Venice, Florence, and Rome in 7 Days 2026: The Classic Triangle

Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com

Last updated: June 2026.

This is the classic first-trip-to-Italy route, and seven days is the right amount of time to do it without rushing. Run it north to south by fast train, two days in Venice, two in Florence, three in Rome, so you end in the biggest city with the most to see. The one rule that saves it: do not add a fourth city. Three world-class cities in a week is full but joyful; four is a blur seen from train windows. Book everything and travel light.

No car at any point; the high-speed train links all three centers and Venice is car-free. Book the Doge's Palace, the Uffizi and Accademia, and the Colosseum and Vatican well ahead, and base centrally in each.

7-Day Italy Triangle Itinerary

Days 1-2: Venice

St Mark's Basilica and the Doge's Palace, the Rialto, a gondola through the back canals, and getting lost in the quiet lanes after the day-trippers leave. The floating-city opener.

Days 3-4: Florence

A two-hour train south to Florence: the Uffizi, the Accademia and David, and a climb up the Duomo dome, with the Oltrarno for dinner. The Renaissance heart.

Days 5-7: Rome

Ninety minutes on to Rome: the Colosseum, Forum, and Palatine, the Pantheon and Baroque fountains, and a day for the Vatican and St Peter's. The grand finale, with time to spare.

Q&A: The Italy Triangle in 7 Days

Is 7 days enough for Venice, Florence, and Rome?

Yes; it is the ideal length for the classic triangle, with two nights in Venice, two in Florence, and three in Rome. It is full but not frantic, and the fast trains make the hops painless.

Which direction should I go?

North to south, ending in Rome, which has the most to see and the busiest airport. Flying into Venice and out of Rome (an open-jaw ticket) avoids backtracking.

How do I get between the cities?

By high-speed train: Venice to Florence in about two hours, Florence to Rome in about ninety minutes. Book ahead for cheaper fares, and skip the car entirely.

Can I add a fourth city?

Not in seven days; a fourth stop turns the trip into a transit marathon. Keep it to these three, or add days rather than cities if you want more, such as a Tuscan side trip.

When should I go?

Spring and fall for the best balance of weather and crowds, though you must book the big sights regardless. Summer is hot and packed; winter is quiet with short museum lines.

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