Accumoli 2026: The Rieti Village That the 2016 Earthquake Reduced to Rubble — Where the Community Stands Ten Years On and How to Visit Respectfully
Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com
Last updated: April 2026.
Accumoli (a village of approximately 600 permanent inhabitants — reduced from 700 by the August 24, 2016 earthquake — in the Rieti province, 130km northeast of Rome at 828m altitude on the Apennine ridge between Lazio and Marche) was among the most severely damaged communities in the August 24, 2016 central Italy earthquake sequence: the 6.2 Mw earthquake that struck at 03:36 (the specific time that maximized casualties because the population was asleep indoors) killed 50 people in Accumoli itself (the village's population of 700 lost approximately 7% of its residents in a single night) and destroyed approximately 80% of the village's building stock, including the church of San Francesco and the entire historic centre that the specific Apennine medieval urban form had preserved largely intact until that morning.
Accumoli in 2026 — the reconstruction status: the Italian reconstruction process (the specific post-earthquake institutional mechanism that the Italian Civil Protection and the regional and national government manage) has produced, ten years after the earthquake, a situation of substantial but incomplete progress: the temporary housing (the SAE — Soluzioni Abitative in Emergenza — the prefabricated dwellings that the civil protection system installed within months of the earthquake) has housed the Accumoli community continuously since late 2016, and the permanent reconstruction (the rebuilding of the village on the existing footprint with the reinforced anti-seismic construction standards required by the updated Italian building codes) is ongoing. Some families have returned to reconstructed homes; the majority remain in the SAE modules as of 2026.
Accumoli: Visit, Memory, and Reconstruction
How to Visit Respectfully
Accumoli is not a tourist destination in the conventional sense — it is a living community in an active reconstruction process. The visitor approach that the Accumoli community finds appropriate: the visit to the memorial area (the maintained section of the former village centre where some ruins have been preserved as a memorial to the earthquake victims), the stop at the local bar or trattoria in the temporary village (the specific economic support that visitor spending provides to a community whose commercial infrastructure was also destroyed), and the awareness that the village's population is managing a decade-long trauma whose resolution is still in progress. The specific disrespectful approach: disaster tourism (photographing ruins or displaced residents without context or permission) is the behaviour that the Accumoli community and the civil protection authorities specifically discourage.
The Rieti Earthquake Circuit
Accumoli is 15km from Amatrice (see the Antrodoco guide for the Amatrice context — the town most severely damaged in the same earthquake sequence, with 299 deaths) and 30km from Arquata del Tronto (Marche — the third severely affected community). The three villages together constitute the specific central Apennine earthquake zone whose reconstruction process represents the most significant ongoing Italian civil engineering and social programme of the 2020s.
Q&A: Accumoli
Should tourists visit earthquake-damaged Italian villages?
The question is legitimate and the answer is nuanced: the visit that provides economic support to the affected community (eating at local restaurants, buying local products, staying in the available accommodation) actively contributes to the recovery. The disaster tourism visit (the visit whose primary purpose is witnessing destruction rather than supporting the community) extracts experience from the community's suffering without contributing to its recovery. Accumoli and Amatrice both have functioning restaurants and local food products (the amatriciana tradition) — a visit centred on these supports the community. A visit centred on photographing ruins does not.