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Rome villas — hand-selected luxury rentals

The Eternal City

Rome Villas

Coffee at dawn in a piazza no one else has found, and the hills just outside the city for sleeping.

Stay in Rome itself — a palazzo apartment in the centro storico, the Trevi at the end of your street — or in the hills just outside, where the city is a forty-minute drive and the silence is total.

Both work. A short stay is best inside the walls; a long stay is best in the Castelli Romani, the Sabine hills, or the Lago di Bracciano. Driver service into the city for dinners and museums; the villa pool the rest of the day.

Best Villas

Best villas in Rome

Experiences

Activities & experiences

After-hours Vatican

A private after-hours visit to the Sistine Chapel and the Vatican Museums — empty rooms, your own pace, two hours of art history. Our most-requested experience in Rome.

A Rome food walk through Trastevere

A morning with a Roman food guide — the bakery for cornetti, the market in Piazza San Cosimato, supplì at Trapizzino, lunch at Da Enzo.

A private Colosseum + Forum visit at opening

Through the Gladiator's Gate before the gates open, a guide who works in the archaeology. Most cinematic at first light.

Frascati afternoon

A drive south into the Castelli Romani for white wine at a family fraschetta, porchetta and a long lunch in the hills above Rome.

Vatican Library or Borghese Gallery private hours

Hard-to-get bookings: the Borghese with a Bernini specialist, or the Vatican Library's reading rooms with a manuscript curator.

A day on the Appian Way

A morning bicycle from Porta San Sebastiano along the original cobbled Roman road. Stop at the Catacombs of San Callisto and the Tomb of Cecilia Metella. Picnic at the villa of the Quintilii.

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From the right villa to private chefs, boat charters, and bespoke experiences, we take care of every detail.

Beyond the Villa

Day trips

Tivoli

Forty minutes east. Hadrian's Villa in the morning, lunch in town, the Villa d'Este fountains in the afternoon — two World Heritage sites in a day.

The Castelli Romani

A drive through Frascati, Castel Gandolfo, Nemi. Papal summer palace, the volcanic lake at Nemi, wild strawberries (in season), dinner at a fraschetta.

Orvieto

Ninety minutes north. The Duomo with the Signorelli fresco of the Apocalypse, lunch on the terrace, descend the funicular for the underground city.

Sperlonga & Sabaudia

An hour south. The whitewashed Tyrrhenian beach village of Sperlonga, lunch on the beach, the Tiberius villa cave.

Civita di Bagnoregio

Ninety minutes north. The dying town — a hilltop village reachable only by footbridge. Most cinematic in late afternoon.

Florence

Ninety minutes by high-speed train. A day or an overnight in the Renaissance capital.

Climate

Average monthly highs

Average monthly high temperatures for Rome
January February March April May June July August September October November December
54°F 56°F 60°F 66°F 74°F 82°F 88°F 88°F 80°F 71°F 61°F 55°F

Source: long-term monthly averages for the region. Sea temperatures stay comfortable for swimming May through October.

Where it is

Rome on the map

Travelers Ask

Frequently asked questions

Rome needs no introduction, but it does reward time. Most visitors come for three days and see the Vatican, the Colosseum, Trevi, and Spanish Steps. Stay a week and you discover everything else: the Caravaggios in San Luigi dei Francesi (free), Trastevere's two-thousand-year-old streets, the Aventine keyhole view of St Peter's, the Jewish Ghetto and carciofi alla giudia, the Appian Way at dawn on a Sunday with no traffic.

Lazio — the region around Rome — is one of the most overlooked stays in Italy. The Castelli Romani south of the city (Frascati, Castel Gandolfo, Nemi) are old villa territory with lakes, white wine, and porchetta. The Sabine hills northeast of the city are olive-and-cypress country. The Lago di Bracciano northwest has lakeside towns and 17th-century papal estates. The coast at Sperlonga and Sabaudia is the surprise — a Mediterranean coastline forty minutes from Rome that most tourists never know about.

The food in Rome is itself: cacio e pepe, carbonara, amatriciana, gricia (the four Roman pastas), saltimbocca, supplì, the great pizza al taglio of Pizzarium and Bonci, the fritti at Sforno and Da Remo. Restaurants worth a flight: Pierluigi for fish, La Pergola for the night out, Roscioli for the lunch, Pianostrada for the dinner, Armando al Pantheon for the lunch you've been planning since you got off the plane.

April, May, October, and November are our favourite months in Rome itself — comfortable temperatures, comfortable crowds. June through September is hot (high 80s°F in July and August) and busy. For Lazio (the hills outside Rome), May and September are perfect; July and August are excellent for villa stays with a pool.

Rome has a Mediterranean climate with hot dry summers (high 80s°F) and mild damp winters (50s°F). The shoulder seasons — April–May and September–October — are ideal. Rainfall is concentrated in November and December.

Both work. For a short visit (3–5 nights), stay in a palazzo apartment in the centro storico — the rione of Monti, Trastevere, or near the Pantheon. For a longer visit (a week or more), the hill villas in the Castelli Romani, the Sabine countryside, or near Lago di Bracciano give you pool-and-garden days with driver service into Rome for dinners and museums.

The four Roman pastas (cacio e pepe, carbonara, amatriciana, gricia), Roman-Jewish artichokes (carciofi alla giudia), supplì, pizza al taglio, saltimbocca, abbacchio (spring lamb). Bookings worth making: Roscioli, Pierluigi, Armando al Pantheon, Pianostrada, Da Enzo al 29 in Trastevere, La Pergola for the once-in-a-trip dinner.

After-hours Vatican, an Appian Way Sunday morning bicycle, the Caravaggios in San Luigi dei Francesi (free), the Aventine keyhole view, Trastevere food walks, the Borghese Gallery on a private hour, dinner at a Roman trattoria you'd never find without a local.

Tivoli (40 min — Hadrian's Villa and Villa d'Este), the Castelli Romani (45 min), Orvieto (90 min north), Sperlonga (1 hr south), Civita di Bagnoregio (90 min north), Florence (90 min by train).

Not in Rome itself — most of the centro storico is a limited traffic zone (ZTL) and parking is impossible. We use private driver service for evenings and day trips. If you're staying in Lazio (Castelli Romani, Sabine hills), a car is helpful, or arrange driver service through us.

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