Cammino di San Francesco 2026: Francis Walked This Route in 1206 and the Path Passes Through the Same Umbrian Villages He Preached In, the Northern Route Has 10 Stages Through the Apennine Forest, and You Can Sleep in the Same Franciscan Friaries That Hosted Francis's Disciples
Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com
Last updated: April 2026. Verified by the editorial team of www.tourleaderpro.com.
The Cammino di San Francesco (the Franciscan Pilgrimage Way — the specific walking route network following the specific life, preaching circuits, and spiritual sites of Francis of Assisi (born Giovanni di Pietro di Bernardone, Assisi, approximately 1181 — died Assisi, October 3, 1226)) is the most specifically historically grounded single Italian pilgrimage walk and the one whose specific route (through the specific Umbrian and Lazio territory where Francis preached, prayed, and established the specific Franciscan order (the Ordo Fratrum Minorum — the Friars Minor)) traverses the most specifically unchanged single Italian medieval spiritual landscape: the same Apennine forests (the bosco francescano — the specific Franciscan forest landscape (the chestnut and oak forest of the Umbrian Apennines) that Francis used as the specific meditation space (the specific "eremo" — the hermitage (the isolated forest retreat) is the most specifically Franciscan single architectural typology: the simple stone building in the specific forest clearing that Francis used for the most intensive single periods of prayer)), the same villages (the same Spello, Bevagna, Foligno, and Colfiorito market towns where Francis preached his specific "Laudato si'" creation theology in the specific 13th-century town squares)), and the same friaries (the Franciscan friaries that were established by Francis's disciples within years of the specific preaching circuits (the Sacro Convento di Assisi (the GPS: 43.0700°N, 12.6166°E) and the La Verna Sanctuary (the GPS: 43.7049°N, 11.9318°E)) are still operated by the Franciscan friars and still accept pilgrims in the specific pilgrim accommodation (the foresteria dei frati) at the most specifically affordable single Italian pilgrimage hostel price).
Cammino di San Francesco: The Routes and the Stages
The Northern Route — La Verna to Assisi
The Cammino di San Francesco Northern Route (il Cammino di San Francesco Via Francescana — the specific northern section from the Santuario della Verna (the La Verna Sanctuary — the GPS: 43.7049°N, 11.9318°E, the Arezzo province) to Assisi (the GPS: 43.0700°N, 12.6166°E): approximately 195km in 9-10 stages at the standard 20km per day pace): the most specifically Franciscan single route section (the specific La Verna Sanctuary (the site of the specific 1224 Stigmata (the specific September 14, 1224 mystical event in which Francis received the specific stigmata (the marks of the Passion of Christ (the wounds of the crucifixion — the specific hands, feet, and side wounds) on his own body during the specific 40-day fast at the La Verna sanctuary) — the most specifically documented single medieval mystical event in the Italian religious tradition) is the most specifically emotionally charged single Cammino di San Francesco starting point). The specific route stages: Stage 1 (La Verna → Chiusi della Verna: 18km, the specific Apennine forest section of the Foreste Casentinesi National Park); Stage 2 (Chiusi → Caprese Michelangelo: 20km, the specific birthplace of Michelangelo Buonarroti (the Casa di Michelangelo — the GPS: 43.6442°N, 11.9808°E) — the most specifically unexpected single Italian pilgrimage cultural encounter); through Stages 3-9 to the Assisi arrival (the Basilica di San Francesco — the GPS: 43.0738°N, 12.6072°E): the most specifically emotionally rewarding single Cammino di San Francesco moment.
The Southern Route — Assisi to Rome
The Cammino di San Francesco Southern Route (il Cammino di San Francesco da Assisi a Roma — the specific southern extension from Assisi to Rome following the specific 1220 Francis-to-Rome pilgrimage route): approximately 550km in 28-30 stages through the specific Umbria, Lazio, and Sabine Apennine territory. The most specifically remarkable single southern route section: the Rieti Valley (the Valle Santa di Rieti — the specific Rieti province valley (the GPS centroid: 42.4°N, 12.8°E) where Francis established the specific 4 Franciscan sanctuaries (the Greccio, the Fonte Colombo, the Poggio Bustone, and the La Foresta) within a 25km radius — the most specifically concentrated single Franciscan sacred site cluster in Italy and the one whose specific Fonte Colombo (the GPS: 42.3868°N, 12.8100°E) is the specific location where Francis dictated the specific "Regola Bollata" (the Franciscan Rule — the definitive 1223 Franciscan Rule approved by Pope Honorius III at Fonte Colombo): the most specifically historically important single Cammino di San Francesco stop.
Accommodation and Practical Information
The specific Cammino di San Francesco accommodation (the alloggio lungo il Cammino di San Francesco): the Franciscan friary guest accommodation (the foresteria dei frati — the specific Franciscan hospice (the ospizio francescano) available at the La Verna Sanctuary (30 beds, approximately 15-20 euros per night including the breakfast and the dinner), the Greccio Sanctuary (25 beds, approximately 18-25 euros per night), and the Sacro Convento di Assisi (40 beds, approximately 20-30 euros per night)). The specific pilgrim credential (the credenziale del pellegrino — the accordion-fold document that receives the specific stamps from each stage church, friary, or municipal stamp point): available at the La Verna Sanctuary (the starting point) or at the Assisi Pilgrim Welcome Centre (the Casa Accoglienza Pellegrini (the Via San Francesco 11, Assisi)). The completion certificate (the Testimonium — the specific Cammino di San Francesco completion certificate (in Latin) issued at the Assisi Sacro Convento for the walker who completes the minimum 100km of the Northern Route or the entire southern route to Rome): the most specifically Franciscan single completion document in Italian pilgrimage culture.
Q&A: Cammino di San Francesco
Is the Cammino di San Francesco more difficult than the Santiago de Compostela?
The specific comparison: physically, the Cammino di San Francesco Northern Route is more specifically challenging than the standard Camino Francés to Santiago (the specific elevation profile: the Cammino di San Francesco Northern Route has a total elevation gain of approximately 5,800m over 195km (the average gradient: 30m of ascent per km) versus the Camino Francés to Santiago (the Pyrenees + Galicia) at approximately 9,500m over 790km (the average gradient: 12m per km) — the shorter Cammino di San Francesco is more steeply graded per km but has the lower total ascent for the complete route); logistically, the Cammino di San Francesco has a less developed infrastructure than the Santiago (the specific accommodation spacing on the Cammino di San Francesco is less predictable than the Santiago Camino — some stages require a 25-30km walk to the next pilgrim accommodation, versus the standard 20km Santiago stage spacing); spiritually, the Cammino di San Francesco is the most specifically Franciscan single Italian pilgrimage (the specific Francis sites (the La Verna, the Greccio, the Fonte Colombo) have no Santiago equivalent in terms of the direct biographical contact with the patron saint of the pilgrimage route).