Favignana Island 2026: The Egadi Tuna Island, Its Ancient Quarries, and the Clearest Water in Sicily

Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com

Last updated: April 2026.

Favignana is the largest and most accessible of the three Egadi Islands (the archipelago 15-30km west of Trapani that forms Italy's largest marine protected area) and the one most worth visiting for the specific combination of natural and cultural heritage that no other Sicilian island replicates. The mattanza (the traditional tuna hunt that operated here for centuries, last performed in 2007) has ended as a living practice but its infrastructure (the tonnara — the historic tuna processing plant on the southern coast, now the Museo del Mare) and its cultural weight remain the defining element of Favignana's identity. The tufo quarries (the pale yellow limestone that was quarried on Favignana since Phoenician times and shipped throughout the Mediterranean as building material — the same tufo that gives Syracuse's old city its specific color was quarried from Favignana) are visible in the extraordinary landscape of vertical carved stone walls that appear throughout the island wherever the extraction has ceased and the stone face is exposed. And the water — the Egadi MPA water in late May and September, before and after the tourist season peak — has the specific clarity of 30-meter visibility that makes every snorkeled or dived bay here look like a rendering of what tropical water is supposed to look like.

Favignana: Essential Information

How to Get There

Ferry from Trapani to Favignana: Liberty Lines aliscafo (hydrofoil) — 25 minutes, approximately €18 each way, 6-8 daily departures in summer; conventional ferry — 60 minutes, approximately €10 each way, 2-3 daily. Total round-trip cost: €20-36 per person. The ferry schedule fills at peak summer (July-August); book in advance at libertylines.it. From Palermo to Trapani: 2.5 hours by bus (Autoservizi Salemi), or 1 hour by train (changing at Piraineto-Alcamo for the Trapani connection).

The Bicycle Circuit

Favignana is the best Italian island for cycling — the terrain is flat (the highest point is 314m on Monte Santa Caterina, and the main island circuit road stays below 50m), the main coastal road is 15km total, and bicycle rental is available at the Favignana port for €5-10/day for standard bikes and €15-20/day for e-bikes. The specific island circuit: from the port north to Cala Azzurra (the most sheltered swimming cove on the north coast), west to the tufo quarries of Cala Rossa (the most dramatic quarry landscape — vertical yellow-white walls dropping into turquoise water, the quarrying having followed the limestone to the waterline), continuing around to the Stabilimento Florio tonnara on the south coast (the historic tuna processing plant built by the Florio family in 1859, one of the most important industrial monuments in Sicily). Total circuit: 3-4 hours at a comfortable pace with swimming stops.

Q&A: Favignana Island

When is the best time to visit Favignana?

May-June and September-October: the water is warm enough for swimming (20-24°C), the ferry and accommodation infrastructure is fully operational, and the island avoids the specific July-August density when day-trippers from Trapani and the Sicilian coast fill the small beaches beyond comfortable capacity. Favignana in late May specifically: the almond trees have finished flowering, the island vegetation is at its peak green before summer desiccation, and the morning light on the tufo quarries produces the most atmospheric landscape photographs of the year.

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