Lake Como in 3 Days 2026: Skip the Car, Ride the Ferries, Base Smart
Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com
Last updated: June 2026.
The big Lake Como mistake is renting a car and trying to drive the shore roads - they are narrow, slow, choked in summer, and parking is misery. Here is the tour-leader version: come by train, base yourself in one town, and let the ferries do the work, because gliding between villages on the water is the whole point of this lake. And base smart - Varenna or Menaggio are calmer and cheaper than Bellagio or Como, with the same ferries at the door.
Practical reality first: the train from Milan reaches Como or Varenna in about an hour, so you never need a car. The lake's heart is the central triangle of Bellagio, Varenna, and Menaggio, linked by frequent passenger and car ferries. The real draws are the gardens and villas - Balbianello, Carlotta, Melzi - so build the days around ferry times and villa opening hours.
3-Day Lake Como Itinerary
Day 1: Como Town
Start in Como at the south tip: the marble-striped cathedral, the lakefront promenade, and the Brunate funicular up to a balcony view over the whole lake. It is the easy, walkable introduction, with an aperitivo by the water at sunset to set the tone.
Day 2: The Central Lake by Ferry
Move up to base in Varenna or Menaggio, then ferry-hop the central lake. Bellagio, the "pearl of the lake" at the fork, has the Villa Melzi gardens and steep stepped lanes - see it early before the day-trippers; Varenna has the Villa Monastero gardens and a romantic shoreline path. Hop between all three on the ferry triangle.
Day 3: The Villas
Give the day to the two great villas. Villa del Balbianello at Lenno, on its own wooded point, is the cinematic one (you have seen it in the movies), reached by boat or a short walk; Villa Carlotta at Tremezzo pairs a botanical garden with an art collection. Finish with a slow boat along the shoreline to see the lakefront mansions from the water.
Q&A: Lake Como in 3 Days
Should I rent a car?
No - it is the classic mistake here. The shore roads are narrow and slow, parking is scarce and pricey, and the ferries reach everywhere you want to go. Come by train from Milan and travel by boat; a car only adds stress and cost on Lake Como.
Where should I base myself?
Varenna or Menaggio are the smart picks: smaller, cheaper, and calmer than Bellagio or Como, but right on the central ferry triangle. Bellagio is beautiful but busy and expensive; Como town is convenient for arrival but further from the prettiest middle of the lake.
Which villas are worth it?
Villa del Balbianello at Lenno for the dramatic setting and film fame, Villa Carlotta at Tremezzo for gardens plus art, and Villa Melzi at Bellagio for its lakeside park. Check opening days before you go - some close on certain weekdays and outside the main season.
What should I eat?
Lake fish is the local specialty: perch risotto (risotto con pesce persico), lavarello, and the dried, salted missoltini around Bellagio, often with polenta. Pair it with a local lake-area white and finish with a gelato on the promenade.
When should I go?
Late spring and September are ideal - gardens in bloom or still lush, ferries on full schedules, and warm but not packed. July and August are crowded and pricey; in winter many villas and some ferries wind down, though the towns stay quietly beautiful.