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Verona 3-Day Essentials — Arena, Old Town & Lake Garda

Roman Arena + Piazza delle Erbe + Juliet's House + Castelvecchio + Ponte Pietra + a Lake Garda or Valpolicella day

Verona 3-Day Itinerary — Quick Answer

As of 2026
Trip length
3 days
Est. cost / person (mid, ex-flights)
$365
Budget–luxury
$175–$860

As of 2026, the recommended Verona 3-day route runs Day1 Roman Arena + Piazza delle Erbe + Juliet's House · Day2 Castelvecchio + Ponte Pietra + San Zeno (+ opera in summer) · Day3 Lake Garda & Sirmione (or a Valpolicella wine day), grouping the must-see sights with minimal backtracking. Estimated cost per person (excluding flights) is around $365 on a mid-range budget. Three days covers Verona at a relaxed pace. Day 1 takes the Roman Arena, Piazza delle Erbe, the Lamberti Tower, Juliet's House, and an aperitivo; Day 2 handles Castelvecchio, Ponte Pietra, Castel San Pietro, and San Zeno, with an opera night in summer; Day 3 is a Lake Garda/Sirmione escape or a Valpolicella wine day. The historic center is compact and walkable end to end. Book Arena opera tickets 2-3 months ahead if you're visiting June-September.

3-Day Total Budget at a Glance

Budget

$175

Per person, flights excl.

Recommended

Mid-Range

$365

Per person, flights excl.

Luxury

$860

Per person, flights excl.

Book Hotels & Flights for This Itinerary

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Day-by-Day Detailed Schedule

DAY 1

Roman Arena + Piazza delle Erbe + Juliet's House

Roman Arena (Piazza Bra) - Piazza delle Erbe - Lamberti Tower - Piazza dei Signori - Juliet's House - aperitivo

Activities

  1. 09:30 Roman Arena — 1st-century amphitheater 1h30

    Start at Piazza Bra with the Roman Arena (€12), the 1st-century AD amphitheater that still hosts summer opera. Walk the tiers and stone steps to grasp the scale of one of the best-preserved Roman arenas anywhere.

    Cost: €12 (free first Sunday some winter months) TIP: Go early before the heat and crowds. On opera-festival days (mid-June to early September) daytime hours may be reduced for stage setup — check the schedule. If you'll attend an opera, book that separately 2-3 months ahead.
  2. 11:30 Via Mazzini + Piazza delle Erbe 1h

    Stroll Via Mazzini, the main shopping street, to Piazza delle Erbe — the colorful old market square on the site of the Roman forum, ringed by frescoed buildings, the Madonna Verona fountain, and market stalls.

    Cost: Free TIP: This is the heart of the old town and the prettiest square. Browse the market stalls but watch your bag in the crowd. Café tables here cost a premium — it's mostly for the view.
  3. 12:30 Lamberti Tower + Piazza dei Signori 1h30

    Climb (or take the lift partway up) the 84m Torre dei Lamberti (€8) for the best panorama of Verona's rooftops, the Arena, and the Adige's bend. Below sits Piazza dei Signori, with its statue of Dante, who was exiled here.

    Cost: €8 (lift extra) TIP: The tower view is the city's best — go on a clear day. Piazza dei Signori is quieter and more elegant than Piazza delle Erbe next door, good for a calm coffee.
  4. 14:30 Lunch — a Veronese osteria 1h30

    Lunch on Veronese classics. Osteria al Duomo or Hostaria La Vecchia Fontanina serve risotto all'Amarone, gnocchi, and bigoli in cozy, traditional rooms near the central squares.

    Cost: €15-25 per person TIP: Risotto all'Amarone is the signature order. Italian kitchens close between lunch and dinner (around 2:30-7pm), so don't leave lunch too late. A glass of Valpolicella pairs well.
  5. 16:30 Juliet's House (Casa di Giulietta) 1h

    Visit Juliet's House — a real medieval building once owned by the Cappello family, with a balcony added in the 1930s for tourism. The courtyard, bronze Juliet statue, and love-letter walls are free; the house interior and balcony are €6.

    Cost: Courtyard free / interior + balcony €6 TIP: Be honest with yourself: Romeo and Juliet are Shakespeare's fiction and the balcony is a 20th-century addition — but it's fun as romantic theater. The free courtyard is the main event for most; the paid balcony is skippable. Very crowded; mind pickpockets.
  6. 19:00 Aperitivo + dinner near Piazza delle Erbe 2h30

    Do an aperitivo (an Aperol or Campari spritz with snacks) at a bar around Piazza delle Erbe, then dinner. Osteria del Bugiardo is a lively wine-bar stop; Antica Bottega del Vino a deeper sit-down with a vast cellar.

    Cost: €25-40 per person TIP: Aperitivo (6-8pm) is the local pre-dinner ritual. Dinner runs late (from 7:30-8pm). Antica Bottega del Vino is the place to pair a glass of Amarone with risotto. Book ahead in high season.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Caffè Borsari or hotel breakfast

Centro · €2-6

An espresso or cappuccino standing at the bar, Italian-style.

Lunch

Osteria al Duomo or La Vecchia Fontanina

Centro · €15-25

Risotto all'Amarone, gnocchi, and bigoli in a traditional room.

Dinner

Antica Bottega del Vino

Centro (off Via Mazzini) · €25-40

Benchmark risotto all'Amarone and a glass from the famous cellar.

Transit:

Everything today is on foot — the Arena, Piazza delle Erbe, Lamberti Tower, and Juliet's House are within a few minutes of each other in the compact, flat center. No transit needed.

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

Budget $55 Mid $115 Luxury $260
DAY 2

Castelvecchio + Ponte Pietra + San Zeno (+ opera in summer)

Castelvecchio + Scaliger Bridge - Ponte Pietra - Castel San Pietro view - Basilica di San Zeno - opera night (summer)

Activities

  1. 09:30 Castelvecchio + the Scaliger Bridge 2h

    Visit Castelvecchio (€9), the 14th-century Scaliger fortress on the Adige, now an art museum, and walk its iconic fortified red-brick bridge, the Ponte Scaligero, across the river.

    Cost: €9 (museum) TIP: The fortress and bridge are striking even from outside if you skip the museum. The Carlo Scarpa-designed museum interior is a highlight for architecture fans. Combine with nearby Trattoria I Masenini for later.
  2. 12:00 Basilica di San Zeno Maggiore 1h

    Walk to Basilica di San Zeno, one of Italy's finest Romanesque churches, with bronze door panels and a Mantegna altarpiece — and, fittingly, the setting Shakespeare gave Romeo and Juliet's secret wedding.

    Cost: €4 TIP: It's a 10-15 minute walk west of Castelvecchio, a bit off the main tourist path and worth it. The bronze doors and the crypt are the highlights. Quieter than the central sights.
  3. 14:00 Lunch + Ponte Pietra 1h30

    Lunch, then cross the Adige on Ponte Pietra, the Roman-arched stone bridge — the city's prettiest river crossing, with the hillside and Roman Theatre rising behind it.

    Cost: €15-25 per person TIP: Ponte Pietra is the postcard spot — grab a gelato from Gelateria Ponte Pietra and enjoy the view. Osteria Ponte Pietra has a balcony over the bridge for a special lunch (book ahead).
  4. 16:00 Castel San Pietro viewpoint + Roman Theatre 1h30

    Climb (by funicular or steps) to Castel San Pietro on the far bank for a sweeping view over Verona's rooftops and the river bend. The Roman Theatre and its archaeology museum sit just below.

    Cost: Funicular ~€2 each way / Roman Theatre ~€4.50 TIP: The viewpoint is free and best at golden hour or sunset. The funicular saves the climb. The Roman Theatre hosts summer concerts and a Shakespeare festival.
  5. 20:30 Opera at the Arena (summer) or dinner 3h

    In opera season (mid-June to early September), spend the evening at an Arena opera — Aida, Carmen, or Nabucco under the stars. Outside the season, enjoy a relaxed Veronese dinner near the river.

    Cost: Opera €25-200+ / dinner €25-40 TIP: Stone-step (gradinata) tickets are cheapest and most atmospheric — bring or rent a cushion and a light layer. Shows finish late (past 11pm-midnight). Book 2-3 months ahead for popular nights. No opera? Dinner at Trattoria al Pompiere is a fine alternative.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Café breakfast

Centro · €2-6

Cappuccino and a pastry — pandoro from Pasticceria Flego in season.

Lunch

Osteria Ponte Pietra or a riverside spot

By Ponte Pietra · €15-30

Gnocchi or risotto with a view of the Roman bridge.

Dinner

Trattoria al Pompiere (no-opera nights)

Centro · €25-40

Cured meats, cheeses, and traditional Veneto plates.

Transit:

Mostly on foot; the funicular (~€2) up to Castel San Pietro saves the climb. San Zeno is a 10-15 min walk west. Everything is within the walkable center.

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

Budget $60 Mid $130 Luxury $320
DAY 3

Lake Garda & Sirmione (or a Valpolicella wine day)

Train to Peschiera/Garda - Sirmione (Scaliger castle, Roman ruins, thermal spa) - lake swim or boat - return to Verona

Activities

  1. 09:00 Train to Lake Garda (Peschiera del Garda) 1h

    Take a regional train from Porta Nuova to Peschiera del Garda (15-20 min), the gateway to Italy's largest lake, then a short bus or boat to Sirmione on its peninsula.

    Cost: Train €3-6 each way + local bus/boat TIP: Lake Garda is the standout Verona day trip, 30-40 min total. Sirmione is the prettiest peninsula town. In summer, boats between lakeside towns are scenic. Check return times before you set off.
  2. 10:30 Sirmione — Scaliger castle + Roman ruins 2h30

    Explore Sirmione: the moated Scaliger Castle guarding the peninsula's entrance, the lanes of the old town, and the Grotte di Catullo — extensive Roman villa ruins on the tip with lake views.

    Cost: Castle ~€8 / Grotte di Catullo ~€8 TIP: Sirmione gets very busy in summer — go early. The Grotte di Catullo (Roman ruins) and the olive-grove walk to the point are the highlights. The thermal spa is an option if you've booked.
  3. 13:30 Lakeside lunch + a swim or boat ride 2h30

    Lunch by the water on lake fish and a glass of Lugana (the local Garda white), then swim from a small beach or take a boat to another lakeside town like Bardolino or Garda.

    Cost: €15-30 lunch + boat extra TIP: Lake fish (like lavarello) and Lugana wine are the local pairing. Bring swimwear in summer — the lake is clean and swimmable. Bardolino, on the wine-named shore, is an easy boat or train add-on.
  4. 17:30 Return to Verona + farewell dinner 3h

    Take the train back to Verona (15-20 min) and round off the trip with a final aperitivo and dinner — a last risotto all'Amarone or a glass of Amarone in the old town.

    Cost: Train €3-6 + dinner €25-40 TIP: Confirm your return train time before lunch — regional trains to Peschiera are frequent. Back in Verona, the cool of the evening is the time for a final tapas-style aperitivo and dinner.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Quick café breakfast

Centro / Porta Nuova · €2-6

Coffee and a pastry before the train.

Lunch

Sirmione lakeside restaurant

Sirmione, Lake Garda · €15-30

Lake fish and a glass of Lugana with a water view.

Dinner

Farewell Veronese dinner

Verona centro · €25-40

A last risotto all'Amarone and a glass of Amarone.

Transit:

Regional train Verona Porta Nuova ↔ Peschiera del Garda (15-20 min, €3-6 each way), plus a local bus or boat to Sirmione. Frequent service; no advance booking needed.

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

Budget $60 Mid $120 Luxury $280

Book Verona Tours & Tickets

Packing Checklist

Verona 3-Day Itinerary FAQ

Is 3 days enough for Verona?
Comfortably — the Arena, Piazza delle Erbe, Juliet's House, Castelvecchio, Ponte Pietra, and San Zeno fit in 1-2 days, leaving a third day for Lake Garda/Sirmione or a Valpolicella wine outing. Verona is small and walkable. If you only have one day, you can hit the headline sights; 3 days lets you add a day trip and an opera night without rushing.
Do I need to book attractions in advance?
For the Arena opera festival (June-September), book tickets 2-3 months ahead — popular nights (Aida, Carmen) sell out. Daytime monuments (Arena, Castelvecchio, Lamberti Tower) rarely need advance booking, but going early beats heat and crowds. Reserve dinner at popular osterias a day or two ahead in high season. The VeronaCard bundles many sights plus buses.
Is the Lake Garda day trip worth it?
Very — Italy's largest lake is just 15-20 minutes by train to Peschiera, then a short hop to Sirmione, with a Scaliger castle, Roman ruins (Grotte di Catullo), a thermal spa, and swimmable water. It's the best day trip from Verona. The Valpolicella wine country (Amarone tastings) is the alternative if you'd rather drink than swim.
When should I avoid visiting?
July-August are hot and humid (86-90°F / 30-32°C) and busiest with opera crowds — doable but demanding, and priciest. Vinitaly (April) and Christmas also spike prices and bookings. The sweet spots are April-June and September-October. Winter is cheap and quiet but cold and damp, with a popular Christmas market on Piazza Bra.

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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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