Corniglia is the odd one out. The middle village of the five, it sits on a 100-meter cliff top (not at sea level like the others), has no harbor, no direct sea access, and is reached from the station by climbing the Lardarina โ a staircase of 382 steps carved into the cliff (or by a minibus that runs every 15 minutes in summer). This altitude filter keeps Corniglia the quietest of the five. The reward for climbing: vineyard terraces in every direction (Corniglia produces the most wine of the five villages), panoramic views both north (toward Manarola) and south (toward Vernazza), and a village with a main street (Via Fieschi), a 14th-century church (San Pietro), and the atmosphere of a Ligurian agricultural village that happens to have a sea view. Cinque Terre →
Plan my Cinque Terre trip →The Lardarina: 382 steps from the station to the village. The climb takes 15-20 minutes and is the entrance exam. Via Fieschi: The main street โ a single lane through the village center with small shops, cafรฉs, and the Ligurian pastel color palette. Chiesa di San Pietro (1334): Gothic, with a carved marble rose window salvaged from a Genoese church. The terraces: Corniglia is surrounded by vineyard terraces โ walk the paths between dry-stone walls for views. Guvano Beach (unofficial/naturist): A difficult trail from Corniglia descends to a rocky beach (the old train tunnel route). Check locally for current access โ the trail is sometimes closed. The viewpoints: The Belvedere terrace at the end of Via Fieschi gives the classic panorama โ Manarola to the south, the sea below, terraced vineyards on all sides.
Getting there: Corniglia station, then 382 steps or shuttle bus (€2.50). NO CARS. Stay: €65-120/night (the cheapest of the five villages). Eat: Enoteca Il Pirun (Via Fieschi โ wine bar with Cinque Terre wines and focaccia, €10-15), A Cantina de Mananan (€25-35, traditional). Combine with: Vernazza (1.5h hike or 5min train), Manarola (1h hike or 4min train).