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Italy travel by somtamgirl

Destination guide

Lake Como, the Slow Way: 4 Days Based in Varenna

Slow lake mornings, espresso on the steps, nowhere to rush.

Lake Como is the trip I keep telling people to slow right down for, and Varenna is exactly where I'd do it. I based myself in this little pastel village on the eastern shore, woke up to the water every morning, and let the days unfold without a packed schedule. My 4-day premium guide is built around the spots I actually loved: a boat tour across the lake, the hike up to Castello di Vezio with its eerie ghost statue and huge views, and Villa Monastero sitting right on the water. My favourite moment was the Walk of Lovers at sunset, when the lake goes gold and the crowds thin out. The premium guide lays the whole trip out for you — the base, the boat tour, the timings and the bookings — so you can travel it without the planning.

  • Best base: Varenna
  • Trip length: 4 days
  • Don't miss: Walk of Lovers at sunset
  • Guide type: Premium itinerary
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Best time to go

May, June and September are ideal on the lake — warm and long-lit without the August crowds; spring and autumn are quieter and still lovely.

Jan
Feb
Mar13°
Apr17°
May22°
Jun26°
Jul29°
Aug29°
Sep24°
Oct18°
Nov12°
Dec
BestGoodMixedQuiet

Three ways to do it

BudgetA dorm by the lake

A hostel bed back from the water, the public ferry between villages, and picnics eaten on the steps in Varenna. This is how I did Lake Como without the price tag.

ComfortableA glimpse of the water

A simple guesthouse in Varenna, the boat tour across the lake, and the climb up to Castello di Vezio. The sweet spot for slow days here.

Treat yourselfA lakefront balcony room

A villa room right on the water, a private boat across the lake, and a long lunch as the Walk of Lovers turns gold at sunset. Worth it once.

The itinerary

Italy on film

Do you really need a car for Lake Como, or can you do it all by ferry?

Honestly, the best decision I made on Lake Como was not renting a car. I took the train straight in from Milano Centrale to Varenna-Esino, which is about an hour on the Milan to Tirano line and drops you a short downhill walk from the water, and from there I never needed wheels once. Varenna is tiny and walkable, parking is a nightmare and expensive, and the lake itself is the road here, so a car just becomes something you're paying to leave in a garage. I based myself in Varenna on the quiet eastern shore on purpose: it's smaller and calmer than Bellagio, right on the water, and every village worth seeing is a 15 to 20 minute ferry away. Waking up to the lake and stepping onto a boat instead of into traffic is the whole reason I keep telling people to slow this trip right down.

How I'd actually do the ferry days

The thing nobody tells you is to buy the day pass rather than single tickets. I grabbed a day pass for around 15 euros and used it to village-hop at my own pace, over to Bellagio for the steep cobbled lanes and the gardens, across to Menaggio on the western shore for a long lakeside lunch, then back to Varenna for sunset. Single fares add up fast and tie you to one crossing; the pass let me be spontaneous, which is the point of a slow lake trip. One real warning from me: check the ferry timetable the night before, because the lake boats are not frequent like a city metro, and the gaps get wider in shoulder season and around the middle of the day. I nearly got stranded in Bellagio once because I assumed there'd always be a next boat. Screenshot the schedule, build your day loosely around two or three crossings, and you'll never feel rushed.

The little things that made the days

Beyond the boats, the spots I loved most were the cheap and quiet ones. The Walk of Lovers, the little waterfront path on stilts into the village, is free and was my single favourite moment of the trip when the light goes gold and the day crowds thin out. The climb up to Castello di Vezio is a short uphill walk for about 5 euros, with the eerie ghost statue and the best lake views I saw all week, so save it for a clear day and wear proper shoes. Villa Monastero's lakeside gardens are around 10 euros and made for doing absolutely nothing on a bench among the citrus trees. I'd book a table at somewhere small like Il Cavatappi ahead because it fills up, and post up at Nilus Bar right on the water for an aperitivo as the ferries come in. None of it needs to be expensive, and none of it needs a car.

Staying safe & smart

Lake Como felt very safe and easy to me as a solo traveller, but a few honest, specific things. The main risk isn't crime, it's logistics: the ferries genuinely stop earlier than you'd expect and run with big gaps mid-day, so check the timetable each night or you can get stranded in a village across the water after dinner. The lake water is cold and deep with boat traffic, so it's lovely to look at but not somewhere I'd casually swim far out. The walk up to Castello di Vezio and the Walk of Lovers path can be slippery in the wet, so save the climb for a clear day and wear shoes with grip. If you do end up driving anywhere in Italy, watch for the ZTL restricted-traffic zones in town centres, because the cameras fine you automatically by post. And the usual European train-travel sense applies in busy Milano Centrale where you'll likely change: keep your bag zipped and on you, especially in the crowd around the platforms. Beyond that, it's tap water you can drink, a friendly village, and the slowest, calmest few days I've had in a while.

Frequently asked

Why base yourself in Varenna instead of Como town?

Varenna is smaller, quieter and right on the water, which made it my favourite base for slow days. From there the boat tour across the lake, Villa Monastero and the Walk of Lovers are all easy to reach.

What's the hike to Castello di Vezio like?

It's a short uphill walk from Varenna to the castle, where you'll find the well-known ghost statue and some of the best lake views I saw all trip. Wear comfortable shoes and go on a clear day.

How many days do I need for Lake Como?

My guide is built around four days, which gave me enough time for the boat tour, the Castello di Vezio hike, Villa Monastero and sunset on the Walk of Lovers without ever feeling rushed.

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