Giardino di Ninfa 2026: The Medieval Abandoned City Turned Garden Where the New York Times Called It the World's Most Romantic — and the Seasonal Opening That Makes It Worth Planning Your Trip Around

Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com

Last updated: April 2026.

The Giardino di Ninfa (the Garden of Ninfa — near Cisterna di Latina, in the Pontine plain of the Lazio province of Latina, 80km south of Rome) is the single most celebrated garden in Italy and one of the most discussed gardens in the world: the New York Times described it as "the world's most romantic garden," the Garden of Eden to which all other gardens are merely aspiring, and the specific combination of the medieval abandoned city (the ruins of Ninfa — the city that was founded in Roman times, reached its peak in the 12th-13th century, and was abandoned due to malaria in 1382, leaving the entire urban fabric — the walls, the towers, the churches, the houses — standing but uninhabited for the subsequent 600 years) and the river garden (the Ninfa river that runs through the abandoned city, the garden planted in the medieval ruins since 1921 by the Caetani family) produces the specific Ninfa quality: the medieval ruins as garden architecture, the ancient walls covered in climbing roses, the 11th-century church tower reflected in the Ninfa river, and the specific atmospheric density of a place where civilisation and nature have been collaborating for 600 years.

The Ninfa garden history: the abandoned city of Ninfa came into the Caetani family possession in 1297 (the year that Pope Boniface VIII — born Benedetto Caetani — gave the abandoned city to his family as a feudal possession): the Caetani maintained ownership of the Ninfa territory for seven centuries, and in 1921 Duchess Ada Wilbraham Caetani began the systematic garden planting in the ruins that transformed the abandoned medieval city into the garden that the subsequent generations of the Caetani family — particularly Princess Marguerite Chapin Caetani (an American, founder of the literary magazine Botteghe Oscure) and Lelia Caetani Howard (the final family member actively managing the garden) — developed into the specific Ninfa of international garden fame.

Giardino di Ninfa: Visit, Opening, and Garden Experience

The Seasonal Opening

The Giardino di Ninfa is not open daily — the garden opens on specific weekends and days through the year (the 2026 calendar published on fondazionecaetani.org at the beginning of each year): typically open the first weekend of each month from April through October, plus specific additional open days for the peak seasons (the spring opening in April-May for the rose bloom, the autumn opening in October for the foliage). The visit must be booked in advance (the Fondazione Caetani online booking system — advance booking is mandatory; walk-up access on the open days is not guaranteed and frequently unavailable in the spring peak season). The visit format: guided in groups of 25-30 people, 90-minute walk through the garden and ruins. Admission approximately €15 per person.

The Garden in April-May

The April-May Ninfa (the rose and wisteria season — the specific period when the climbing roses that cover the medieval walls reach their annual peak bloom, the wisteria cascades over the ruined arches, and the specific Ninfa spring colour (the rose pinks and whites against the grey medieval stone) produces the canonical Ninfa garden images): the most sought-after Ninfa visit date, with bookings typically selling out within hours of the April-May availability release (typically published in January-February for the following spring). The October Ninfa (the autumn foliage season — the Japanese maple and the ginko biloba plantings that Lelia Caetani Howard added in the 1970s-1980s produce the specific autumn colour palette): the second most beautiful Ninfa season, with better availability than the spring.

Q&A: Giardino di Ninfa

How far in advance should I book Ninfa?

For the spring visits (April-May): 2-3 months minimum. The fondazionecaetani.org releases the spring calendar in January-February, and the April-May weekend visits sell out within days of release — the specific Ninfa booking challenge that the international garden tourism community has created through the garden's reputation. For autumn visits (October): 4-6 weeks is typically sufficient. Check the Fondazione Caetani social media and newsletter for the specific 2026 calendar release date, and set a reminder to book immediately when availability opens.

Internal Links

Book top-rated tours & skip-the-line tickets for this trip