1 (800) 409-4346  ·  Mon–Fri. 9am–5pm ET
Umbria villas — hand-selected luxury rentals

The Green Heart

Umbria Villas

Tuscany's quieter sister. Frescoed chapels, truffle woods, and hill towns that haven't quite woken up yet.

Tuscany's quieter, older neighbour. Hill towns, frescoes, truffles you actually dig up. Umbria is the green heart of Italy — landlocked, slower-paced, and untouched by the crowd-pull of the names just over the border.

Stay in a stone-farmhouse villa in the hills near Todi, Spoleto, or Montefalco, and the holiday becomes the landscape: oak woods, vineyards, olive groves, the medieval town on the horizon, the long lunch under the pergola.

Best Villas

Best villas in Umbria

Experiences

Activities & experiences

Truffle hunt + lunch

A morning in the oak woods near Norcia or Spoleto with a truffaio and his Lagotto Romagnolo. Two hours of slow walking, then truffle pasta for lunch at the farm.

Sagrantino tasting at a Montefalco producer

A morning at Arnaldo Caprai, Antonelli, or one of the smaller producers in Italy's most under-rated red-wine region.

Assisi at dawn

The Basilica of San Francesco with the Giotto frescoes before the tour groups arrive — empty rooms, your own pace.

Cooking class at a Umbrian farmhouse

Hand-rolled umbricelli, the family ragù, the Trasimeno carp recipe, and lunch with what you made.

A day at the Castelluccio plain (June only)

The fioritura — three weeks each June when the lentil fields above Castelluccio bloom in waves of poppies, daisies, and cornflowers. The most spectacular landscape moment in Italy.

Gubbio Funivia

The open-cage cable car up Mount Ingino with the medieval town below. Lunch at the top, the walk back down.

Travel Advisor

Let our specialists plan your trip

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

Beyond the Villa

Day trips

Assisi

The most-visited Umbrian town — best as a half-day or a sunset visit when the bus tours leave.

Orvieto

The cliffside town with the Duomo and the underground city. A full day, lunch on the terrace.

Gubbio

One of the best-preserved medieval towns in Italy, in the north of Umbria.

Norcia & the Sibillini Mountains

Two hours northeast. The salumi town, then up into the wild and Alpine-like Monti Sibillini for lunch.

Cortona (Tuscany)

An hour west across the Tuscan border. Frances Mayes country, lunch on the piazza.

Siena & the Val d'Orcia

Two hours west. Best as a long day or an overnight in Pienza.

Climate

Average monthly highs

Average monthly high temperatures for Umbria
January February March April May June July August September October November December
50°F 53°F 58°F 64°F 71°F 79°F 85°F 84°F 76°F 65°F 55°F 50°F

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

Where it is

Umbria on the map

Travelers Ask

Frequently asked questions

Umbria sits at the centre of Italy, sharing a border with Tuscany to the west and the Marche to the east. It is the only Italian region without a coast — and that, in a country obsessed with the sea, has kept it slower, greener, and less touristed than its famous neighbour.

The towns of Umbria are essentially intact medieval. Assisi (the Basilica of San Francesco with the Giotto fresco cycle), Perugia (the medieval capital with the underground Etruscan well and the Galleria Nazionale), Spoleto (the Festival dei Due Mondi in July, the Roman theatre, the Romanesque cathedral with the Filippo Lippi frescoes), Orvieto (the cliffside town with the Signorelli-frescoed Duomo and the underground city), Todi (the hilltop city Lonely Planet once named the world's most livable town), Gubbio (the medieval town of the Eugubine Tablets), Bevagna, Montefalco, Spello.

The food in Umbria leans toward the woods and the inland — wild boar, white and black truffles (the famous Umbrian black is the cheaper and equally delicious cousin of the Alba white), lentils from Castelluccio, salumi from Norcia (the wild-boar prosciutto, the wild-mushroom salami, the Norcia black truffle salami), porchetta. The wines are Sagrantino di Montefalco (one of the great forgotten Italian reds), Orvieto Classico, Trebbiano. Restaurants: Vespasia at Palazzo Seneca in Norcia (Michelin), L'Acquolina in Perugia, La Stalla in Assisi, Latini in Bevagna, Il Bacco Felice in Foligno.

For travellers who already know Tuscany and want a quieter, less expensive, and frankly more beautiful Italy, Umbria is the answer.

May, June, and September are our favourite months. The Castelluccio fioritura (the lentil-field bloom) runs roughly mid-June to early July and is one of the most extraordinary landscape moments in Italy. Late September and October are the truffle and vendemmia season. Winter is the white-truffle season (November–January) — quiet and atmospheric.

Umbria has a continental inland climate — warmer than the coast in summer, cooler in winter. Monthly highs run from around 50°F in January to 85°F in July. Pool weather is mid-May through late September. Spring and autumn carry rain but are mild.

Black and white Umbrian truffles, lentils from Castelluccio, Norcia salumi (cinghiale prosciutto, mushroom salami, truffle salami), porchetta, umbricelli (hand-rolled noodles), wild-boar ragù, Trasimeno carp. Wines: Sagrantino di Montefalco, Orvieto Classico, Trebbiano Spoletino. Restaurants: Vespasia at Palazzo Seneca in Norcia (one Michelin star), L'Acquolina in Perugia, La Stalla in Assisi, Latini in Bevagna, Il Bacco Felice in Foligno.

Truffle hunts, vineyard tastings (Sagrantino, Orvieto Classico), cooking classes at family farmhouses, the Castelluccio fioritura in June, the Spoleto Festival in July, dawn visits to the Basilica of San Francesco, the Gubbio Funivia, the Marmore Falls.

Assisi (the Basilica), Perugia (the medieval capital), Spoleto (the festival), Orvieto (the cliffside Duomo), Todi (the picture-perfect hilltop), Gubbio (the most intact medieval town), Bevagna and Montefalco (smaller, wine country).

Most of Umbria is within an hour of the others. Cortona (1 hr west into Tuscany), Siena and the Val d'Orcia (2 hr west), the Marche coast at Senigallia (1.5 hr east), Rome (1.5 hr south by car or train).

Yes. Public transport is limited; the towns and villas are spread out. A car (or a private driver for full days) is essential.

See our full Italian Villa Rentals FAQ →

Explore

Other destinations

Each region is hand-picked, walked, and slept in by us first. See which one is calling.

Amalfi Coast

Amalfi Coast

Costiera Amalfitana
Chianti

Chianti

Classic Tuscany
Cortona

Cortona

Under the Tuscan Sun
Lake Como

Lake Como

Lakeside Elegance
See all destinations

What People Are Saying

Unlock Italy's Hidden Magic

Get the latest on our luxury villas, experience inspiration and local secrets delivered every month. Be first to discover special offers and travel stories that spark your next great escape.