Plan Your Rome Vacation

Departing From: See the Top

See the Top
  • Popular picks
  • 4 & 5 Star Vacations
  • Vacations under $500
  • Vacations Under $1000
  • 3 & 4 Night Vacations
  • 7 to 10 Night Vacations


See the Top
  • Popular picks
  • 3 & 4 Night Vacations
  • 7 to 10 Night Vacations
  • Vacations under $500
  • Vacations Under $1000
  • 4 & 5 Star Vacations
Jul 1 - 11
You Save $ 1382
$ 4239  $ 2857
per person
 
Melia Roma
#2 Vacation Deal
Flight + 6 Nights*
Area: Rome
Jun 29 - Jul 5
You Save $ 912
$ 2781  $ 1869
per person
 
The Westin Excelsior Rome
#3 Vacation Deal
Flight + 6 Nights*
Area: Via Veneto
Jun 29 - Jul 5
You Save $ 1225
$ 3864  $ 2639
per person
 
The St Regis Rome
#4 Vacation Deal
Flight + 6 Nights*
Area: Rome
Jun 29 - Jul 5
You Save $ 1344
$ 4269  $ 2925
per person
 
Hotel Splendide Royal
#5 Vacation Deal
Flight + 6 Nights*
Area: Villa Borghese and Villa Medici
Jun 29 - Jul 5
You Save $ 1234
$ 3930  $ 2696
per person
 
Hotel Panama Garden
#6 Vacation Deal
Flight + 6 Nights*
Area: Rome
Jun 29 - Jul 5
You Save $ 861
$ 2781  $ 1920
per person
 
Hotel Eden
#7 Vacation Deal
Flight + 6 Nights*
Area: Villa Borghese and Villa Medici
Jun 29 - Jul 5
You Save $ 1240
$ 4106  $ 2866
per person
 
Rome Marriott Grand Hotel Flora
#8 Vacation Deal
Flight + 6 Nights*
Area: Villa Borghese and Villa Medici
Jun 29 - Jul 5
You Save $ 1163
$ 3937  $ 2774
per person
 
Aldrovandi Villa Borghese - The Leading Hotels of the World
#9 Vacation Deal
Flight + 10 Nights*
Area: Villa Borghese and Villa Medici
Jun 5 - 15
You Save $ 1186
$ 4229  $ 3043
per person
 
Romanico Palace and Spa
#10 Vacation Deal
Flight + 6 Nights*
Area: Via Veneto
Jun 29 - Jul 5
You Save $ 759
$ 2781  $ 2022
per person
 
 
* Prices are in USD for one adult based on double occupancy and include tax recovery charges. Sample prices were found recently by Travelocity or its customers. Our real-time dynamic packaging engine is constantly updating prices and availability. Please click prices for current information.
 
 

All About Rome

Rome is a city of vivid and unforgettable images: the view of the city's silhouette from Janiculum Hill at dawn, the array of broken marble columns and ruins of temples of the Roman Forum, St. Peter's dome against a pink-and-red sunset, capping a gloriously decorated basilica.

Rome is also a city of sounds, beginning early in the morning with the peal of church bells calling the faithful to Mass. As the city awakens and comes to life, the sounds multiply and merge into a kind of urban symphony. The streets fill with cars, taxis, and motor scooters, all blaring their horns as they weave in and out of traffic; the sidewalks become overrun with bleary-eyed office workers rushing to their desks after stealing into crowded cafes for the first cappuccino of the day. The shops lining the streets open for business by raising their protective metal grilles as loudly as possible, seeming to delight in their contribution to the general din. Before long, fruit and vegetable stands are abuzz with activity as homemakers, maids, cooks, and others arrive to purchase their day's supply of fresh produce, haggling over prices and clucking over quality.

By 10am, the tourists are on the streets, battling crowds and traffic as they wind their way from Renaissance palaces and baroque buildings to the famous ruins of antiquity. Indeed, Rome often appears to have two populations: one of Romans and one of visitors. During the summer months especially, the city plays host to a horde of countless sightseers who converge on it with guidebooks and cameras in hand. To all -- Americans, Europeans, Japanese -- Rome extends a warm and friendly welcome, wining, dining, and entertaining them in its inimitable fashion. (Of course, if you visit in August, you might see only tourists, not Romans, because the locals flee the summer heat of the city. Or, as one Roman woman once told us, "Even if we're too poor to go on vacation, we close the shutters and pretend we're away so neighbors won't find out we couldn't afford to leave the city.")

Despite all this chaos, Romans still know how to live the good life. After you've done your duty to culture by wandering through the Colosseum and being awed by the Pantheon, after you've traipsed through St. Peter's Basilica and thrown a coin in the Trevi Fountain, you can pause to experience the charm of the Roman evening. Find a cafe at summer twilight and watch the shades of pink turn to gold and copper before night finally falls. That's when another Rome comes alive; restaurants and cafes grow more animated, especially if you've found one on an ancient hidden piazza or along a narrow alley deep in Trastevere. After dinner, you can have a gelato (or an espresso in winter) and stroll by the fountains through Piazza Navona, and the night is yours.

Published by Frommer's © 2012, Whatsonwhen Ltd

 
 

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