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Amalfi 3-Day Essentials — Cathedral, Ravello & the Coast

Duomo di Sant'Andrea + Paper Museum + Atrani + Ravello's Villa Rufolo & Villa Cimbrone + Positano by ferry

Amalfi 3-Day Itinerary — Quick Answer

As of 2026
Trip length
3 days
Est. cost / person (mid, ex-flights)
$630
Budget–luxury
$300–$1,330

As of 2026, the recommended Amalfi 3-day route runs Day1 Amalfi town — Cathedral, Paper Museum & Atrani · Day2 Ravello — Villa Rufolo & Villa Cimbrone (or the Path of the Gods) · Day3 Positano by ferry (or a Capri day trip), grouping the must-see sights with minimal backtracking. Estimated cost per person (excluding flights) is around $630 on a mid-range budget. Three days covers the heart of the Amalfi Coast with Amalfi town as your base. Day 1 takes the town itself — the Duomo di Sant'Andrea and Cloister of Paradise, the Paper Museum up the valley, and a walk to neighboring Atrani. Day 2 goes up the mountain to Ravello for Villa Rufolo and Villa Cimbrone, or onto the Path of the Gods. Day 3 is a ferry day to Positano (or Capri). Use ferries and the SITA bus rather than driving the hair-raising coast road — and travel in May-June or September-October to dodge the worst heat, crowds, and prices.

3-Day Total Budget at a Glance

Budget

$300

Per person, flights excl.

Recommended

Mid-Range

$630

Per person, flights excl.

Luxury

$1,330

Per person, flights excl.

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Day-by-Day Detailed Schedule

DAY 1

Amalfi town — Cathedral, Paper Museum & Atrani

Duomo di Sant'Andrea - Cloister of Paradise - Museo della Carta (Paper Museum) - Marina Grande - walk to Atrani

Activities

  1. 09:30 Duomo di Sant'Andrea + Cloister of Paradise 1h30

    Climb the dramatic staircase to Amalfi's cathedral, with its striped Arab-Norman façade and 11th-century bronze doors from Constantinople. Inside, visit the Cloister of Paradise (Chiostro del Paradiso), the diocesan museum, and the crypt holding the relics of St. Andrew.

    Cost: ~€3 TIP: Go early before the square fills and the heat builds. Dress modestly (shoulders and knees covered) to enter the cathedral. The cloister's interlacing Moorish-style arches are the photo highlight. The clearest reminder of Amalfi's maritime-republic past.
  2. 11:30 Paper Museum (Museo della Carta) 1h

    Walk up the Valle dei Mulini to the Museo della Carta, set in a 13th-century former paper mill, where guides demonstrate Amalfi's centuries-old hand-papermaking with working water-powered machinery — the craft that made the town an early European paper center.

    Cost: ~€4.50 (guided) TIP: A short uphill walk from the cathedral square. A good cool, shaded stop on a hot day. You can buy handmade Amalfi paper at the end. The guided demonstration is the point — check the next tour time on arrival.
  3. 13:00 Lunch + Marina Grande beachfront 2h

    Lunch on classic coast seafood. Marina Grande sits right on the Spiaggia Grande beach (mussels in San Marzano sauce, clam spaghetti); Lido Azzurro by the port is a fair-value alternative. Then relax on the main beach.

    Cost: €20-35 per person TIP: Book a sea-view terrace table in season. After lunch, the Spiaggia Grande is the easy place to swim from June onward; beach-club umbrellas run €25-50. Step a street back for cheaper options like Trattoria San Giuseppe.
  4. 16:00 Walk to Atrani 1h30

    Stroll the seafront path and short tunnel/stairway to Atrani, the tiny village 10 minutes away — a cluster of white houses around a piazza and a small beach, with the Church of San Salvatore de' Birecto where the Amalfi Republic's doges were once crowned.

    Cost: Free TIP: Atrani is far quieter than Amalfi and a lovely, easy outing. Wander the stairways and arches and have a drink in the little piazza. It's also a calmer, cheaper place to come back for dinner.
  5. 20:00 Dinner — Da Gemma or dinner in Atrani 2h

    For a special evening, Da Gemma (since 1872, above the cathedral square) does refined seafood and the coast's signature scialatielli ai frutti di mare. For local value, walk back to Atrani for A' Paranza's scampi-cream risotto.

    Cost: €35-65 per person TIP: Italians eat late (dinner from 7:30-8pm); reserve a terrace table in season. Da Gemma is smart-casual and a splurge; Atrani is cheaper and quieter. Finish with a delizia al limone or limoncello.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Pasticceria Pansa

Piazza Duomo, Amalfi · €4-8

Espresso and a delizia al limone at the historic 1830 café on the cathedral square.

Lunch

Marina Grande or Lido Azzurro

Amalfi seafront · €20-35

Beachfront seafood — mussels, clam spaghetti, grilled fish.

Dinner

Da Gemma or A' Paranza (Atrani)

Amalfi / Atrani · €35-65

Scialatielli ai frutti di mare, or Atrani's scampi-cream risotto for value.

Transit:

Everything today is on foot — the cathedral, Paper Museum, beach, and Atrani are all within a short, mostly walkable distance (some steps and a gentle uphill to the museum).

DAY 1 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $100 Mid $210 Luxury $440
DAY 2

Ravello — Villa Rufolo & Villa Cimbrone (or the Path of the Gods)

SITA bus up to Ravello - Villa Rufolo - Villa Cimbrone Terrace of Infinity - Ravello village - return to Amalfi

Activities

  1. 09:00 SITA bus up to Ravello 40min

    Take the small local SITA bus from Amalfi's seafront up the mountain switchbacks to Ravello, about 350m above the coast (roughly 25 minutes). Ravello is cooler, quieter, and famously romantic.

    Cost: ~€2-3 TIP: Buses run roughly every 30-60 minutes — check the timetable and buy a ticket. A taxi (€30-50) is faster if you miss one. There's no ferry to Ravello; it's inland and uphill. Carsickness-prone travelers should sit forward.
  2. 10:00 Villa Rufolo — gardens & belvedere 1h30

    Tour the medieval Villa Rufolo, its gardens spilling toward a belvedere over the coast — the setting that inspired Wagner and now the stage of the summer Ravello Festival. Around €7 entry.

    Cost: ~€7 TIP: Go in the morning before tour groups. The belvedere over the sea is the iconic photo. If you visit in July, the Ravello Festival stages concerts here over the sea — book ahead. Allow time to wander the gardens.
  3. 12:30 Lunch — Cumpa' Cosimo 1h30

    Lunch on hearty Neapolitan home cooking at Cumpa' Cosimo, a friendly family-run institution in the village center known for its handmade pastas and a mixed-pasta sampler plate.

    Cost: €20-35 per person TIP: Order the mixed-pasta sampler to taste several house pastas at once. It's homey rather than fancy — a perfect Ravello lunch. Popular, so reserve. For a splurge instead, the Michelin-starred Il Flauto di Pan is at Villa Cimbrone.
  4. 14:30 Villa Cimbrone — Terrace of Infinity 1h30

    Walk the stepped lane to Villa Cimbrone, whose lush gardens end at the Terrace of Infinity — a balustrade lined with marble busts above a sheer drop to the sea, one of the coast's most famous views. Around €10.

    Cost: ~€10 TIP: The Terrace of Infinity is the highlight — go for the views and the romantic gardens. It's a 10-minute walk from the village center along stepped lanes. Allow time to linger. A classic spot for couples.
  5. 17:00 Ravello village + return to Amalfi 1h30

    Wander Ravello's quiet main piazza and lanes, then take the SITA bus back down to Amalfi for the evening. Ravello's cool, calm air is a contrast to the busy waterfront.

    Cost: ~€2-3 bus TIP: Check the last convenient bus down before you lose track of time. Back in Amalfi, the evening is cooler and the harbor pleasant for a stroll and dinner. (Alternative: swap today for the Path of the Gods hike — see the FAQ.)

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Café in Amalfi

Amalfi · €3-6

Espresso and a cornetto before the bus up to Ravello.

Lunch

Cumpa' Cosimo

Ravello · €20-35

The mixed-pasta sampler at a homey family-run Ravello institution.

Dinner

Trattoria in Amalfi

Amalfi · €25-45

A relaxed local dinner back on the coast — seafood pasta or wood-fired pizza.

Transit:

Local SITA bus from Amalfi's harbor up to Ravello (~25 min, €2-3 each way), then walking within Ravello on stepped lanes. A taxi (€30-50) is the faster backup.

DAY 2 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $95 Mid $200 Luxury $430
DAY 3

Positano by ferry (or a Capri day trip)

Ferry to Positano - Spiaggia Grande - cliffside lanes & shops - lunch by the sea - ferry back to Amalfi

Activities

  1. 09:30 Ferry to Positano 40min

    Take the seasonal ferry along the coast from Amalfi to Positano (about 25-40 minutes) — the most beautiful and least stressful way to travel, with cliffside views the road can't match. Positano is the coast's most photographed village, a vertical cascade of pastel houses.

    Cost: €8-18 per leg TIP: Ferries run April-October and can be cancelled in rough seas, so check the day's timetable (Travelmar, Alicost) and have a SITA bus backup. Arrive early at the dock in peak season. Buy a round trip if convenient.
  2. 10:30 Positano — Spiaggia Grande & the lanes 2h30

    Explore Positano: the Spiaggia Grande beach, the Church of Santa Maria Assunta with its majolica dome, and the steep lanes of boutiques selling linen, sandals, and ceramics. It's gorgeous but built on relentless steps.

    Cost: Free (beach umbrella €25-50) TIP: Wear good shoes — Positano is all stairs. The famous photo is from the beach looking up at the layered houses. Browse the made-to-measure leather sandal shops. Swim from Spiaggia Grande from June. Pace yourself in the heat.
  3. 13:00 Lunch in Positano — Da Vincenzo or Chez Black 2h

    Lunch on coast cooking — Da Vincenzo (since 1958, built into the cliffside) for traditional pasta and fish, or Chez Black on the waterfront by the ferry dock for clam spaghetti and seafood with a sea view.

    Cost: €30-55 per person TIP: Reserve a terrace table in season. Chez Black is right by the dock and scenic but pricey; Da Vincenzo is the long-established family classic. Beachfront dining carries a premium — that's the Positano deal.
  4. 15:30 Beach time or more wandering 2h

    Spend the afternoon on the Spiaggia Grande or the quieter Fornillo beach, or keep exploring the upper lanes and viewpoints before the ferry back.

    Cost: Beach umbrella €25-50 / free TIP: Fornillo, a short walk west, is calmer than the main beach. Keep an eye on the return ferry time. In peak summer, the last ferries fill — don't leave it to the very last sailing.
  5. 18:00 Ferry back to Amalfi + farewell dinner 2h30

    Take the ferry back to Amalfi in the golden evening light, then a final dinner on the coast — seafood and a glass of Campanian white, finishing with limoncello.

    Cost: Ferry €8-18 + dinner €30-50 TIP: Confirm the last ferry of the day before you settle in for the afternoon. Back in Amalfi, the harbor and cathedral square are lovely in the evening. End with a delizia al limone at Pasticceria Pansa or a gelato.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Café in Amalfi

Amalfi · €3-6

A quick coffee and pastry before the ferry.

Lunch

Da Vincenzo or Chez Black

Positano · €30-55

Cliffside or waterfront Positano dining — seafood pasta and grilled fish.

Dinner

Farewell dinner in Amalfi

Amalfi · €30-50

A final coast seafood dinner with Campanian white and limoncello.

Transit:

Seasonal ferry Amalfi ↔ Positano (~25-40 min, €8-18 per leg), the best way along the coast. Walking within Positano (steep steps). Keep a SITA bus backup in case of rough-sea cancellations.

DAY 3 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $105 Mid $220 Luxury $460

Book Amalfi Tours & Tickets

Packing Checklist

Amalfi 3-Day Itinerary FAQ

Is 3 days enough for the Amalfi Coast?
It's enough for the core based in Amalfi town — the cathedral and Paper Museum, Atrani, Ravello's two villas, and a Positano ferry day. It's a relaxed pace that respects the slow Italian rhythm and the time ferries and buses take. If you want to add a Capri day, Pompeii, or proper beach time, plan 5-7 days. Trying to cram more into 3 days means fighting the famously slow coast road.
Should I drive or use ferries and buses?
Don't drive unless you're an experienced, confident driver in the quiet season — the SS163 is a single narrow lane of 1,000+ hairpins with no parking, and many towns fine outside cars in their ZTL zones. In season (April-October) take ferries between Amalfi, Positano, Sorrento, and Capri (faster, cooler, scenic), and the cheap SITA bus up to Ravello. Hire a private driver (€200-350/day) only if you want door-to-door freedom.
Could I do the Path of the Gods instead of Ravello?
Yes — swap Day 2 for the Path of the Gods (Sentiero degli Dei), the classic cliffside hike usually walked from Bomerano (above Praiano) to Nocelle/Positano, about 6-8km and 3-4 hours. It's free but needs sturdy shoes, water, sun protection, and a head for heights. Reach the Bomerano start by SITA bus and end with the long descent into Positano, then ferry back to Amalfi. Avoid midday heat in summer.
When should I avoid visiting?
July-August are hot (near 86°F / 30°C), packed, and the most expensive, with ferries and beaches at capacity. November-March is cheap and quiet but many hotels, restaurants, and ferry routes close, and the weather turns wet. May-June and September-October are the sweet spots — warm, swimmable, and far less crowded. The Amalfi Coast is a genuinely seasonal destination built around the April-October window.

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Why you can trust 3-day itinerary

Jimmy Kong TripPick founder · Travel content creator

Based in Chiang Mai for 8+ years, with 30+ countries visited across Southeast Asia, Japan, and Europe. Every detail in this guide is primary-source verified as of April 2026, with prices auto-refreshed via live exchange rate APIs. This isn't AI-generated boilerplate — it's written from the perspective of someone who has actually been there.

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