Rome, Florence, and Venice: A Week in Italy 2026
Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com
Last updated: June 2026.
A week across Rome, Florence, and Venice is the classic first trip to Italy, and it works beautifully when paced right: three days in Rome, two in Florence, two in Venice, all by fast train. This version starts in Rome and heads north, ending on the water. The one rule that saves the week: do not add a fourth city. Three world-class cities in seven days is full but joyful; a fourth turns it into a transit marathon.
No car anywhere; the high-speed train links all three centers and Venice is car-free. Book the Colosseum and Vatican, the Uffizi and Accademia, and the Doge's Palace well ahead, and base centrally in each city.
One-Week Rome, Florence, and Venice Itinerary
Days 1-3: Rome
The Colosseum, Forum, and Palatine, the Pantheon and Baroque fountains, and a day for the Vatican Museums, Sistine Chapel, and St Peter's. Evenings in Trastevere.
Days 4-5: Florence
A ninety-minute train north: the Uffizi, the Accademia and David, a climb up the Duomo dome, and the Oltrarno. The Renaissance, one or two big museums a day.
Days 6-7: Venice
A two-hour train on to Venice: St Mark's Basilica and the Doge's Palace, a sunset gondola through the back canals, and getting lost in the quiet lanes. The floating finale.
Q&A: A Week in Rome, Florence, and Venice
Is one week enough for these three cities?
Yes; it is the classic Italy week, with three nights in Rome, two in Florence, and two in Venice. It is full but not frantic, and the fast trains make the hops between them painless.
Which direction is best?
Either works; starting in Rome and ending in Venice, or the reverse. Flying into one and out of the other (an open-jaw ticket) avoids backtracking. Ending in Venice makes a romantic finish.
How do I get between the cities?
By high-speed train: Rome to Florence in about ninety minutes, Florence to Venice in about two hours. Book ahead for the best fares, and skip the car entirely.
Can I add a fourth city?
Not in a week; a fourth stop turns the trip into a blur of stations. Keep to these three, or add days rather than cities, such as a Tuscan day trip from Florence.
When should I go?
Spring and fall for the best mix of weather and crowds, though you must book the big sights regardless. Summer is hot and packed; winter is quiet with short museum lines.