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After you take care of the transportation costs (plane ticket, railpasses, rental cars, etc), the single biggest expense on your trip will probably be for lodging. Luckily, this is also one of the easiest places to cut down your budget.
You could spend $400 to $800 on a posh hotel in Rome, go around the corner for a $90 double in a simple, moderate family-run B&B, or check into a hostel for $25 a night.
My general advice? Don't blow your budget on a high-test hotel. Treat your lodgings as merely a place to lay your head for the night. After all, ideally you'll send almost every waking moment out and about, seeing the sights, enjoying the restaurants, and whiling away the afternoon in a café, returning to your room only to wash out a few pairs of socks and underwear and then crash after a vacation day well spent.
That's why this section covers not just the best hotels in Italy (and how to find them), but also two dozen alternatives to hotels—from rooms for rent and B&Bs to agriturism farm stays and villa rentals, with apartments, castles, convents, and camping thrown in between. There are even eight ways to stay for free.
Use better booking engines. The best hotel booking sites can often undersell the rates the hotel itself charges by a good 5% to 15%. Notice I say "the best booking engines." This rarely means the big three (Orbitz.com, Expedia.com, Travelocity.com) or the major hotel sites (like Hotels.com).
You need to use a true Italy specialist booking engine like Booking.com, or a budget specialist like Hostelworld.com (which actually lists more inexpensive hotels, apartments, and B&Bs than it does hostels) or the last-minute site Laterooms.com.
I'm serious. That's why I've partnered with those sites. On may last Italy trip, I found—and booked—every single hotel through Booking.com because it had a better selection and lower prices than any other source (guidebooks included). » more
Free options
Learn what Italian hotels are like. Enjoyment of any vacation is 80% perception—your mental state and the expectations you bring along with your luggage. Set your expectations realistically, and reality can only surpass them.
Just about every complaint I've ever heard or read about hotels in Italy stems from a single misperception: people somehow expect every hotel to be a Sheraton (or at least a Red Roof Inn). Don't go expecting a cookie-cutter American-style chain hotel and you won't be disappointed with Italy's tiny rooms, tinier bathrooms, curtain-less showers, and other European quirks.
Know what you're in for, and instead of lamenting the lack of HBO and matching queen beds you'll start seeing the lovely Italian touches: the hand-hewn ceiling beams, ancient terracotta floors, charming peasant-style furnishings, and doorways and windowsills that were carved by the same Renaissance stonecutters with whom Michelangelo was raised. » more
Look into alternative accommodations. Hotels aren't the be-all and end-all of lodging options in Italy. In fact, for the most memorable trip, you might want to make them your fallback choice when it comes to looking for a place to stay for the night.
Why? Because hotels are usually among the more expensive options available, and yet are rarely the most fun or remarkable.
All things being equal, given the option of a study, reliable, but unremarkable standardized hotel room, wouldn't you rather stay in a nearby medieval castle, or on a working farm or vineyard, or in a family-run B&B, or perhaps even with some Franciscan monks in a historic monastery?
Even if you follow my own standard advice and consider your lodging to be just the cheapest comfortable place you can find to lay your weary head for the night, if you could get a bed that's both cheaper and in a more interesting setting, why not go for it? » more
Among the other options:
Use an online personal shoppper to do your searches for you. Aggregators—HotelsCombined.com, Momondo.com, Vayama.com, Dohop.com—are kind of search engines of the search engines, canvassing most of the major search sites and booking engines out there and presenting the results side-by-side so you can comparison-shop quickly.
Try your luck with opaque/bidding sites. Booking with the opaque fares sites Priceline.com or Hotwire.com can often save you up to 50%—though most of the hotels offered will be big chain hotels, not mom-and-pop joints. Click on "more" to learn more about how they work (this is a page about using the services for airfares, but the process pretty much works the same for hotels): » more
Don't book more hotel than you need. Don't get star-struck.
Hotels will be rated from one-star (simple) to five-star deluxe (posh). The difference has little to do with comfort, charm, or location and everything to do with how many amenities are on the checklist.
In other words, a crummy, bland hotel on the outskirts of town can add minibars and satellite TV channels and bump up to three– or four-star status (and prices), while a charming little inn—simple (no minibars, no satellite channels...heck, no TV), but clean and comfy, with friendly owners and a central location—might rate only one star.
Me? I'll book the one-star hotel every time. I mean, do you really need the minibar? And you came to see Italy, not sit around watching TV, right?
When I want to book a hotel, I look for the four Cs, in this order: Clean, comfortable, central, and cheap. "Charming" is also a nice touch, but only after the first four "C" needs have been met. » more
Whittle down the price. There are tons of ways to lower the "rack rate" of a hotel room (besides using a booking engine).
Consider staying with the neighbors. Everything in town either booked or way too expensive? Consider shaking up at a hotel in the next town over.
It may be cheaper, and nets you two cities for the price of one, with the second city often being a far less touristy one.
That said, you will miss out on any nightlife in the main city, and will spend a bit more time commuting—don't bother with anything more than a 30-minute commute by train. (Also, factor in that daily price of a train ticket into your calculations of how much you're saving.)
This technique doesn't work so well for Rome (nothing that interesting is close enough), but can work gangbusters for Venice (stay in Padova/Padua) or Florence (stay in Prato or Pistoia; with a car, you could even stay in the Chianti—bonus!). And why not stick around Milan just long enough the great sights, then hie out for gorgeous Lake Como to spend the night? (Bonus: Como is actually closer to the Milan Malpensa airport than Milan is.)
Avoid the minibar, telephone, and laundry service. These are all ludicrously overpriced.
I call all of these hotel scams & rip-offs. Anything in the room that they can hang a price tag on, avoid it. Same thing goes for hotel breakfasts (get a cornetto—croissant—and cappuccino at the corner bar for half the price) and hotel garages (admittedly convenient, but the public lot will be up to 1/5 the price). » more
English (Inglese) | Italian (Italiano) | Pro-nun-cee-YAY-shun |
Good day | Buon giorno | bwohn JOUR-noh |
Good evening | Buona sera | BWOH-nah SAIR-rah |
Good night | Buona notte | BWOH-nah NOTE-tay |
Goodbye | Arrivederci | ah-ree-vah-DAIR-chee |
Excuse me (to get attention) | Scusi | SKOO-zee |
thank you | grazie | GRAT-tzee-yay |
please | per favore | pair fa-VOHR-ray |
yes | si | see |
no | no | no |
Do you speak English? | Parla Inglese? | PAR-la een-GLAY-zay |
I don't understand | Non capisco | non ka-PEESK-koh |
I'm sorry | Mi dispiace | mee dees-pee-YAT-chay |
Where is? | Dov'é | doh-VAY |
...a hotel | un albergo | oon al-BEAR-go |
...a B&B | un bed-and-breakfast | oon bet hand BREK-fust |
...a rental room | un'affittacamera | oon ah-feet-ah-CAH-mair-ra |
...an apartment for rent | un appartamento | oon ah-part-tah-MENT-toh |
...a farm stay | un agriturismo | oon ah-gree-tour-EES-moh |
...a hostel | un ostello | oon oh-STEHL-loh |
How much is...? | Quanto costa? | KWAN-toh COST-ah |
a single room | una singola | OO-nah SEEN-go-la |
double room for single use [will often be offered if singles are unavailable] | doppia uso singola | DOPE-pee-ya OO-so SEEN-go-la |
a double room with two beds | una doppia con due letti | OO-nah DOPE-pee-ya cone DOO-way LET-tee |
a double room with one big bed | una matrimoniale | OO-nah mat-tree-moan-nee-YAAL-lay |
triple room | una tripla | OO-nah TREE-plah |
with private bathroom | con bagno | cone BAHN-yoh |
without private bathroom | senza bagno [they might say con bagno in comune—"with a communal bath"] | SEN-zah BAHN-yoh |
for one night | per una notte | pair OO-nah NOH-tay |
for two nights | per due notti | pair DOO-way NOH-tee |
for three nights | per tre notti | pair tray NOH-tee |
Is breakfast included? | É incluso la prima colazione? | ay in-CLOO-soh lah PREE-mah coal-laht-zee-YOAN-nay |
Is there WiFi? | C'é WiFi? | chay WHY-fy? |
May I see the room? | Posso vedere la camera? | POH-soh veh-DAIR-eh lah CAH-mair-rah |
That's too much | É troppo | ay TROH-po |
Is there a cheaper one? | C'é una più economica? | chay OO-nah pew eh-ko-NO-mee-kah |
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