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Accommodation

Where to Stay in Tuscany for a Wedding: The Complete Accommodation Guide

Area-by-area guide to the best accommodation in Tuscany for wedding guests — agriturismos, boutique hotels, villas, and budget options across Chianti, Val d'Orcia, Florence, and the Maremma.

By Italian Venues
12 min read

Finding the right place to stay for a Tuscan wedding is one of those decisions that can quietly shape your entire trip. Get it right and you wake up to olive groves, eat breakfast with local honey, and arrive at the venue relaxed and unhurried. Get it wrong — too far from the venue, too remote without a car, or booked too late — and you spend the weekend in logistics mode instead of celebration mode.

This guide breaks down accommodation across Tuscany's main wedding regions, from rustic agriturismos in the Chianti hills to luxury hotels overlooking the Val d'Orcia. Whether you're on a budget or looking to make this a proper Italian escape, the advice here is specific, tested, and designed to help you book with confidence.


The Golden Rule: Stay Near the Venue

Before anything else, find out exactly where the wedding is being held. Tuscany covers a vast area — it's roughly the size of Wales or New Jersey — and a venue in the Chianti hills is a completely different proposition from one on the coast near Grosseto. The single most important factor in choosing your accommodation is proximity to the wedding venue.

Many Tuscan wedding venues are in the countryside, accessible via winding roads that are beautiful by day and poorly lit by night. Staying within a short drive — ideally 15 to 20 minutes — means you can drink freely, stay late, and avoid the stress of navigating unfamiliar roads at midnight. If the couple has suggested accommodation, take those suggestions seriously. They've usually been vetted by the venue or their wedding planner.


Types of Accommodation in Tuscany

Agriturismos: The Quintessential Tuscany Stay

An agriturismo is a working farm that offers guest accommodation, and they are the defining accommodation experience of rural Tuscany. They range from simple and rustic — stone buildings, shared gardens, a communal breakfast table — to beautifully restored estates with pools, vineyards, and multi-course dinners prepared with produce from the property. Many have been in the same family for generations.

What makes an agriturismo special isn't luxury in the hotel sense. It's the setting: waking up to the sound of nothing, watching the light change over the hills in the evening, eating breakfast with honey from the estate's bees and bread baked that morning. For many guests, this becomes the most memorable part of the trip — not just the wedding itself.

Expect to pay: €80–€150 per night for a good double room, often including breakfast. Some of the more polished estates charge €150–€250 and offer a more hotel-like experience while retaining the agriturismo character.

Boutique Hotels and Town Stays

If you prefer a bit more structure — a restaurant downstairs, a concierge, the ability to walk to a bar after dinner — Tuscany's hilltop towns are full of small, characterful hotels. These tend to occupy converted palazzos, former convents, or Renaissance townhouses, and the best of them combine historic architecture with modern comfort.

Expect to pay: €150–€300 per night depending on the town, the season, and the property. For a full luxury experience with spa facilities and world-class dining, budget €300 and upward.

Private Villas

For groups travelling together — families, friend groups, or couples who want more space — a private villa is often the best value and the best experience. Tuscan villas typically come with a pool, outdoor dining areas, and enough bedrooms to sleep 6 to 12 people comfortably. Split between a group, the per-person cost can be surprisingly reasonable.

Expect to pay: €200–€600 per night for the entire property (off-peak) or €400–€1,500+ per night in peak summer for premium properties. Weekly rentals are common and usually offer better rates.

On-Site Venue Accommodation

Many wedding venues in Tuscany offer guest accommodation on the estate — converted farmhouses, guest suites, or separate buildings within the grounds. This is often the ideal option: no transport needed, you're at the heart of the celebration, and the atmosphere of staying together with other guests adds to the occasion. These rooms fill quickly — enquire the moment you RSVP.


Where to Stay by Wedding Area

Chianti

The rolling vineyards between Florence and Siena are Tuscany's most popular wedding region. Venues here tend to be wine estates, converted farmhouses, and hilltop villas surrounded by vines and olive groves. The area is well-served by accommodation at every level.

  • Greve in Chianti — The unofficial capital of Chianti Classico, with a lively central piazza, good restaurants, and a wide range of accommodation from simple B&Bs to polished agriturismos. Central to most Chianti venues.
  • Radda in Chianti — A smaller, quieter hilltop town with excellent views and a more intimate feel. Strong on boutique stays and agriturismos within walking distance of restaurants.
  • Castellina in Chianti — Well-positioned on the main road between Florence and Siena, with a good mix of hotels and farm stays. Slightly more accessible than Radda or Gaiole.
  • Gaiole in Chianti — The most rural of the main Chianti towns, surrounded by some of the region's finest wine estates. Perfect if the wedding is in the eastern Chianti hills.

Budget tip: Agriturismos a few kilometres outside the main towns often cost 30–40% less than those in the immediate town centre, with better views and more character.

Val d'Orcia

The Val d'Orcia — the postcard landscape of cypress-lined roads, golden wheat fields, and medieval hilltop villages — is where many of Tuscany's most photogenic weddings take place. Accommodation here is spread across several stunning small towns.

  • Pienza — A Renaissance gem with extraordinary views over the valley. Small but perfectly formed, with excellent pecorino cheese shops and a handful of beautiful boutique hotels. The town itself is UNESCO-listed.
  • Montalcino — Home to Brunello di Montalcino, one of Italy's greatest wines. Accommodation ranges from simple rooms above wine bars to converted abbey guesthouses. The fortress at the top of town has a wine bar with panoramic views.
  • Montepulciano — Larger than Pienza or Montalcino, with more restaurant options and a wider range of accommodation. The main street climbs steeply to a cathedral piazza — stay near the top if you value views over convenience.
  • San Quirico d'Orcia — Often overlooked, this small town sits at the crossroads of the valley and offers good value accommodation with easy access to everywhere in the Val d'Orcia.

Florence and Surrounds

If the wedding is at one of the grand villas near Florence — and there are some spectacular ones in the Fiesole and Settignano hills — staying in or near the city gives you the best of both worlds: countryside venues within 20 minutes, and Florence's art, food, and culture on your doorstep.

  • Fiesole — Perched in the hills above Florence with commanding views over the city. A handful of luxury hotels and villa rentals. The bus to central Florence takes 20 minutes.
  • Florence centro — If you want to combine the wedding with city exploration, staying in Florence's historic centre puts you within walking distance of the Uffizi, the Duomo, and hundreds of restaurants. Hotels here range from €100 budget options to €500+ luxury palazzos.
  • Settignano — A quiet village east of Florence, less touristy than Fiesole, with a genuine local atmosphere. Several excellent agriturismos nearby.

Maremma and the Tuscan Coast

Tuscany's southern coast and the Maremma region are wilder, less touristed, and considerably cheaper than Chianti or the Val d'Orcia. Weddings here tend to have a more relaxed, rustic character.

  • Saturnia — Famous for its thermal springs (including the free, open-air Cascate del Mulino). Great base for Maremma weddings, and the hot springs are the perfect post-wedding recovery.
  • Pitigliano — A dramatic town built on a volcanic tufa cliff, often called "Little Jerusalem" for its historic Jewish quarter. Unique, atmospheric, and affordable.
  • Scansano — A quiet agricultural town known for Morellino di Scansano wine. Simple, affordable accommodation and authentic Tuscan food.

Find Your Tuscany Accommodation

Compare hotels, agriturismos, and villas across all Tuscan regions

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Budget Planning

Accommodation costs in Tuscany vary enormously depending on the area, the season, and the type of property. Here's a realistic breakdown for peak wedding season (May to October):

  • Budget (€60–€120/night): Simple agriturismos, B&Bs, rooms in smaller towns. Perfectly comfortable, often with breakfast included. Best availability in the Maremma, smaller Val d'Orcia towns, and properties a short drive from the main tourist centres.
  • Mid-range (€120–€250/night): Quality agriturismos with pools, boutique town hotels, well-appointed B&Bs in prime locations. The sweet spot for most wedding guests.
  • Luxury (€250–€500+/night): Five-star hotels, premium villa estates, converted castles with full spa facilities. Chianti and the Val d'Orcia have the strongest luxury options.
  • Villa rental (€1,000–€5,000+/week): Split between 3–6 couples, a villa often works out cheaper per person than a mid-range hotel, with far more space, a private pool, and the ability to cook together.

Booking Tips

When to Book

Book as early as possible. Tuscany's best properties — particularly on-site venue accommodation, well-located agriturismos, and anything in Chianti or the Val d'Orcia — fill up months in advance for the summer season. If you're attending a June to September wedding, start looking the moment you RSVP. For shoulder season (April, May, October), you have slightly more flexibility, but the best places still go fast.

Cancellation Policies

Look for properties with free cancellation up to 7–14 days before arrival. This is standard on Booking.com and many direct booking sites. It lets you secure a good property early without committing before you've confirmed travel plans. Avoid non-refundable rates unless the savings are significant and your plans are locked.

Transport Considerations

If you're staying at a rural agriturismo or villa, you will almost certainly need a car. Public transport in the Tuscan countryside is limited, and taxis are not something you can hail on a country road. Factor rental car costs into your budget, or coordinate with other guests to share rides. For the wedding day itself, consider a pre-booked taxi or transfer so you can drink freely.

For more on getting to Tuscany and navigating the region, see our complete Tuscany guest travel guide and our Italy transport guide.

Explore our curated collection of Tuscan wedding venues for more on what makes this region so special for celebrations.

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