's highest honour.

Isola d'Elba
Elba may be only an hour's ferry from mainland Tuscany, but the island has its own character: less polished than the Amalfi Coast, wilder than Sardinia, and laced with beaches the Italians have long kept quiet about. Biodola Bay on the north coast is one of the best, a pale sandy stretch bookended by low cliffs and backed by scented Mediterranean maquis. The Hotel Hermitage has occupied it since the 1960s, when the De Ferrari family built a scattering of cottages through a 50-acre park running down to the sea. Still family-run today, it's built for the long, slow Italian summer with three seawater pools, four restaurants and a private beach.

Montecatini Terme
Part of the LHP Hotels empire (they of the "made in Italy style and design" manifesto), this 62-room property takes itself rather seriously as Montecatini's first proper design hotel. Built in 1910 but given the full monochrome makeover, it's all geometric patterns, chrome furnishings, and that black-and-white aesthetic that screams "we hired an expensive interior designer and by God you're going to notice." The whole thing reads like someone's mood board for urban sophistication came to life - water cascades at the entrance, a rooftop pool with 360-degree views, and a spa they've christened Monté that promises "exclusive wellness". But here's the thing: despite the try-hard design speak and occasional pretentiousness, they've actually created something rather special here, especially when you're floating in that rooftop pool watching the sun set over the Tuscan hills.

Maremma & Coastal Tuscany
Kissed by the Tuscan sun and surrounded by the pristine blue Tyrrhenian sea, Hotel Il Pellicano is a timeless Mediterranean hideaway, home to all things slow, stylish and creative. Come embrace your sense of wonder and experience 'la dolce vita'. The best place to experience 'la dolce vita.' Guests can experience a taste for 'sprezzatura' – an Italian word that captures an offhand, casual elegance and Il Pellicano is the epitome of that.

Ischia Island
Ischia is often overshadowed by its flashier neighbour Capri across the bay - but that's exactly how regulars prefer it! It's the Bay of Naples' volcanic sibling, laced with thermal springs and chestnut forests, and moving at a noticeably slower pace. The quietest corner is the tiny fishing village of Sant'Angelo and, set right on the edge in a mountain of volcanic stone, is the Miramare Sea Resort & Spa. The work of Neapolitan architect Giuliano dell'Uva, it's a rare piece of contemporary design on an island more often done up in terracotta and tile and a private beach, sea-view rooms and access to a proper thermal park are the perfect finishing touches.

Amalfi Coast
While the rest of the Amalfi Coast leans into terracotta, bougainvillea and old-world romance, Casa Angelina does something refreshingly different. Sitting on the cliffs of Praiano, the hotel's white-on-white minimalism feels more gallery than grand palazzo... And that's totally the point. Clean lines, contemporary art and a pared-back palette let the real star of the show take centre stage: the staggering Tyrrhenian Sea views that stretch from Positano to Capri. Add a Michelin-starred rooftop restaurant, a holistic spa and the hotel's own private boats, and you've got one of the most distinctive stays on this magnificent coastline.

Rome
There's something really quite special about staying in a home that's been in the same family for five generations, especially when that family descends from Napoleon's sister. Perched on the Quirinal Hill, a short stroll from the Trevi Fountain, the intimate Villa Spalletti Trivelli was built in 1901 for Countess Gabriella Rasponi, a formidable woman who turned her drawing rooms into a salon for Rome's intellectual elite. Today, her descendants welcome guests into a world of honesty bars, heirloom antiques and the family's own organic wines from Umbria set the tone. The result is less hotel and more family home... and one with impeccable taste.

Venice
Most Venice hotels are planted deep in the maze of canals... But the Belmond Hotel Cipriani does the exact opposite. Located on the eastern tip of Giudecca Island, the hotel looks back across the lagoon at St Mark's Square, with three acres of fragrant gardens, a working vineyard and the only Olympic-sized swimming pool in central Venice. Opened in 1958 by Giuseppe Cipriani (the man behind Harry's Bar and the Bellini cocktail), it has been a favourite Venetian bolthole of Hollywood, royalty and the Biennale crowd ever since. Many of the staff have been there for decades and it really does show.

Lake Como
Lake Como's western shore — the so-called Riviera delle Azalee — has long been the lake's most sought-after address. And gazing across the water towards Bellagio's sparkling promontory, sits the Grand Hotel Tremezzo, an Art Nouveau palace built in 1910 and still family-owned today. Greta Garbo summered here and Clooney's been spotted on the terrace, but for all the celebrity connections, it's the personal warmth of the De Santis family that lingers longest. Five restaurants (including one honouring Italy's first three-Michelin-star chef), three pools and a Santa Maria Novella spa in an 18th-century villa make it rather difficult to leave.

Florence
Ring the doorbell and wait to be greeted as if arriving at a friend's particularly stylish townhouse - albeit one with impeccable taste in Tuscan wines and a knack for artful décor. This elegant hideaway feels distinctly un-hotel-like, with its shelves adorned in an "artfully haphazard" array of hardback books, fresh flowers, and artistic sketches. The warm, informal atmosphere creates an instant sense of belonging in a city that can sometimes overwhelm with its artistic grandeur. Perfectly positioned for immersive exploration, you're just moments from iconic Renaissance treasures, yet tucked away enough to feel like a local rather than a tourist. This is Florence experienced as it should be - intimate, personal and utterly authentic.

Sicily
Perched high above the glittering Mediterranean, this elegant hideaway sits pretty amidst rolling vineyards and wild gardens on a UNESCO-listed volcanic isle. The white-washed buildings peek out between tangles of bougainvillea and swaying palms, while the heady scent of Malvasia grapes ripening on ancient vines fills the air. Let yourself be drawn into the rhythm of island life, where mornings might find you practicing sun salutations on the rooftop, afternoons call for lazy dips in the freshwater pool, and evenings are best spent sampling estate wines as the lighthouse beam sweeps across inky waters.

Sicily
Few hotels have a history quite like the Grand Hotel Timeo. Opened in 1873, it was Taormina's first hotel and still occupies its original clifftop spot, right beside the third-century Greek theatre. Mount Etna smokes gently to the south, the turquoise Ionian Sea glitters below, and the view alone has attracted artists, writers, emperors and Hollywood royalty for well over a century. Add six acres of terraced gardens, Michelin-starred dining and a Dior spa, and you might find yourself lingering for considerably longer than planned...

Puglia

Siena & Val d'Orcia
Imagine waking up in an 8th-century hamlet, where geraniums spill from stone windowsills and the morning mist slowly reveals Siena's striking silhouette in the distance. This isn't just any village though - it's a rather spectacular Relais & Châteaux property where every medieval building, from the chapel to the cobbled square, has been carefully transformed into something truly special. The active winery and surrounding vineyards aren't just for show either - they produce some seriously good bottles that are shipped across the globe.

Capri
Just a stone's throw from the legendary Piazzetta and the chic boutiques of Via Camerelle lies this eclectic gem that oozes effortless style. The moment you step inside, you're transported into a world where La Dolce Vita meets contemporary design with a wink to the past. Multi-hued rooms (no two the same) showcase dusty Mediterranean blues, saffron yellows and coral splashes that echo the island's natural palette. Globetrotting bon vivants flock here for the intimate yet privileged position, savoring the perfect blend of Caprese tradition and worldly sophistication.
Naples

The Dolomites
Some hotels win you over with design, others with location - and this one does it with dinner. Tucked into the hillside near the village of San Cassiano in South Tyrol's Alta Badia valley, Ciasa Salares has been in the Wieser family since the 1960s, and their obsession with food has turned a traditional alpine lodge into a genuine gastronomic destination. A wine cellar with 24,000 bottles, dedicated cheese and chocolate rooms, and four distinct restaurants sit alongside wood-panelled cosiness and honest Ladin hospitality. Beyond the table, the UNESCO-listed Dolomites are right there (the Armentarola ski lift is practically on the doorstep), and summer opens up some of Italy's finest hiking.

Sardinia
Cross the threshold into an unexpected world, where nature reigns supreme, art pervades every corner, and Sardinian traditions are the very essence. Su Gologone isn't just a hotel, it's an experience. A pleasant surprise awaits you around every corner, a warm smile at every glance.
In the beautiful Barbagia region, a rugged and surprising region of Sardinia, just a few dozen kilometers from the sea, lies a world of juniper trees and embroidery, terracotta and inlay, 20th-century Sardinian artists, and a strong culinary tradition.
Namibrand, Namibia