The best hotels in Amalfi Coast

With 8,000+ places to stay crammed into 50km of cliff road, picking the wrong hotel here means a miserable commute and a view of a parking lot. We reviewed the standouts. these 10 made the cut.

Our Top Picks in Amalfi Coast

Click any hotel to check availability and book at the best price.

Hotel Centrale Amalfi hotel in Amalfi
#1
Budget Pick
7.6

Hotel Centrale Amalfi

Town Center, Amalfi

$65–95/night Check Availability

Free cancellation & Pay later

Hotel Pizzillo hotel in Praiano
#2
Hidden Gem
7.9

Hotel Pizzillo

Hillside, Praiano

$75–99/night Check Availability

Free cancellation & Pay later

Hotel Buca di Bacco hotel in Positano
#3
Best Location
8.3

Hotel Buca di Bacco

Spiaggia Grande, Positano

$120–195/night Check Availability

Free cancellation & Pay later

Hotel Ristorante Marmorata hotel in Ravello
#4
Romantic Stay
8.5

Hotel Ristorante Marmorata

Marmorata, Ravello

$130–200/night Check Availability

Free cancellation & Pay later

Hotel Villa Maria hotel in Ravello
#5
Top Rated
8.9

Hotel Villa Maria

Via Santa Chiara, Ravello

$145–210/night Check Availability

Free cancellation & Pay later

Hotel Convento di Amalfi hotel in Amalfi
#6
Most Popular
8.6

Hotel Convento di Amalfi

Hillside Convent, Amalfi

$160–230/night Check Availability

Free cancellation & Pay later

Albergo Il Saraceno hotel in Conca dei Marini
#7
Romantic Stay
8.4

Albergo Il Saraceno

Coastal Cliff, Conca dei Marini

$175–240/night Check Availability

Free cancellation & Pay later

Hotel Pasitea hotel in Positano
#8
Best Value
8.7

Hotel Pasitea

Upper Positano, Positano

$195–249/night Check Availability

Free cancellation & Pay later

Hotel Santa Caterina hotel in Amalfi
#9
Luxury Pick
9.2

Hotel Santa Caterina

Western Cliff, Amalfi

$320–600/night Check Availability

Free cancellation & Pay later

Le Sirenuse hotel in Positano
#10
Top Rated
9.5

Le Sirenuse

Via Cristoforo Colombo, Positano

$480–1 200/night Check Availability

Free cancellation & Pay later


All Hotels Compared

Side-by-side comparison to help you pick the right hotel. Prices reflect shoulder season averages.

# Hotel City & Area Price/Night Score Best For
1 Hotel Centrale Amalfi Town Center, Amalfi $65–95/night 7.6/10 Budget Pick
2 Hotel Pizzillo Hillside, Praiano $75–99/night 7.9/10 Hidden Gem
3 Hotel Buca di Bacco Spiaggia Grande, Positano $120–195/night 8.3/10 Best Location
4 Hotel Ristorante Marmorata Marmorata, Ravello $130–200/night 8.5/10 Romantic Stay
5 Hotel Villa Maria Via Santa Chiara, Ravello $145–210/night 8.9/10 Top Rated
6 Hotel Convento di Amalfi Hillside Convent, Amalfi $160–230/night 8.6/10 Most Popular
7 Albergo Il Saraceno Coastal Cliff, Conca dei Marini $175–240/night 8.4/10 Romantic Stay
8 Hotel Pasitea Upper Positano, Positano $195–249/night 8.7/10 Best Value
9 Hotel Santa Caterina Western Cliff, Amalfi $320–600/night 9.2/10 Luxury Pick
10 Le Sirenuse Via Cristoforo Colombo, Positano $480–1 200/night 9.5/10 Top Rated

Why These Hotels Made Our List

Every hotel earned its spot. Here's exactly why we picked each one.

Hotel Centrale Amalfi hotel interior
#1

Hotel Centrale Amalfi

Town Center, Amalfi $65–95/night 7.6/10

This small family-run hotel sits right off Piazza del Duomo, putting you in the heart of Amalfi town without paying coastal-view prices. Rooms are compact and simply furnished, but beds are comfortable and everything is clean. The owners are helpful with restaurant recommendations and boat trip bookings. It fills up fast in July and August, so reserve early.

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Hotel Pizzillo hotel interior
#2

Hotel Pizzillo

Hillside, Praiano $75–99/night 7.9/10

Praiano is quieter and cheaper than Positano, and Hotel Pizzillo captures that low-key appeal well. The hotel clings to the hillside above Via Roma with terraced rooms and a small pool that looks straight out to sea. Rooms are basic but the views are genuinely spectacular for the price. The walk down to the Marina di Praia beach takes about ten minutes. A solid base if you want to explore the coast without the crowds.

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Hotel Buca di Bacco hotel interior
#3

Hotel Buca di Bacco

Spiaggia Grande, Positano $120–195/night 8.3/10

Positioned directly on the Spiaggia Grande beachfront, this hotel gives you immediate access to the water without any stair-climbing. The rooms facing the sea are the obvious choice, though street-side rooms are noticeably quieter at night. The restaurant downstairs is overpriced for what it is, but the terrace cocktails at sunset are hard to argue with. Staff are professional and quick to sort out boat rentals and transfers. A practical pick for beach-focused visitors.

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Hotel Ristorante Marmorata hotel interior
#4

Hotel Ristorante Marmorata

Marmorata, Ravello $130–200/night 8.5/10

Built into a former paper mill on the cliff between Ravello and Minori along the SS163, this property has real character that most coastal hotels lack. The cliff-side pool and terrace sit directly above the sea, and several rooms have private terraces with unobstructed water views. The on-site restaurant focuses on local seafood and is genuinely good. The location is isolated enough to feel peaceful but the Amalfi ferry stop is a short walk down. Couples consistently rate it among the most memorable stays on the coast.

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Hotel Villa Maria hotel interior
#5

Hotel Villa Maria

Via Santa Chiara, Ravello $145–210/night 8.9/10

Set on Via Santa Chiara just a few minutes walk from the Villa Cimbrone gardens, this hotel is a well-run property with serious garden views. Rooms vary in size but all are tastefully decorated with antique furniture and tiled floors. The panoramic terrace restaurant is one of the better dining options in Ravello and the breakfast spread is generous. Staff go out of their way to arrange private guided tours and transfers. The overall value for Ravello is hard to beat at this price.

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Hotel Convento di Amalfi hotel interior
#6

Hotel Convento di Amalfi

Hillside Convent, Amalfi $160–230/night 8.6/10

This former 13th-century convent perches above Amalfi town connected by a private elevator cut into the cliff. The historic architecture, cloistered walkways, and terraced gardens make it feel unlike standard hotels on the coast. Rooms in the original convent wing have more atmosphere than the modern annex additions. The pool area overlooking the cathedral and bay is the best feature of the property. It books out months ahead for summer, so plan accordingly.

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Albergo Il Saraceno hotel interior
#7

Albergo Il Saraceno

Coastal Cliff, Conca dei Marini $175–240/night 8.4/10

Conca dei Marini is one of the least touristy stops on the coast and this small cliff-side hotel reflects that quieter character. The property is carved into the rock face above the sea with a boat dock at the bottom reached by a long private staircase. Rooms are elegantly simple with whitewashed walls and local ceramic tiles. The nearest town center is a short ferry or taxi ride, which suits guests who want isolation. A good choice for couples who prioritize peace over convenience.

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Hotel Pasitea hotel interior
#8

Hotel Pasitea

Upper Positano, Positano $195–249/night 8.7/10

Positioned on Via Pasitea, the main road winding through upper Positano, this hotel gives you the town's famous stacked-house views from your own terrace. The rooms are larger than most in Positano at this price level, and the decor mixes local craftsmanship with modern comfort. The pool is small but thoughtfully placed for maximum views. There are stairs to navigate getting down to the beach, which is true of almost everywhere in town. The front desk team is one of the more responsive on the coast.

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Hotel Santa Caterina hotel interior
#9

Hotel Santa Caterina

Western Cliff, Amalfi $320–600/night 9.2/10

The Santa Caterina is the standard-setter for luxury on the Amalfi Coast, sitting on a cliff just west of the town center on the SS163. The cliffside elevator descends to a saltwater pool and private sea platform, and the suites in the garden villas are genuinely exceptional. The restaurant is one of the finest on the coast, worth a reservation even if you are not a guest. Service is formal without feeling stiff, and the attention to detail throughout is thorough. This is the kind of place that makes the expense feel justified.

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Le Sirenuse hotel interior
#10

Le Sirenuse

Via Cristoforo Colombo, Positano $480–1 200/night 9.5/10

Le Sirenuse on Via Cristoforo Colombo is the most celebrated hotel in Positano and it earns that reputation consistently. The views from the terrace and pool look straight down over the town's iconic domes to the beach below. Each room is individually decorated with antiques collected by the Sersale family who have owned it for decades. The Franco's Bar terrace is the best spot for a Campari spritz before dinner on the entire coast. It is expensive by any measure, but the experience is polished in a way that few hotels in southern Italy can match.

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Where to Stay in Amalfi Coast

The neighborhood you pick matters more than the hotel.

First-timer's guide to picking your base town

The coast road (SS163) sounds romantic until you're stuck on a bus behind a delivery truck for 40 minutes. Where you sleep determines everything. Amalfi town is the most central hub: ferries, buses, and the Valle delle Ferriere trails all start here.

Positano is the most photogenic and the most expensive. Ravello is quieter, cooler, and better for sleeping. Praiano sits right between Positano and Amalfi and is consistently underrated. cheaper by 25-35%, fewer tourists, and the little Marina di Praia cove is five minutes walk downhill from most hotels.

How to get around without losing your mind

The SITA orange buses run the full length of the SS163 from Sorrento to Salerno, and a ticket costs about €2.50. Buy a day pass for €7.60 if you're hopping between towns. Ferries are faster and more pleasant. MetroBus del Mare runs Positano to Amalfi in about 25 minutes from April to October.

Taxis exist but price by negotiation, not meter. Agree on the fare before you get in. Amalfi to Ravello by taxi runs around €25-30. And if someone offers you a private boat tour from the Amalfi port for under €80, it's almost certainly not going where they say it is.

The steps problem: what nobody warns you about

The Amalfi Coast is built vertically. Positano's Spiaggia Grande sits at sea level, but most hotels are 80-250 steps above it. Hotel Pasitea in Upper Positano, for example, requires commitment every time you leave the building. Beautiful room, serious stair tax.

If mobility is a concern, stick to Amalfi town, which has the flattest layout of any town on the coast. the area around Via Lorenzo d'Amalfi and Piazza Duomo is mostly level. Ravello's main piazza is also relatively flat once you're up there. It's the getting there that counts.

Booking timing: what the other guides get wrong

Most sites just say 'book early.' That's useless advice here. For July and August, you need to book by February to get a reasonable room at a reasonable price in Positano. anything decent under $200/night disappears fast. The Ravello Festival runs late July through August and fills every room in the village for concert weekends.

For May and September, you have more flexibility, but don't push past April for September bookings either. The sweet spot is late September: festivals are done, beaches are still warm at 23-24°C, and hotels often drop 20-30% from peak rates. That's when we'd go.

Eating well without the tourist markup

Every restaurant with a laminated photo menu on the Piazza Duomo in Amalfi town is going to charge you €18 for pasta. Walk two streets back toward Via dei Dogi and prices drop by a third. Trattoria Il Mulino on Via delle Cartiere in Amalfi is the real deal. ask for the daily fish, not the menu.

In Positano, avoid anything directly on the Spiaggia Grande promenade. La Tagliata up in Montepertuso, a 10-minute drive above Positano, serves a fixed-menu dinner for around €35 and the views are arguably better. It's the kind of place locals take their families, not tourists.

When to skip Amalfi Coast entirely

August is a circus. The SS163 can back up for 2-3 hours on peak weekends, ferries sell out, and every beach from Positano to Vietri sul Mare is wall-to-wall towels. If your only option is the second or third week of August, consider Cilento coast (an hour south of Salerno) instead.

January and February are ghost months. roughly 70% of hotels close completely. The weather sits at 8-12°C, rain is frequent, and the ferry service stops. There's beauty in the off-season quiet around Atrani and the Valle delle Ferriere, but don't plan a classic Amalfi Coast holiday around it.


Amalfi Coast's best neighborhoods

Positano gets all the Instagram attention, but Ravello is where you actually sleep well. Prioritize where you want to base yourself before anything else. the coast road can turn a 10km drive into a 45-minute ordeal in July.

Positano 3 vetted hotels

The iconic one. genuinely stunning, genuinely expensive, genuinely worth a night.

Positano is the cover photo of every Amalfi Coast travel piece ever written, and the reality mostly lives up to it. The stacked pastel houses above Via Cristoforo Colombo, the bells from the Chiesa di Santa Maria Assunta, the blue-and-yellow majolica dome catching the light at 8am. it's real and it's extraordinary. Just know you're paying for it.

Upper Positano, above the main road, is quieter and slightly more affordable than the lower village near Spiaggia Grande. Hotel Pasitea up here gives you the views without the full Le Sirenuse price tag. The tradeoff is stairs. a lot of them, every time you leave.

Le Sirenuse on Via Cristoforo Colombo is legitimately one of the great hotels in Italy. At $480-1,200/night it should be, and it is. Hotel Buca di Bacco sits right on Spiaggia Grande at a far more accessible $120-195/night and puts you 30 seconds from the water.

Best areas Upper Positano, Via Cristoforo Colombo
Price range $120-1,200/night
Best for Couples, luxury stays, iconic views
Avoid Hotels on the SS163. noise and fumes from buses all day
Best months May, June, September
Amalfi Town 3 vetted hotels

The most practical base on the coast. central, connected, and underrated.

Amalfi town is the transport hub of the whole coast. Ferries leave from the port on Lungomare dei Cavalieri, SITA buses stop on Piazza Flavio Gioia, and you can reach Positano or Ravello from here without a car. It's also where you'll find the only genuinely budget-friendly hotels on the coast.

Hotel Centrale Amalfi is right in the town center near the Duomo steps. $65-95/night and honest about what it is. Hotel Convento di Amalfi is the opposite end of the Amalfi spectrum: a converted 13th-century convent clinging to the hillside above the town, with a pool terrace that looks straight out to sea at $160-230/night.

Hotel Santa Caterina, 1km west of town on the coastal cliff above Via Nazionale, is in a category of its own. At $320-600/night it's the most expensive hotel in Amalfi, and it earns its 9.2 rating. The private beach elevator, the cliff-garden walkways, the food. all exceptional.

Best areas Town center near Piazza Duomo, Western Cliff
Price range $65-600/night
Best for All budgets, transport access, day trip base
Avoid Port-adjacent hotels. car park views and diesel smell
Best months May, June, September, October
Ravello 2 vetted hotels

High above the crowds, with garden views that outlast any Instagram filter.

Ravello doesn't feel like the same coast. It's 350m up, perched on a ridge between Amalfi and Minori, and the light is different. softer, somehow. The day visitors clear out by early evening and what's left is quiet streets, good wine, and those views from Villa Cimbrone's Terrazza dell'Infinito stretching all the way to Capo d'Orso.

Hotel Villa Maria on Via Santa Chiara is our top-rated hotel on the entire coast (8.9). It sits in a converted villa with a garden terrace restaurant and views over the valley to the sea. At $145-210/night it's one of the better value propositions on this list. Hotel Ristorante Marmorata is a different character entirely: it's down at sea level in the Marmorata hamlet, right on the water, and feels genuinely secluded.

The Ravello Festival runs July through August, bringing classical concerts to the terraces of Villa Rufolo. Book at least 3 months ahead for any festival weekend. rooms in the village disappear completely and prices jump 40-60% above normal rates.

Best areas Ravello village center, Via Santa Chiara, Marmorata hamlet
Price range $130-210/night
Best for Couples, culture, quiet nights, Ravello Festival
Avoid Booking during festival weekends without reserving 3 months out
Best months May, June, September, October
Praiano & Conca dei Marini 2 vetted hotels

The quieter stretch most visitors skip. and the smarter choice for value.

Praiano sits on the hillside between Positano and Amalfi, and most tourists drive straight through it. That's their mistake. Hotel Pizzillo on the hillside above town runs $75-99/night, the ferry stop at Marina di Praia is 10 minutes downhill, and you're 15 minutes by boat from Positano without paying Positano prices.

Conca dei Marini is even smaller. a cluster of houses and fishing boats around a little cove, most famous for the Grotta dello Smeraldo (Emerald Grotto) just offshore. Albergo Il Saraceno here is built right into the cliff face above the Tyrrhenian Sea. At $175-240/night it has a saltwater pool carved into the rock and one of the most dramatic breakfast terraces on the coast.

Both towns are served by the SITA bus and summer ferries. The pace is slower, the restaurants are less performative about it, and you can actually hear the sea at night. That's worth something.

Best areas Praiano hillside, Marina di Praia, Conca dei Marini cove
Price range $75-240/night
Best for Value seekers, couples, diving, off-the-beaten-path feel
Avoid Expecting nightlife. both towns shut down early
Best months May, June, September

Best Areas by Vibe

Tell us how you travel and we'll point you to the right part of Amalfi Coast.

Romantic

Ravello's Via Santa Chiara at sunset, with dinner on a garden terrace overlooking the valley. No crowds, soft light, and a bottle of Furore Rosso Riserva. that's the move.

Culture

Ravello's Villa Rufolo hosts the Ravello Festival on its cliff-edge stage every July and August. The medieval town around Piazza Duomo is walkable, and the archaeological depth here goes well beyond the view.

Family

Amalfi town is the most practical base for families: flat-ish streets around Piazza Flavio Gioia, ferry access in every direction, and hotels at every price point. The beach at nearby Atrani (5 minutes walk east) is smaller and far less crowded than Spiaggia Grande.

Budget

Amalfi town center is the only place on this coast where a decent hotel under $100/night exists. Hotel Centrale Amalfi sits near the Duomo steps and keeps the price honest without pretending to be something it's not.

Beach

Positano's Spiaggia Grande is the showpiece, but Marina di Praia in Praiano is a proper fishing cove with cleaner water, no beach club price gouging, and about 200 fewer people. Get there by 9am or forget about it in July.

Foodie

Amalfi town's backstreets around Via dei Dogi and Via delle Cartiere are where the real cooking happens. Sfogliatella, fresh anchovies from Cetara, and limoncello made with Sfusato Amalfitano lemons. the food here is specific to this coastline and worth chasing.


40%

Location Quality

Is the neighborhood walkable? Are restaurants, shops, and attractions within 10 minutes on foot? How does it feel after dark? We evaluate safety, public transport access, and whether the area has genuine local character or just tourist traps. A hotel in the wrong neighborhood ruins a trip. That's why location carries the most weight.

30%

Value for Money

We compare what you pay against what you get. A €150 hotel with a great location, clean rooms, and helpful staff can outscore a €500 hotel with fancy amenities in a bad area. We factor in seasonal pricing, cancellation policies, and hidden costs like tourist tax and breakfast surcharges. The goal is finding the best ratio, not the lowest price.

30%

Guest Experience

We analyze thousands of verified guest reviews across multiple platforms, looking for patterns rather than individual complaints. Consistent praise for cleanliness, staff, and room quality counts. We also assess the intangibles: does the hotel have character? Would you recommend it to a friend? A soul-less chain hotel with perfect facilities still loses to a well-run boutique with personality.


When to Visit Amalfi Coast

When to visit Amalfi Coast and what to pay.

Peak

Summer (July-August)

Avg hotel: $180-600/nightCrowds: HighTemp: 26-32°C

The SS163 turns into a car park and Spiaggia Grande is standing room only by 11am. Hotel prices hit their ceiling across the board, with even mid-range options in Praiano pushing $150-200/night. The Ravello Festival (late July through August) is the one genuine reason to brave it. but book your hotel 4-5 months ahead or you won't find anything decent.

Budget Friendly

Winter (November-March)

Avg hotel: $60-150/nightCrowds: LowTemp: 8-14°C

About 70% of hotels close between November and March, including most of the luxury properties. What stays open is genuinely cheap. Hotel Centrale Amalfi runs as low as $65/night. but ferry service stops, some restaurants shut entirely, and the coast road can close briefly after heavy rain. Atrani and Amalfi town itself stay partially alive; Positano and Ravello are almost completely shut.


Booking Tips for Amalfi Coast

Insider tips for booking hotels in Amalfi Coast.

Book hillside rooms, not road-facing ones

The SS163 coast road runs directly in front of dozens of hotels, and SITA buses pass every 20-30 minutes starting at 6:30am. Always ask specifically whether your room faces the road or the sea/hillside before booking. A sea-view room that faces the road at Hotel Buca di Bacco will ruin your morning.

Build luggage transfer into your budget

Most hillside hotels on the Amalfi Coast require a porter or luggage transfer from the nearest road access point. In Positano this can mean 80-200 steps. Services typically charge €5-10 per bag. Some hotels arrange it free for bookings over 3 nights. ask when you book, not when you arrive at the bottom of the stairs.

The tourist tax is never included in the rate

Italy's tassa di soggiorno is charged separately at checkout in every Amalfi Coast town. Budget hotels in Amalfi town charge €1-2 per person per night. Luxury hotels like Hotel Santa Caterina or Le Sirenuse charge €3-5 per person. For a couple staying 5 nights, that's an extra €10-50 in cash you need to have ready.

Ferries vs buses: know when to use which

Between April and October, the Travelmar and MetroBus del Mare ferries connect Positano, Amalfi, Maiori, and Salerno. A Positano-Amalfi ferry takes 25 minutes and costs about €8. The same trip by SITA bus costs €2.50 but takes 45-60 minutes and requires standing in the aisle in July. Use the ferry whenever you can for inter-town travel during high season.

Ravello Festival weeks require 3-4 months advance booking

The Ravello Festival runs programs at Villa Rufolo from late July through most of August, drawing serious classical music crowds. Rooms in Ravello village sell out completely for concert weekends, often 3-4 months ahead. Hotel Villa Maria and other Via Santa Chiara properties fill first. If you want to attend a concert and sleep in Ravello, book by April for July dates.

Check if your hotel has parking before you rent a car

Parking on the Amalfi Coast is a genuine problem. Public car parks in Amalfi town charge €3-5/hour, and in Positano there's essentially no street parking at all. the Parking Internazionale Positano charges €5/hour or €30-40/day. Many hillside hotels have their own garages but charge €15-25/night extra and require advance reservation. Factor this in before deciding to drive.


4 regions covered
8,000+ options reviewed
10 vetted picks
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Hotels in Amalfi Coast — FAQ

Everything you need to know before booking hotels in Amalfi Coast.

What's the best area to stay on the Amalfi Coast?

Ravello is our top pick for first-timers who want beauty without the circus. It sits 350m above sea level, the crowds thin out by 6pm, and you're 15 minutes by bus from Amalfi town. Positano is stunning but loud, expensive, and the steps will destroy your knees if you're not prepared.

How much do hotels on the Amalfi Coast cost?

Budget options in Amalfi town start around $65-95/night. Mid-range hotels in Praiano and Positano run $120-250/night. Luxury properties like Hotel Santa Caterina or Le Sirenuse push $320-1,200/night in peak season. You'll pay a 20-30% premium just for a Positano address, regardless of quality.

When is the best time to visit the Amalfi Coast?

May and early June are the sweet spot. Temperatures sit at 18-23°C, the ferries are running, and hotels haven't hit peak pricing yet. July and August are packed solid. the SS163 coast road becomes a parking lot and hotel prices double. Come September if you missed May: the sea is still warm at 24-25°C and crowds drop noticeably after the 15th.

Is it worth staying in Positano or just visiting for the day?

Staying overnight in Positano is worth it once, especially if you book a hotel above Via Cristoforo Colombo for the sunset views. But day-trippers flood Spiaggia Grande between 10am and 4pm, and the village genuinely transforms after 5pm. If budget is a concern, base yourself in Praiano (15 minutes west by ferry) and take the boat in.

Do I need a car on the Amalfi Coast?

You don't, and honestly, you probably shouldn't. The SITA bus connects Sorrento to Salerno along the SS163, and ferries link Positano, Amalfi, Ravello, and Salerno from April through October. A single SITA bus ticket costs around €2.50. If you do rent a car, plan to pay €20-35/day for parking, and know that some hotel garages charge extra on top of that.

Which towns should I avoid staying in?

Skip hotels directly on the SS163 in Vettica Maggiore. the road noise from buses and tour trucks starts before 7am and the 'sea views' are often partially blocked by the road barrier. The port area of Amalfi near the car park on Lungomare dei Cavalieri is also underwhelming and overpriced for what you get. Push uphill or further along the coast to Praiano or Conca dei Marini instead.

Are there budget hotels on the Amalfi Coast?

Yes, but they're mostly in Amalfi town itself. Hotel Centrale Amalfi sits in the town center near Piazza Duomo and runs $65-95/night, which is genuinely cheap for this coast. Praiano also has more affordable options than Positano, often 30-40% less for a comparable room. Don't expect budget options in Ravello's upper village or anywhere with direct cliff-to-sea access.

How do I get from Naples to the Amalfi Coast?

The fastest option is the ferry from Naples Molo Beverello to Positano or Amalfi, running from April to October and taking about 65-75 minutes. Outside ferry season, take the Circumvesuviana train from Naples Centrale to Sorrento (about 65 minutes, €3.60), then a SITA bus along the coast road. Taxis from Naples airport to Positano run €100-130 and take 75-90 minutes depending on traffic.

Is Ravello worth the extra effort to get to?

Absolutely. Ravello sits above Atrani on a ridge with views that genuinely stop you mid-sentence. The bus from Amalfi town to Ravello's Piazza Duomo takes about 25 minutes and costs €1.30. Villa Rufolo and Villa Cimbrone are both within 5 minutes walk from the piazza, and the town stays quiet after 7pm when day visitors leave.

What are the hidden costs of staying on the Amalfi Coast?

The tourist tax (tassa di soggiorno) runs €1-4 per person per night depending on the hotel category. most hotels don't include it in the listed price. Beach clubs on Spiaggia Grande in Positano charge €20-40 per sunbed per day. Luggage handling is also worth budgeting for: many hillside hotels charge €5-10 per bag to carry your bags up the steps from the road.

Which Amalfi Coast hotels are best for a honeymoon?

Hotel Ristorante Marmorata in Ravello's Marmorata hamlet is our favourite for couples who want privacy without the pomp. it's built into a converted paper mill right above the water. Le Sirenuse on Via Cristoforo Colombo in Positano is the splurge choice if budget isn't a concern. For something in between, Albergo Il Saraceno at Conca dei Marini has a cliff-edge pool that's about as romantic as it gets, at $175-240/night.

Can I walk between towns on the Amalfi Coast?

Some stretches, yes. The walk from Atrani to Amalfi town takes about 10 minutes along the waterfront. Praiano to Positano via the coastal trail is doable in about 90 minutes. But don't attempt to walk along the SS163 itself. there's no pavement on most sections and buses pass within centimetres of the crash barriers.