Skip to main content
Amalfi Coast cliffside village with colourful buildings above the sea
Accommodation

Where to Stay on the Amalfi Coast for a Wedding: Town-by-Town Guide

The best places to stay on the Amalfi Coast as a wedding guest — Positano, Ravello, Amalfi, Praiano, and the budget-friendly alternatives. Town comparisons, price guides, and booking advice.

By Italian Venues
12 min read

The Amalfi Coast is one of the most beautiful places on earth to attend a wedding. It is also one of the most challenging places to find affordable, well-located accommodation — particularly in peak season. The coastline is short, the cliffs are steep, and you cannot simply build more hotels on a vertical rock face. Supply is limited by geography, and demand is relentless.

The good news: with the right information and enough lead time, you can find a place that's well-positioned, reasonably priced, and spares you the stress of navigating winding cliff roads on the wedding day. This guide covers every major town on the coast, what each one offers, what it costs, and which to choose based on where the wedding is being held.


The Most Important Decision: Which Town?

The Amalfi Coast is only about 50 kilometres long, but getting from one end to the other can take well over an hour on the single-lane SS163 road that threads along the cliffs. In summer traffic, it can take longer. Where you stay matters enormously — more so than almost any other wedding destination in Italy.

The priority is simple: stay as close to the wedding venue as possible. If the ceremony is in Ravello, stay in Ravello or Amalfi. If it's in Positano, stay in Positano or Praiano. Being able to walk to the venue — or take a five-minute taxi — transforms the entire experience. You arrive relaxed, you can drink freely, and you avoid the white-knuckle experience of navigating the coast road in formal clothes after dark.


Town-by-Town Guide

Ravello

Perched 350 metres above the sea with commanding views over the entire coastline, Ravello is the most refined and tranquil town on the Amalfi Coast. It's also one of the most popular wedding locations — the gardens of Villa Rufolo and Villa Cimbrone are among Italy's most sought-after ceremony venues.

Staying in Ravello means quiet evenings, exceptional restaurants, and the luxury of being steps from the venue if the wedding is here. The trade-off is that it sits above the coast rather than on it — reaching the beach requires a drive or a long walk down to Minori. But for a wedding weekend, that rarely matters.

  • Budget: €150–€250/night — Small guesthouses and B&Bs tucked into the town's medieval lanes. Rooms can be compact, but many have terraces with sea views.
  • Mid-range: €250–€450/night — Boutique hotels with pools, refined service, and the classic Ravello aesthetic: tiled floors, lemon trees, bougainvillea everywhere.
  • Luxury: €450–€1,000+/night — Properties like Palazzo Avino and Hotel Caruso, with infinity pools, Michelin-starred dining, and views that justify every euro.

Positano

The most photographed and most glamorous town on the coast. Pastel-coloured houses cascade down a near-vertical cliff to a grey-sand beach, and the entire composition looks like it was designed by someone who understood exactly how to make a place unforgettable. Positano is busy, expensive, and unapologetically spectacular.

If the wedding is in Positano, staying here is non-negotiable — the town is steep enough that even moving between neighbourhoods involves serious stair-climbing, and arriving from another town adds unnecessary stress. If the wedding is elsewhere, Positano makes an excellent base only if you're happy to pay the premium and enjoy the atmosphere.

  • Budget: €180–€300/night — Budget in Positano is relative. Simple rooms in the upper town (more stairs, fewer views) offer the best value. Expect compact spaces but clean, well-maintained properties.
  • Mid-range: €300–€550/night — Hotels with pools, sea views, and that signature Positano style. Properties on the Fornillo side tend to be quieter and slightly cheaper than those on the main beach side.
  • Luxury: €550–€1,500+/night — Le Sirenuse, Il San Pietro, and their peers. Some of the most celebrated hotels in the Mediterranean.

Amalfi

The town that gives the coast its name sits at the centre of the coastline and serves as its practical hub. Amalfi has the widest range of restaurants, the most ferry connections, and a slightly more grounded, less exclusively tourist-oriented atmosphere than Positano. The cathedral square — Piazza del Duomo — is one of the great public spaces of southern Italy.

Amalfi is an excellent base regardless of where the wedding is. Ferry connections run east and west along the coast, and the town is centrally positioned for reaching Ravello (a 25-minute bus ride up the hill) or Positano (30 minutes by bus or ferry).

  • Budget: €120–€200/night — Genuinely affordable options exist here, particularly in guesthouses a short walk from the main piazza. Better value than Positano or Ravello.
  • Mid-range: €200–€400/night — Sea-view hotels, rooftop terraces, and properties with that perfectly maintained Amalfi Coast aesthetic.
  • Luxury: €400–€800+/night — Historic hotels in converted monasteries and merchant palaces, with cloistered gardens and private beach access.

Praiano

Sitting between Positano and Amalfi, Praiano is the coast's best-kept secret for accommodation. It has fewer tourists, a more authentically local atmosphere, and sunsets that many consider the finest on the entire coastline — the town faces due west, so you watch the sun drop directly into the Tyrrhenian Sea.

Praiano offers excellent value for boutique stays and is well-positioned for weddings in either Positano or Amalfi. The only downside is limited nightlife and fewer restaurants than the larger towns — but for a wedding weekend, that's rarely a concern.

  • Budget: €100–€180/night — Some of the best-value accommodation on the coast. Small hotels and apartments with sea views at prices that would be unthinkable in Positano.
  • Mid-range: €180–€350/night — Boutique properties with pools, terraces, and genuine character. The sweet spot for wedding guests who want quality without excess.
  • Luxury: €350–€700+/night — A small number of high-end properties, including the renowned Casa Angelina.

Maiori and Minori

Further east along the coast, these twin towns offer the most affordable accommodation and the most authentically Italian experience. Maiori has the longest beach on the coast (a genuine rarity here), and Minori is widely considered to have the best food — the pasta made here, particularly the local ndunderi, is exceptional.

  • Budget: €80–€150/night — Genuinely affordable. Family-run hotels and apartments with sea views at a fraction of Positano prices.
  • Mid-range: €150–€250/night — Comfortable hotels with pools and good facilities. Excellent value by Amalfi Coast standards.

The trade-off is distance: Maiori and Minori are 20–30 minutes from Positano by bus, and further still in traffic. For a wedding in Ravello or Amalfi, they're well-positioned. For Positano, they're a stretch.

Vietri sul Mare

The gateway town at the eastern end of the coast, famous for hand-painted ceramics. Vietri is the most affordable option and has excellent connections to Salerno by bus and train. It's the logical choice for guests arriving via Salerno's train station, and the ceramic shops are worth exploring in their own right. Best for weddings in the eastern half of the coast.

Find Your Amalfi Coast Accommodation

Compare hotels and boutique stays across Positano, Ravello, Amalfi, and beyond

Search Amalfi Coast, Italy on Booking.com

Prices shown on Booking.com. We may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.


Booking Strategy

When to Book

For summer weddings (June to September), book at least 3–4 months in advance, ideally more. The Amalfi Coast has limited inventory — there are only so many rooms carved into a cliff — and the best properties at every price point sell out early. For shoulder season weddings (April, May, October), you have more flexibility, but the most desirable spots still go fast.

Cancellation Flexibility

Book a property with free cancellation as soon as you receive the invitation. This secures your spot without commitment. You can always upgrade or switch later if you find something better — but you can't create availability that doesn't exist. Waiting is the biggest mistake Amalfi Coast guests make.

The Transport Factor

Do not plan to drive on the Amalfi Coast unless you're genuinely confident on narrow, winding cliff roads with oncoming traffic. Parking is scarce and expensive (€25–€40 per day in Positano). Instead, use the excellent ferry network (April to October), SITA buses, or pre-booked private transfers. This is another reason to stay close to the wedding venue — it removes transport stress entirely.

For more on reaching the coast and getting around, see our complete Amalfi Coast guest travel guide and our Italy transport guide.

Browse our collection of Amalfi Coast wedding venues to discover what makes this coastline one of the world's most coveted wedding destinations.

This page contains affiliate links. If you book through these links, we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. This helps us keep creating free travel guides.