Central Italy 10-Day Itinerary 2026: Norcia Was the Birthplace of Saint Benedict and Makes the Best Salumi in Italy, Todi Is the Most Perfectly Preserved Medieval Italian Hill Town Nobody Has Heard Of, Spoleto Hosts One of Europe's Oldest Music Festivals Every June, and the Marche Coast Is the Adriatic Answer to the Amalfi Coast
Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com
Last updated: May 2026 — verified by the editorial team of www.tourleaderpro.com
A central Italy itinerary 10 days (un itinerario di 10 giorni nell'Italia centrale) is the single most specifically complete Italian cultural landscape immersion available in any Italian multi-region programme. Ten days through Tuscany and Umbria from Florence to Rome — using a rental car from Day 2 — covers the most consistently overlooked Italian artistic heritage (the Piero della Francesca Arezzo frescoes, the Signorelli Orvieto Last Judgement, the Giotto Assisi cycle), the most specifically authentic Italian food zone (the Norcia salumi, the Montefalco Sagrantino wine, and the truffle-culture of the Crete Senesi and the Valnerina), and the most specifically "this is the Italy I imagined" single Italian landscape experience (the Tuscan cypress lines, the Umbrian green hills, and the specific medieval hilltop silhouettes that every Merchant-Ivory film has used as the default Italy visual for 40 years).
Central Italy 10-Day Itinerary: The Full Programme
Days 1-2: Florence
See the Tuscany 5-Day Itinerary Days 1-2. The central Italy 10-day Florence addition: the Cappella Brancacci (GPS: 43.7671°N, 11.2435°E — the Masaccio and Masolino fresco cycle (1424-1428): the single most important early Renaissance fresco cycle for the understanding of subsequent Florentine painting (the specific Masaccio Expulsion of Adam and Eve is the most specifically emotionally modern single Italian fresco in the early Renaissance — the first "shame" face in Western painting history)): admission 10 euros, pre-book at museodellopera.it.
Days 3-4: Arezzo and Cortona
Arezzo (GPS: 43.4633°N, 11.8797°E — the Piero della Francesca Legend of the True Cross (see the Tuscany 10-Day Itinerary for the full Arezzo programme)). Cortona (GPS: 43.2752°N, 11.9858°E — 30km south of Arezzo): the most specifically internationally famous single Tuscan hill town thanks to the Frances Mayes "Under the Tuscan Sun" memoir (1996) and the subsequent film (2003) — the specific Cortona that the international visitor finds: the Piazza della Repubblica (the most specifically medieval-feeling single Tuscan main piazza in any hill town not called Siena), the Museo dell'Accademia Etrusca e della Città di Cortona (the MAEC — GPS: 43.2754°N, 11.9864°E — the most specifically important single Etruscan museum in Tuscany after the Guarnacci in Volterra: admission 10 euros), and the specific Cortona panorama (the Val di Chiana visible from the Piazza Garibaldi belvedere — the specific landscape panorama that Frances Mayes described as "the most beautiful in the world" in the opening chapter of Under the Tuscan Sun).
Days 5-6: Val d'Orcia and Norcia
Day 5: the Val d'Orcia programme (see the Tuscany 10-Day Itinerary Days 5-6). Day 6 drive to Norcia (GPS: 42.7942°N, 13.0936°E — 120km southeast of Pienza through the Umbrian Apennines via the SS685 Valnerina): the most specifically food-famous single Italian town after Parma (the Norcia salumi (i norcinieri — the specific Norcia cured meat tradition: the prosciutto di Norcia IGP, the mazzafegato (the spiced pork and liver sausage), and the capocollo di Norcia are the most specifically Umbrian single food products)) and the most specifically earthquake-affected single Italian cultural site (the 2016 Norcia earthquake (the 6.6 Richter magnitude seismic event on October 30, 2016 — the most destructive single Italian earthquake since the 2009 L'Aquila event) destroyed the specific Basilica di San Benedetto (the birthplace church of Saint Benedict of Nursia — the patron saint of Europe): the church is under reconstruction in 2026 — the specific temporary structure (the "new" San Benedetto — the temporary wooden structure in the piazza) is open for visits). The Norcia black truffle (il tartufo nero di Norcia — the most specifically famous single Umbrian product after the salumi: the Norcia truffle market (the Mercato del Tartufo Nero) operates every Saturday from November to March in the Piazza San Benedetto).
Days 7-8: Spoleto and Assisi
Spoleto (GPS: 42.7362°N, 12.7376°E): the most specifically art-dense single Umbrian city per capita (the specific Spoleto Roman theatre (GPS: 42.7349°N, 12.7378°E — the 1st-century CE Roman theatre, the best-preserved single Umbrian Roman monument), the Duomo di Spoleto (GPS: 42.7362°N, 12.7372°E — the most specifically complete single Umbrian Romanesque cathedral facade with the specific Filippo Lippi "Life of the Virgin" apse fresco cycle (1467-1469) — Lippi died in Spoleto before completing the cycle and is buried in the cathedral (the only single major Italian Renaissance artist buried in the specific church he was decorating)), and the specific Ponte delle Torri (GPS: 42.7338°N, 12.7383°E — the 13th-14th century aqueduct-bridge: 10 arches, 236m long, 81m high over the Tessino gorge — the most specifically dramatic single medieval engineering structure in Umbria): free. Assisi (see the Central Italy 7-Day Itinerary Day 5 programme).
Days 9-10: Todi, Orvieto, and Rome
Todi (GPS: 42.7836°N, 12.4036°E): the most specifically "perfect medieval Italian town" single Umbrian designation (the American town planner Gian Carlo De Carlo famously described Todi in 1990 as "the most liveable city in the world" based on the specific combination of scale (17,000 population), elevation (400m), and historical urban form): the specific Piazza del Popolo (GPS: 42.7836°N, 12.4036°E — the most specifically intact single medieval civic piazza in Umbria: the Palazzo dei Priori, the Palazzo del Capitano, and the Palazzo del Popolo (all 13th-14th century) face the specific Todi Cathedral across the most specifically perfect single medieval square "room"). Orvieto (see the Central Italy 7-Day Itinerary Day 4). Drive to Rome (1h30m on the A1 from Orvieto): arrive Rome for the final Day 10 programme (see the How Many Days in Rome guide). Departure from Fiumicino.
Q&A: Central Italy 10-Day Itinerary
What is the most honest assessment of 10 days in central Italy?
Ten days in central Italy is the minimum for the visitor who wants to actually understand the region rather than tick it off. The specific 10-day central Italy honest assessment: you will want to return. The specific evidence: the Norcia food market, the Todi sunset, and the Orvieto Duomo facade at 07:00 before the tourists arrive are each individually worth the entire 10-day trip — and they happen in the same circuit. The visitor who does the central Italy 10-day programme once typically does the same programme again within 3 years, this time also including the Marche (the Adriatic-facing region east of Umbria whose specific Urbino, Pesaro, and Loreto programme is the most directly addable single 2-day extension to the central Italy 10-day circuit).