
Rome 4-day itinerary
4 days in Rome, planned the tabi way — one neighbourhood per day, gapless timing, every stop chosen from 40 human-verified places across 6 curated neighbourhoods. Open it offline and follow it street by street, or make it the starting point for your own plan.
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Stay near Historic Centre Hotels on Klook ↗
Historic Centre & nearby — a sights day
Baroque Rome at its most theatrical — the Pantheon's coffered dome, Bernini's fountains in Piazza Navona, and Campo de' Fiori's morning market give way to café tables after dark. The Trevi Fountain is unmissable but always crowded — go at dawn or late evening to actually see it, and mind the pickpockets in the crush.
- 08:0008:30BreakfastPick a spot nearby — not booked yet
- 08:3009:10MarketCampo de' Fiori40 min
A working morning market since 1869, when it replaced the fruit-and-vegetable stalls that used to fill Piazza Navona — flowers, produce, spices and Roman souvenirs crowd the square Monday to Saturday, 7:00–14:00, then vanish by mid-afternoon for the evening bar and restaurant crowd. At the centre, a brooding bronze statue marks where the philosopher Giordano Bruno was burned at the stake in 1600 for heresy — he still faces the Vatican. No entry fee; bring small cash, since some stalls don't run cards.
marketfood markethistoricverify opening hours - 09:10~5 min walkroute
- 09:2510:05Landmark40 min
Rome's grandest baroque piazza, laid out on the oval footprint of Domitian's 1st-century stadium — Bernini's Fountain of the Four Rivers anchors the centre, flanked by his Moor Fountain and the Fountain of Neptune, all freshly restored for the 2025 Jubilee. Free to enter any time; street artists, portrait painters and gelato stands crowd the edges by day, café terraces take over by evening. No ticket, no queue — just come, though café tables here charge a premium for the view.
piazzafountainbaroqueverify opening hours - 10:05~5 min walkroute
- 10:2011:05Historic site45 min
Ancient Rome's best-preserved monument — a 2,000-year-old dome with a 9-metre oculus still open to the sky, and no visible support columns holding it up. Entry now requires a paid, timed ticket (raised to €7 on 1 July 2026, from the €5 fee introduced in 2023); reduced €2 for EU citizens 18–25, free under 18 and on the first Sunday of the month (queue on-site for that slot — no online booking for free Sundays). Book the standard timed entry on the Musei Italiani site or app days ahead to skip the door queue; dress modestly (shoulders and knees covered) since it still functions as a working church. A ramp on the Via della Minerva side gives step-free access.
Cards OKStep-freehistoricalancient romeverify opening hours - 11:05~10 min walkroute
- 11:2011:40LandmarkFontana di Trevi20 min
Rome's most theatrical fountain — Neptune's chariot pulled by sea-horses through a wall of travertine, restored to a gleam for the 2025 Jubilee. Since February 2026, non-residents pay €2 to step down onto the basin's stone edge for the classic coin-toss photo (tap a card or phone at the on-site machines, or book at fontanaditrevi.roma.it); viewing from the piazza itself stays free, and the fee doesn't apply after 22:00 or before 09:00 (11:30 on Mondays and Fridays) — go late evening or early morning for both a thinner crowd and a free basin. Legend says a coin thrown over your shoulder with your right hand guarantees a return to Rome.
Cards OKfountainlandmarkmust seeverify opening hours - 11:40Transit ~15–25 minroute
- 12:0013:00LunchSuggested
- 13:0014:15Museum75 min
A Renaissance banker's pleasure villa turned museum, its ground-floor loggias frescoed by Raphael and his workshop — the Loggia of Cupid and Psyche's ceiling and the adjoining Galatea fresco, painted around 1517-1519 for the banker Agostino Chigi, are the highlights. Unlike most Rome museums, it keeps mornings-only hours: Monday to Saturday 9am-2pm (last admission 1:15pm), closed Sundays except the second Sunday of each month (9am-5pm, with a curated concert at 11:30am) — plan a morning visit here, not an afternoon one. Full ticket €12, reduced €10; a ramp gives step-free entry at the main loggia and a lift reaches the upper floor. A quiet, often near-empty counterpoint to the crowds across the river in Centro Storico.
Cards OKStep-freemuseumhistoric villaverify opening hours - 14:15~10 min walkroute
- 14:3015:00Church30 min
One of Rome's oldest churches dedicated to the Virgin — founded in the early 4th century and rebuilt into its current form around 1148 — famous for the glowing 12th-century apse mosaic of Christ enthroned beside Mary, with Pietro Cavallini's 13th-century Life of the Virgin cycle in the same apse below it. Free entry, no ticket needed, roughly 7:30am to 8pm daily (hours run shorter in August and visits pause during Mass, so check locally if you're set on a specific time). The piazza outside, built around one of Rome's oldest public fountains, is Trastevere's social heart from morning coffee through to the evening crowd.
churchbyzantinemosaicsverify opening hours - 15:00~10 min walkroute
- 15:1515:55ViewpointGianicolo40 min
Rome's widest panoramic view, unfolding from St Peter's dome across every rooftop and hill of the historic centre — reachable by a stiff 20-25 minute uphill walk from Trastevere, or more easily by bus 115 or a taxi straight to the piazzale. Time it for noon: a cannon has been fired from just below the terrace, beneath the equestrian statue of Giuseppe Garibaldi, every single day since 1847 (originally to give Rome's churches one shared signal to synchronise their bells) — the blank round is loud enough to hear across much of central Rome, and you can walk right up to watch two uniformed attendants load and fire it. Free to visit any time; a few kiosks along the terrace sell drinks and snacks for a cheap view-side aperitivo.
viewpointpanoramacity viewverify opening hours - 17:3018:45DinnerSuggested
Tridente & Villa Borghese & nearby — a sights day
The Spanish Steps and Via del Corso's flagship stores anchor Rome's fashion triangle, but climb past Piazza del Popolo and the day opens into Villa Borghese's shaded paths, rowboat lake and the Galleria Borghese — book the gallery's timed entry weeks ahead, as same-day tickets rarely exist.
- 08:0008:30BreakfastPick a spot nearby — not booked yet
- 08:3009:30LandmarkPiazza del Popolo e la Terrazza del Pincio60 min
Rome's monumental northern gateway — a wide oval piazza framed by an Egyptian obelisk brought here in 1589 and Carlo Rainaldi's baroque 'twin' churches, their domes deliberately mismatched (one oval, one round) to disguise the piazza's uneven proportions. A ramped, switchback path Giuseppe Valadier built on the eastern side climbs to the Pincio Terrace, where crowds gather every clear evening for a free view over the piazza's rooftops to St Peter's dome — arrive at least an hour before sunset for a spot at the railing. Both the piazza and the terrace are free, always open and wheelchair-navigable via Valadier's ramp (paved, no stairs required); the flower-sellers working the piazza can be persistent, so a polite no is normal.
landmarkviewpointsunsetverify opening hours - 09:30~10 min walkroute
- 09:4510:15LandmarkScalinata di Trinità dei Monti30 min
Rome's most photographed staircase — 135 travertine steps built in 1725 with French funding, linking Piazza di Spagna below to the twin-towered church of Trinità dei Monti above. A 2019 city ordinance bans sitting or lying on the steps: expect a €250 fine just for perching, rising to €400 if you damage or stain the stone — whistle-blowing officers patrol by day and the rule is still strictly enforced. At the base, Bernini's father carved the boat-shaped Fontana della Barcaccia, sunk low because of weak local water pressure. The steps themselves have no ramp; wheelchair users can reach the top via the elevator at Spagna metro station instead, while the piazza below is flat and step-free.
landmarkmust seephoto spotverify opening hours - 10:15~15 min walkroute
- 10:3012:00ParkVilla Borghese90 min
Rome's grandest public park — 80 hectares of shaded avenues, formal gardens and a small artificial lake where you can rent a rowboat (roughly €3–5 per person for 20 minutes, minimum two people) to row past the neoclassical Temple of Asclepius. The park is free and unenclosed by any single gate — main paths are paved and wheelchair-navigable — though it holds several separately-ticketed attractions inside: the Galleria Borghese, the Bioparco zoo (adults €16, children 3–12 €13), and the Pincio Terrace viewpoint. A natural pairing for families: let kids loose at the Bioparco or the lake while adults take a timed slot at the low-child-appeal Galleria Borghese nearby. Bike and golf-cart rentals are available near the main entrances for covering more ground.
Step-freeparkgardensfamily friendlyverify opening hours - 12:00~10 min walkroute
- 12:1513:15LunchSuggested
- 13:1515:15Gallery120 min
One of Rome's richest small museums — Bernini's Apollo and Daphne and David, plus Caravaggio and Titian canvases, all inside Cardinal Scipione Borghese's 17th-century villa. Visits are strictly capped: book a fixed 2-hour entry slot in advance (there is no walk-up ticketing), with online booking opening only about 10 days ahead of a visit date and popular slots — especially spring and autumn mornings — selling out within hours of release. The ticket is €18 total (€16 admission plus a mandatory €2 reservation fee, charged on every ticket including reduced and free ones); arrive 30 minutes early for the mandatory bag check, and be ready to leave promptly when your 2 hours end — there's no re-entry and no extensions. Closed Mondays. A side entrance and small elevator-compatible wheelchairs make the ground and first floors accessible, per the gallery's own accessibility page.
Cards OKStep-freegalleryart museumverify opening hours - 15:15Transit ~15–25 minroute
- 15:3016:00Landmark30 min
Monti's living room — a small fountain-centred square where the neighbourhood actually sits, day and night, on the steps around the basin. It's the natural hub for wandering the sloped, cobbled lanes fanning out from it — Via del Boschetto and Via dei Serpenti for vintage and indie shops, Via Urbana for a quieter stroll — all a five-minute walk from the Colosseum but feeling like a different, villagey Rome. No opening hours, no ticket: come for an aperitivo at dusk when the square fills up and stays that way past midnight on weekends.
piazzavillagestrollingverify opening hours - 16:00~5 min walkroute
- 16:1516:35ChurchSan Pietro in Vincoli20 min
Free entry to see one of Michelangelo's greatest sculptures without a ticket, a booking, or a crowd — his seated Moses, muscular and horned per medieval iconography, was carved for Pope Julius II's never-finished tomb and anchors the right transept. The church closes for a genuine midday break, roughly 12:30–15:00 (stretching later into the evening — up to 19:00 — in summer), so plan around lunch rather than showing up at 13:00. It's two minutes uphill from the Colosseum but sees a fraction of the visitors. Note the entrance is a flight of steps with no ramp — not workable for wheelchairs or strollers without prior arrangement with staff.
churchhistoricalmust seeverify opening hours - 16:35~5 min walkroute
- 16:5018:20Historic siteColosseo90 min
Rome's ancient amphitheatre, and the single most booked sight in Italy — as of April 2024, ticketing moved off CoopCulture entirely onto the Parco Archeologico del Colosseo's own site (ticketing.colosseo.it); buy only there or at official partner sites, never a .com reseller. The standard ticket (€18) is nominative — tied to your name, checked against photo ID at the gate — and covers one entry each to the Colosseum, Roman Forum and Palatine Hill within 24 hours. Slots release exactly 30 days ahead at 9:00 Rome time and the summer 08:30–19:15 window sells out fastest at peak hours. The Full Experience upgrade (Underground & Arena, €24 + a non-refundable €2 booking fee) adds the reconstructed arena floor and the gladiator/animal tunnels beneath it — the best add-on for a first visit, but it sells out within minutes of release, so book the moment your date opens. A dedicated accessible entrance, lifts between levels and free wheelchair loan are available at the reception/security office; disabled visitors plus one companion enter free.
Cards OKStep-freeancient romehistoricalverify opening hours - 18:3519:50DinnerSuggested
Testaccio & nearby — a sights day
Rome's food quarter, minus the tourist theatre — the covered Mercato Testaccio for lunch-counter stalls, Monte Testaccio itself an ancient hill built entirely from broken Roman amphorae, and a trattoria scene (offal-forward Roman classics like coda alla vaccinara) that still cooks for locals first. Few sights, plenty to eat.
- 08:0008:30BreakfastSuggested
- 08:3009:15LandmarkCimitero Acattolico di Roma45 min
One of Europe's oldest continuously used non-Catholic burial grounds, and still active today — this is where John Keats is buried ("Here lies One Whose Name was writ in Water") and where Percy Bysshe Shelley's ashes rest beneath a stone inscribed with lines from The Tempest, a short walk from William Wetmore Story's haunting "Angel of Grief." There's no fixed ticket price, but the cemetery explicitly asks for a €5-per-person donation at the gate — it's what keeps the gardens, and a resident cat colony documented here since at least 1850, going. Open Monday–Saturday 9:00–17:00 (last entry 16:30) and Sunday 9:00–13:00 (last entry 12:30), with extra closures around Christmas, New Year and two weeks in mid-August. Paths are gravel and the cemetery itself notes architectural barriers, so it's a rougher walk than a paved piazza — wear flat shoes, and leave your phone off social media while inside, a house rule here.
cemeteryliteraryhistoricalverify opening hours - 09:15~5 min walkroute
- 09:3010:30LandmarkMonte Testaccio60 min
An entire hill built from roughly 53 million broken ancient Roman amphorae — mostly olive-oil jars discarded over centuries as cargo was unloaded at the nearby river port — Monte Testaccio is genuinely one of Rome's strangest ancient sites, but it is not a park you can just walk up. The hill is fenced and managed as a protected archaeological area; the only way in is a reserved guided visit (call 060608 daily 9:00–19:00 to book, meeting point Via Nicola Zabaglia 24; €4 full / €3 reduced, free for Rome residents and MIC cardholders), and even then paths are uneven gravel and steps with no wheelchair access. A 2024–2026 restoration project aims to eventually reopen the summit for unrestricted public use, but as of writing it still isn't a walk-up site. Without a booking, the closest most visitors get is eating at one of the restaurants built directly into caves at its base — Flavio al Velavevodetto's dining rooms still have amphora shards visible in the walls.
landmarkancient romebook aheadverify opening hours - 10:30~5 min walkroute
- 10:4511:45MarketMercato di Testaccio60 min
Rome's best working food market, rebuilt into a modern covered hall in 2012 and still run for locals first — lunch-counter stalls like Mordi e Vai (offal panini) and Casa Manco (fried supplì) draw a midday crowd of market workers and regulars rather than tour groups. Open Monday to Saturday, 7:00–15:30, and closed all day Sunday — come before 11:00 for the fullest stalls, or a little later once the lunch counters start cooking. Bring some cash: bigger vendors take cards, but many of the smaller produce and deli stalls still prefer euros. A separate, ticketed Republican-era warehouse beneath the market (its walls built from reused amphorae) opens only on the second Tuesday of the month by guided visit — a different thing entirely from the food market above it.
marketfood marketstreet foodverify opening hours - 11:45Transit ~15–25 minroute
- 12:0012:15Landmark15 min
The pedestrian-only approach to Castel Sant'Angelo, lined with ten marble angels — each carrying an instrument of the Passion — carved in Bernini's workshop in the 1660s (two originals now live in a church nearby, replaced here by copies). Free, always open, and one of the best places in Rome to frame the castle against St Peter's dome, especially at golden hour. The old stone paving underfoot is uneven in places, worth noting for wheelchairs or strollers.
river viewstatuesfreeverify opening hours - 12:15~5 min walkroute
- 12:3013:30LunchSuggested
- 13:3014:30Historic site60 min
Hadrian's 2nd-century mausoleum, later a papal fortress and prison, now a museum — the climb up through the Sala Paolina and the papal apartments ends on a rooftop terrace with one of the best skyline-and-river views in Rome, especially near sunset. Adult ticket €18, reduced €2 for EU citizens 18–25, free on the first Sunday of the month. Closed Mondays year-round, with one exception: a 'Mondays in the Castle' initiative (August–December 2026) opens the museum 14:00–20:00 that day for a flat €5. It's an old fortress, so accessibility is only partial — an assisted lift reaches most levels but needs a staffed escort arranged at the dedicated accessible entrance on Lungotevere Castello, not a free-roam route.
historicallandmarkmuseumverify opening hours - 14:30~15 min walkroute
- 14:4515:45ChurchBasilica di San Pietro60 min
Free to enter, no ticket needed — but the security screening line (bags scanned, metal detectors, the dress code enforced right at this checkpoint) regularly runs 1–2 hours by mid-morning in high season. Arrive before 08:00, or plan around it entirely with an early Mass. Shoulders and knees must be covered for everyone, long trousers for men, skirts below the knee or trousers for women — guards turn people away with no exceptions, so pack a cover-up even in August. Inside, the dome climb (up to 551 steps) costs €10 on foot or €15 with a lift partway, still leaving roughly 320 steps to the summit — the lift only reaches the lower terrace. The main basilica floor is step-free via a ramp near the security checkpoint and an elevator, though the dome's very top isn't wheelchair-reachable.
Step-freechurchmust seelandmarkverify opening hours - 15:45~10 min walkroute
- 17:3018:45DinnerSuggested
- 18:4521:45MuseumMusei Vaticani180 min
Book ahead — this is close to mandatory. The standard adult ticket is €20 at the door or €25 online (the €5 booking fee buys you a fixed entry slot instead of the walk-up queue, which can run hours). Open Monday–Saturday 08:00–20:00 with last entry at 18:00; closed on regular Sundays, but the last Sunday of every month opens free 09:00–14:00 (last entry 12:30) — unbooked and, predictably, the single most crowded morning of the month, so it trades a fee for a crush. Select Fridays between April and October add a quieter, atmospheric evening opening, booking-only. The visit is a fixed one-way route roughly 7km long ending at the Sistine Chapel — you can't skip to it directly, so budget a real 3+ hours. Ramps, elevators and an accessible route cover most galleries including the Sistine Chapel; disabled visitors plus one companion enter free with documentation, and free wheelchairs are available at the entrance.
Step-freemuseummust seebook aheadverify opening hours
Historic Centre & nearby — a sights day
Baroque Rome at its most theatrical — the Pantheon's coffered dome, Bernini's fountains in Piazza Navona, and Campo de' Fiori's morning market give way to café tables after dark. The Trevi Fountain is unmissable but always crowded — go at dawn or late evening to actually see it, and mind the pickpockets in the crush.
- 07:4008:00Check out of your stayUsually due by 10:00–12:00 — most stays hold your bags if you ask.
- 08:0008:30BreakfastPick a spot nearby — not booked yet
- 08:3009:10MarketCampo de' Fiori40 min
A working morning market since 1869, when it replaced the fruit-and-vegetable stalls that used to fill Piazza Navona — flowers, produce, spices and Roman souvenirs crowd the square Monday to Saturday, 7:00–14:00, then vanish by mid-afternoon for the evening bar and restaurant crowd. At the centre, a brooding bronze statue marks where the philosopher Giordano Bruno was burned at the stake in 1600 for heresy — he still faces the Vatican. No entry fee; bring small cash, since some stalls don't run cards.
marketfood markethistoricverify opening hours - 09:10~5 min walkroute
- 09:2510:05Landmark40 min
Rome's grandest baroque piazza, laid out on the oval footprint of Domitian's 1st-century stadium — Bernini's Fountain of the Four Rivers anchors the centre, flanked by his Moor Fountain and the Fountain of Neptune, all freshly restored for the 2025 Jubilee. Free to enter any time; street artists, portrait painters and gelato stands crowd the edges by day, café terraces take over by evening. No ticket, no queue — just come, though café tables here charge a premium for the view.
piazzafountainbaroqueverify opening hours - 10:05~5 min walkroute
- 10:2011:05Historic site45 min
Ancient Rome's best-preserved monument — a 2,000-year-old dome with a 9-metre oculus still open to the sky, and no visible support columns holding it up. Entry now requires a paid, timed ticket (raised to €7 on 1 July 2026, from the €5 fee introduced in 2023); reduced €2 for EU citizens 18–25, free under 18 and on the first Sunday of the month (queue on-site for that slot — no online booking for free Sundays). Book the standard timed entry on the Musei Italiani site or app days ahead to skip the door queue; dress modestly (shoulders and knees covered) since it still functions as a working church. A ramp on the Via della Minerva side gives step-free access.
Cards OKStep-freehistoricalancient romeverify opening hours - 11:05~10 min walkroute
- 11:2011:40LandmarkFontana di Trevi20 min
Rome's most theatrical fountain — Neptune's chariot pulled by sea-horses through a wall of travertine, restored to a gleam for the 2025 Jubilee. Since February 2026, non-residents pay €2 to step down onto the basin's stone edge for the classic coin-toss photo (tap a card or phone at the on-site machines, or book at fontanaditrevi.roma.it); viewing from the piazza itself stays free, and the fee doesn't apply after 22:00 or before 09:00 (11:30 on Mondays and Fridays) — go late evening or early morning for both a thinner crowd and a free basin. Legend says a coin thrown over your shoulder with your right hand guarantees a return to Rome.
Cards OKfountainlandmarkmust seeverify opening hours - 11:40Transit ~15–25 minroute
- 12:0013:00LunchSuggested
- 13:0014:15Museum75 min
A Renaissance banker's pleasure villa turned museum, its ground-floor loggias frescoed by Raphael and his workshop — the Loggia of Cupid and Psyche's ceiling and the adjoining Galatea fresco, painted around 1517-1519 for the banker Agostino Chigi, are the highlights. Unlike most Rome museums, it keeps mornings-only hours: Monday to Saturday 9am-2pm (last admission 1:15pm), closed Sundays except the second Sunday of each month (9am-5pm, with a curated concert at 11:30am) — plan a morning visit here, not an afternoon one. Full ticket €12, reduced €10; a ramp gives step-free entry at the main loggia and a lift reaches the upper floor. A quiet, often near-empty counterpoint to the crowds across the river in Centro Storico.
Cards OKStep-freemuseumhistoric villaverify opening hours - 14:15~10 min walkroute
- 14:3015:00Church30 min
One of Rome's oldest churches dedicated to the Virgin — founded in the early 4th century and rebuilt into its current form around 1148 — famous for the glowing 12th-century apse mosaic of Christ enthroned beside Mary, with Pietro Cavallini's 13th-century Life of the Virgin cycle in the same apse below it. Free entry, no ticket needed, roughly 7:30am to 8pm daily (hours run shorter in August and visits pause during Mass, so check locally if you're set on a specific time). The piazza outside, built around one of Rome's oldest public fountains, is Trastevere's social heart from morning coffee through to the evening crowd.
churchbyzantinemosaicsverify opening hours - 15:00~10 min walkroute
- 15:1515:55ViewpointGianicolo40 min
Rome's widest panoramic view, unfolding from St Peter's dome across every rooftop and hill of the historic centre — reachable by a stiff 20-25 minute uphill walk from Trastevere, or more easily by bus 115 or a taxi straight to the piazzale. Time it for noon: a cannon has been fired from just below the terrace, beneath the equestrian statue of Giuseppe Garibaldi, every single day since 1847 (originally to give Rome's churches one shared signal to synchronise their bells) — the blank round is loud enough to hear across much of central Rome, and you can walk right up to watch two uniformed attendants load and fire it. Free to visit any time; a few kiosks along the terrace sell drinks and snacks for a cheap view-side aperitivo.
viewpointpanoramacity viewverify opening hours - 17:3018:45DinnerSuggested
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