This is your destination guide for Lake Como
📍 Part of ItalyVilla gardens above a deep Alpine lake — and ferries that beat the road every single time.
The reality: You step off the train at Varenna-Esino, walk down through the village to the water, and the lake just opens — mountains dropping straight into it, a ferry pulling in, pastel houses stacked above the quay. No car. No parking. You're already where you wanted to be.
That's the thing about Como — it works best when you stop trying to drive it. The lakeside roads are one lane, half tunnel, and jammed by mid-morning in summer. The ferries are the actual road. Once you accept that, the lake opens up: Varenna to Bellagio to Menaggio in an afternoon, villa garden to fish lunch to next village, and never a steering wheel in your hands.
Pick one shore and one base. Spend the mornings in the villa gardens — Balbianello, Carlotta, Melzi — before the day boats arrive. Eat the lake fish nobody outside Lombardy orders. Take the slow ferry, not the fast one, and let it stop everywhere. Como rewards people who slow down to its pace, not the other way round.
Como is a lake you look at, not a coast you lie on. The draw is the water — over 400 metres deep, slate-grey under cloud and jade in sun — and the villas that old money built along it. The great gardens are the headline act.
Villa del Balbianello (Lenno) — a promontory of terraced gardens, best reached by boat. The loggia and the worn stone steps are the postcard. The garden ticket is cheap; the guided interior costs more and earns it once.
Villa Carlotta (Tremezzo) — a botanical garden that peaks in April and May, when the azaleas and rhododendrons go off. Canova sculpture inside. Half a day.
Villa Melzi (Bellagio) — quieter than Carlotta. A lakeside garden with a Japanese corner and big old trees, ten minutes from the Bellagio waterfront and a fraction as crowded.
Villa Monastero (Varenna) — a botanical garden strung two kilometres along the eastern shore. Walk it end to end.
Nesso — a gorge village halfway down the eastern shore, with a waterfall and an old stone bridge worth the detour off the ferry route.
Swimming — there are lidos, and the ones at Menaggio and Bellagio are decent, but this is snowmelt, not the Med. Pleasant in August, sharp the rest of the year.
Each shore town does something different. You can see the best of them by ferry in three days.
Varenna — the eastern-shore town to base yourself in for quiet and a train station. Pastel houses, a lakeside lovers' walk (Passeggiata degli Innamorati), Vezio castle on the hill above. Calmer than Bellagio, prettier than most.
Bellagio — the famous one, at the fork where the lake splits. Stepped lanes, the waterfront, Villa Melzi next door. Genuinely lovely at 8 AM and after 6 PM. In between, it's a slow shuffle of tour groups. Time your visit around the day boats.
Menaggio — the practical western base. A ferry hub for the central triangle, a good lido, better value than Bellagio or Varenna, and a launch point for the western hikes.
Como — the city at the south-west tip. A Gothic Duomo, a silk-trade past, a funicular up to Brunate for the view, and the fast train to Milan. More town than lake-village — good for a first or last night.
Lecco — the south-east arm, working and largely tourist-free. This is Manzoni country (The Betrothed is set here) with the jagged Grigne mountains behind it. Cheapest base, most local, best if you want hiking over villas.
One of the lake's villas belongs to a Hollywood actor; locals stopped pointing it out years ago, and so will I.
For people who'd rather walk a ridge than sit on a boat all day.
Como isn't only villa-gazing. The mountains come straight down to the water, so trails start at lake level — and you reach most trailheads by ferry, not car.
Como eats Lombard — butter, polenta, lake fish — not the tomato-and-olive-oil south. The lake dishes are the ones to chase.
Missoltino — agone (a lake shad) salted, sun-dried, then grilled and served with polenta. Pungent, old, and barely known outside the Lario. Order it.
Risotto al pesce persico — perch-fillet risotto, the everyday lake classic, with butter and sage.
Polenta uncia (or toc) — polenta worked with butter and mountain cheese until it's nearly a fondue.
Pizzoccheri — buckwheat ribbons with cabbage, potato and cheese, from the Valtellina valley just north. Heavy, and brilliant in autumn.
Where to eat: walk one street back from the lakefront. The waterfront tables charge a view tax and cook to tourists; the trattorias behind them cook for locals. Around €20–30 a head with wine.
Wine: Como itself isn't wine country. But Valtellina, the alpine valley to the north, makes serious Nebbiolo-based reds — Sassella, Grumello, Inferno, and the raisined Sforzato — that turn up on every good list here. Worth ordering.
See our full Italy wine & drinks guide →
April to June — the gardens are the reason. Camellias, azaleas and rhododendrons peak; days are mild, the lake calm, the crowds not yet at full volume. The best window.
September to October — warm, golden, quieter. Swimming still on into September. The second-best window.
July and August — hot, full, and dear. Bellagio and Varenna clog with day boats by mid-morning; villa-town hotels hit their ceiling. Go only if your dates are fixed, and move early.
November to March — most villa gardens close (they run roughly mid-March to early November), and many hotels and some ferries wind down. Como city and Lecco stay open and quiet. Good for a low-key town break, wrong for the full lake.
The ferries are the road. Navigazione Laghi runs three kinds: the slow battello that stops everywhere, the fast aliscafo (hydrofoil) that skips villages, and the car ferry across the central triangle (Bellagio–Varenna–Menaggio–Cadenabbia). For most trips the slow one is the better one.
From Milan, skip the car entirely. Milano Centrale to Varenna-Esino is about an hour; Milan to Como San Giovanni about 37 minutes. Train in, ferry around — no parking, no tunnels, no nerves.
If you must drive: the lakeside roads (SS340 west, SS583 east) are narrow, tunnel-blind and slow, with little parking and ZTL restricted zones in the towns. Use the car ferry to cross the central lake rather than driving around it. Better still, leave the car at the hotel and take the boat.
Pick a base by what you want — the central triangle is 15–20 minutes between towns by ferry.
Varenna — romantic, quieter, with its own train station. Best all-round base.
Bellagio — central and beautiful, expensive, busy by day and calm at night.
Menaggio — practical western hub, better value, a lido, good for hikers.
Lenno or Tremezzo — villa country and grand hotels; quiet, scenic, car or ferry needed.
Como (city) — restaurants, nightlife, the Milan train; less lake-village charm.
The Lecco arm — cheapest and most local, mountains over villas, few tourists.
Lake Como is the expensive Italian lake. Prices sit above Garda and Maggiore — and in the villa towns (Bellagio, Cernobbio, Tremezzo) they climb to Amalfi-Coast money in high summer.
Prices in 2026 euros. Shoulder season (April, October) knocks 30–40% off the villa-town hotels.
Go if you want villa gardens, slow ferries, and lake-fish lunches under the Alps — the most theatrical of the Italian lakes, just without the warm-sea swim. Skip if you came for a beach, can't stand the midday crush at Bellagio, or expected the prices to be gentle.
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