Rome and Tuscany in 7 Days 2026: City Then Countryside
Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com
Last updated: June 2026.
Rome and Tuscany pair the grandeur of the ancient capital with the slow golden hills, the perfect city-then-countryside week. Three days in Rome, the train to Florence, then a few unhurried days in the Tuscan hills with a Chianti wine-country base. Do the city first by train, then pick up a car only for the countryside, where it shines and where the ZTL camera zones of the cities cannot bite you. End among the vines, relaxed.
No car in Rome or Florence; the fast train links them in ninety minutes. Rent a car only for the Tuscan hills, parking outside every walled town. Book the Colosseum and Vatican ahead.
7-Day Rome and Tuscany Itinerary
Days 1-3: Rome
The Colosseum, Forum, and Palatine, the Vatican Museums and St Peter's, the Pantheon and Baroque fountains, with evenings in Trastevere. The ancient capital, unhurried.
Day 4: Train to Florence
A ninety-minute fast train to Florence: the Duomo and dome, the Uffizi or Accademia, and the Ponte Vecchio. A Renaissance day before the hills.
Days 5-7: The Tuscan Hills
Pick up a car and base in the Chianti hills: vineyard tastings, Siena and San Gimignano, and golden sunsets over the cypress rows. Slow, sun-soaked country days.
Q&A: Rome and Tuscany in 7 Days
Is 7 days enough for Rome and Tuscany?
Yes: three days for Rome's huge highlights, a Florence day, and three in the Tuscan hills. It balances a big city with slow countryside, ending relaxed among the vineyards.
Do I need a car?
Only for the Tuscan hills, where back roads reach vineyards and hill towns no train serves. Use the fast train for Rome and Florence, and never drive into city centers (ZTL fines).
Where should I base in Tuscany?
The Chianti hills between Florence and Siena for wine and scenery, or near Siena for the Val d'Orcia. A farm stay or villa with a pool makes the countryside days idyllic.
What must I book ahead?
The Colosseum complex and the Vatican Museums in Rome, plus the Uffizi or Accademia in Florence. Wine-estate tastings in Chianti are best reserved ahead too.
When should I go?
Late spring and early fall for green-to-golden hills, comfortable Rome weather, and the grape harvest in September. Summer is hot; winter is quiet with some country places closed.