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Virgin Voyages' guide to Amalfi Coast (Salerno), Italy

Where cliffs meet cobalt seas, the Amalfi Coast unfolds in a sweep of sunlit villages, winding roads, and citrus-scented air. Historic charm, dramatic beauty, and la dolce vita energy come together in one unforgettable stretch of coastline.

AMALFI COAST

Mediterranean Masterpiece

The Amalfi Coast doesn’t do subtle. It never really needed to. Cliffs rise straight out of the Mediterranean. Pastel villages spill down hillsides in sun-washed layers. Lemon groves cascade toward water so vividly blue it feels almost imagined.

Sailing into Salerno, the coastline reveals itself in moments. Church domes catch the light. Fishing boats trace bright white lines across the harbor. High above, narrow roads curve along the cliffs with an easy kind of defiance.
Step ashore and the pace shifts without asking. Espresso cups clink. Scooters weave through narrow streets. Linen moves softly from balconies while café tables stretch into sunlit piazzas where lunch casually becomes the afternoon. No one’s in a rush. Least of all you.

Follow the coastline and it keeps outdoing itself. Positano spills down the cliffs in color and light — less a town, more a scene you’ve stepped into. Ravello lingers high above it all, where gardens and terraces open wide to the sea. And then there are the lemons. Bright, fragrant, everywhere. They find their way into pastries, pastas, and limoncello poured with a generosity that suggests the day is far from over. Because here, it usually is.

Take the scenic road. Order the second glass. Lose track of time — even if just for a while. Around here, that’s exactly how it’s done.
Shore Excursions

The Amalfi Effect

Coastal curves, clifftop trails and iconic Italian moments.

Sorrento & Pasta-Making in Gragnano

Starting in Salerno, you’ll take a drive on the Campanian coastal route, where panoramic views of the Bay of Naples are the star. Your first stop is in Sorrento to see centuries-old wood inlay craftsmanship; then, you'll continue to Gragnano, Italy’s “City of Pasta.” Tour a historic factory, visit its Bicentennial Mill, and join a fusilli-making class paired with wine, music, and lunch. Gragnano’s dry pasta dates to Roman times and is still protected by IGP designation today.

Hike the Path of the Gods

You'll take an air-conditioned minibus to Agerola village, perched 1,500 feet above sea level, and follow your guide on a two-hour hike through lemon-scented air and legendary landscapes. The Path of the Gods rewards you with sweeping views of the Amalfi Coast. After your descent, you'll head to Positano — home of pastel houses, stylish boutiques, and café-lined beaches — for time to explore at your leisure.

Capri & Pompeii Combo

Start your day with a hydrofoil journey across the Bay of Naples to the port of Capri, where you'll take a scenic funicular up to the island's namesake town. The stylish Piazzetta, garden paths, and boutique-lined lanes you'll find at the top are worth getting lost in. Next, you'll head by boat back to the mainland, where a guided walk through Pompeii — eerily preserved by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD — awaits you. A scenic drive and local lunch (on your own) complete the day.

More Shore Things for your wishlist...

We have even more in our curated catalog.

The limoncello tends to pour a little more freely

The lemons grown along the Amalfi Coast — known as Sfusato Amalfitano — are famously oversized and intensely fragrant.
Shore Excursions

Salerno Old Town & Sweet Traditions

Uncover Salerno’s medieval charm, tour its cathedral, and taste a bright red dessert named for a cardinal’s hat.

DISCOVER MORE SHORE THINGS

Cliffs glow in the late afternoon light. Pastel villages cling to the hillsides. Fishing boats drift as a hint of citrus hangs in the warm Mediterranean air. You start replaying the moments.

The road from Salerno, each turn revealing the Bay of Naples in wide, cinematic sweeps. Sorrento, where intricate wood inlay turns craft into art. Gragnano — hands shaping fresh fusilli, a splash of wine, a moment worth lingering over.

Morning in Amalfi’s Piazza Duomo — espresso, a delicate pastry, cathedral bells echoing as the day finds its rhythm. A shaded table somewhere along the coast — something bright with lemon, something just pulled from the sea. A harbor at golden hour — boats swaying, a glass of wine stretching the moment just a little longer.

High above it all, the Path of the Gods — lemon-scented air, cliffs, sky, and sea perfectly aligned before descending into Positano’s soft cascade of color. And then, the icons. Crossing the Bay of Naples toward Capri, the coastline falling away behind you. The Piazzetta — all effortless style, gardens and sea views in every direction. Pompeii — streets, villas, and stories frozen in time beneath Vesuvius’ shadow. Then, somewhere along the way — between sea and stone, terrace and harbor — it becomes more than a place you visited. Ahead, the Mediterranean opens wide once again. So does everything else.