Domus de Janas: Sardinia's prehistoric fairy houses, and Italy's newest UNESCO site
The domus de janas are prehistoric tombs carved into the rock of Sardinia between roughly the 5th and 3rd millennium BC, and in July 2025 they became Italy's 61st UNESCO World Heritage Site, listed as "Funerary Tradition in the Prehistory of Sardinia: the domus de janas." The name means "houses of the fairies" in Sardinian, there are more than 3,500 of them scattered across the island, and only a handful are organised for visits, which is exactly what you need to know before you plan a trip around them.
Let me set the right expectation immediately, because this is the kind of UNESCO listing that can mislead. The domus de janas are not a single site you visit in an afternoon. They are a category of monument, more than 3,500 prehistoric rock-cut tombs spread across the whole of Sardinia, and the 2025 UNESCO inscription is a serial listing that bundles a selection of the most significant necropoleis together. Most of the 3,500 are unmarked, unlit holes in rock faces in the countryside that you would never find or be able to enter. What you actually do as a visitor is pick two or three of the organised necropoleis and build them into a wider Sardinia trip. Done that way, they are extraordinary. Done as a vague "let's go see the domus de janas," they will frustrate you. So this guide is mostly about which ones to choose.
What a domus de janas actually is
Picture the Sardinians of five thousand years ago, in the Neolithic and Copper Age, carving tombs into soft rock to house their dead, and carving them to resemble the houses of the living. That is the heart of it. Many domus de janas reproduce domestic architecture underground: multiple chambers off a central space, carved pillars, even imitation roof beams and lintels cut into the stone. Some have carved or painted symbols, the most striking being stylised bull horns above doorways, an early religious motif, and false doors that seem meant for the passage of the dead. Bodies were often painted with red ochre, like the tomb walls. The Sardinian name, domus de janas, "houses of the fairies," comes from later folklore that peopled these strange little rock dwellings with tiny supernatural women who wove and watched over children. The UNESCO value rests on what they reveal: through the variety of their forms and decoration, they document the beliefs, rituals and social organisation of a vanished prehistoric culture in a way few monuments anywhere can.
The necropoleis worth driving to
Here is the practical core. These are the sites set up, at least in part, for visitors, and the ones I would build a route around.
| Necropolis | Where | Why this one |
|---|---|---|
| Anghelu Ruju | near Alghero, northwest | The largest pre-Nuragic necropolis on the island, discovered in 1903, with dozens of tombs and carved bull-horn motifs; easy to combine with Alghero and the famous wine estate nearby |
| Sant'Andrea Priu | near Bonorva, north-central | About twenty domus, one of them with eighteen rooms among the largest rock-cut tombs in the Mediterranean, and a tomb later converted into a frescoed early Christian church |
| Montessu | near Villaperuccio, southwest | Around forty tombs set in a natural rock amphitheatre, one of the largest and most scenographic complexes on the island |
| S'Incantu (Putifigari) | near Sassari, northwest | One of the finest decorated tombs, with carved and painted architectural detail and a famous false door |
| Sas Concas | Oniferi, central | Known for engraved symbolic figures, accessible and close to Nuoro |
My honest steer: if you are basing in the northwest around Alghero, do Anghelu Ruju and Sant'Andrea Priu and S'Incantu, which cluster within an easy drive. If you are in the south, Montessu is the one to prioritise. Trying to see domus de janas across the whole island in one trip is a mistake; pick a region and go deep.
How they fit Sardinia's bigger prehistoric story
The domus de janas are the oldest layer of a prehistoric Sardinia that has no real parallel in the Mediterranean. After the tomb-carving cultures came the Nuragic civilisation, which built the thousands of stone towers called nuraghi, the greatest of them Su Nuraxi at Barumini, Sardinia's first UNESCO cultural site. Then there are the Giants of Mont'e Prama, the colossal stone statues. Seen together, these are chapters of the same long indigenous story, and that is the right frame for a trip: not "I went to see some old tombs," but "I followed five thousand years of a civilisation that built like no one else." The domus de janas are where that story starts.
A short history in dates
- c. 3400–2700 BC The Ozieri culture and related groups carve most of the domus de janas across Sardinia.
- 1903 The Anghelu Ruju necropolis near Alghero is discovered by chance during construction work.
- 20th c. Archaeologists, including Giovanni Lilliu, document the tombs and their place in pre-Nuragic Sardinia.
- 2018 A formal candidacy for UNESCO recognition begins, led by the network of domus de janas municipalities with Alghero as lead.
- 2021 The serial site is placed on the UNESCO tentative list.
- 12 July 2025 The World Heritage Committee inscribes "Funerary Tradition in the Prehistory of Sardinia: the domus de janas," Italy's 61st site.
What nobody tells you
The UNESCO label is brand new, which cuts two ways. The upside: international attention is arriving, signage and access are improving, and you are visiting at the start of the wave rather than the middle of it. The downside: management is still catching up, so opening hours and tickets are inconsistent, several necropoleis are run by small local cooperatives with seasonal or appointment-only access, and a few of the listed sites are not realistically visitable at all yet. Always phone ahead or check the specific site before driving out, because a wasted hour on a dead-end farm track is the classic domus de janas mistake. Bring a torch, wear shoes you can scramble in, and go in spring or autumn when the countryside is green and the access tracks are not baked or flooded.
Who should skip the domus de janas
The brutal truth, because it protects your trip. If you want beaches and Costa Smeralda glamour, the domus de janas are the opposite of that and you can safely skip them. If you need polished, ticketed, well-signed attractions with cafes and clear opening hours, you will find this frustrating, because much of it is rural, raw and locally run. And if you will not rent a car, do not even start; there is no way to reach these on public transport. But if you are the kind of traveller who is moved by deep human time, who wants to stand inside a five-thousand-year-old tomb carved to look like a home and feel the strangeness of it, and who is happy to drive Sardinian back roads to do it, the domus de janas are a genuinely rare experience, freshly recognised by the world and still, for now, almost yours alone.
Frequently asked questions
- What are the domus de janas?
- They are prehistoric rock-cut chamber tombs in Sardinia, carved between roughly the 5th and 3rd millennium BC by the pre-Nuragic Ozieri and related cultures. The Sardinian name means houses of the fairies, and many are carved to resemble the houses of the living, sometimes with bull-horn motifs and false doors.
- Are the domus de janas a UNESCO World Heritage Site?
- Yes. They were inscribed on 12 July 2025 at the 47th session of the World Heritage Committee in Paris, under the listing 'Funerary Tradition in the Prehistory of Sardinia: the domus de janas,' under criterion iii. They are Italy's 61st World Heritage Site and the second cultural UNESCO site in Sardinia after Su Nuraxi di Barumini.
- How many domus de janas are there?
- More than 3,500 are scattered across Sardinia. The UNESCO listing is a serial site that groups a selection of the most important necropoleis, and only a handful are organised for visits.
- Which domus de janas can you actually visit?
- The most visitor-ready include Anghelu Ruju near Alghero, the largest pre-Nuragic necropolis; Sant'Andrea Priu near Bonorva, with a tomb of eighteen rooms and a later Christian church; Montessu near Villaperuccio, set in a rock amphitheatre; and decorated tombs such as S'Incantu near Sassari and Sas Concas at Oniferi.
- Do you need a car to visit the domus de janas?
- Yes. The necropoleis are rural and scattered across the island with no public transport access, so a rental car is essential. Many sites are run by local cooperatives with seasonal or appointment-only hours, so confirm access before driving out.
- What is the best region to base in for domus de janas?
- Pick one region rather than trying to cross the island. The northwest around Alghero lets you combine Anghelu Ruju, Sant'Andrea Priu and S'Incantu in easy drives, while the southwest is best for Montessu. Going deep in one area beats scattering across many.
- How do the domus de janas relate to the nuraghi?
- They are an earlier chapter of Sardinia's prehistory. The tomb-carving cultures came first, followed by the Nuragic civilisation that built the stone towers called nuraghi, the greatest being Su Nuraxi at Barumini. Seeing both, plus the Giants of Mont'e Prama, gives the full arc of the island's ancient story.
- Why are they called fairy houses?
- The Sardinian name domus de janas means houses of the janas, small supernatural fairy or witch figures of later folklore who were said to live in these rock-cut chambers, weaving and watching over children. The tombs predate the legends by thousands of years.
- How much time do you need to visit the domus de janas?
- Plan around half a day per organised necropolis once you include the rural drive, and build two or three into a wider Sardinia trip rather than treating them as a single destination. Concentrate on one region, such as the northwest around Alghero or the southwest near Villaperuccio, rather than crossing the island.