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Lake Garda

July 6, 2026
Lake Garda
ItalyTrade.org Tailor-made trip
✈️ Plan your trip
Lake Garda — panorama

Lake Garda

Between Lombardy, Veneto and Trentino: Italy’s largest lake

Table of contents

  1. The heart of the Benaco
  2. Culture and nature
  3. Why it’s unique
  4. Places and sights
  5. Cuisine and wines
  6. Traditions and festivals
  7. Way of life
  8. When to go and where to stay
  9. Local products
  10. Weddings on the lake
  11. Real estate market
  12. Where to eat
  13. Tourism figures
  14. 3-day itinerary
  15. Frequently asked questions

📈 Trending today — Lake Garda

In 2025 Lake Garda recorded nearly 28 million tourist stays, confirming it as one of the most visited destinations in Europe.

#LagoDiGarda #Sirmione #Malcesine #Bardolino 🔥 #StradaDellaForra
Instagram TikTok Facebook X / Twitter

Source: Gardapost.it

Tailor-made trip
Introduction

The pulsing heart of Northern Italy

Already called Benaco by the Romans, who venerated it as a deity linked to the cult of Neptune, Lake Garda is Italy’s largest lake, with a surface area of around 370 km² set between three regions: Lombardy, Veneto and Trentino-Alto Adige.

Source: Wikipedia

Narrow and enclosed by the Prealps to the north, the lake widens to the south into a broad amphitheatre of moraine hills, formed by deposits left by the ancient Garda glacier during the last ice ages: a landscape that shifts from the alpine profiles of Monte Baldo to the Mediterranean softness of olive groves and vineyards within just a few dozen kilometres.

Source: Treccani

📍
370 km²
Surface area, Italy’s largest lake
Source
🌡️
13°C
Average water temperature
Source
🗣️
3 regions
Lombardy, Veneto, Trentino-Alto Adige
Source
✈️
~28 million
Tourist stays in 2025
Source
Culture and nature

Thousand-year history and contrasting landscapes

The first settlements on the shores of Lake Garda date back to the Palaeolithic, but it was in the Bronze Age that pile-dwelling villages developed, still visible today along the southern shores; in Roman times, between the 2nd and 1st century BC, the first patrician villas were built, as the Grotte di Catullo in Sirmione testify.

Source: Beeboatservice.it

The mild climate, tempered by the lake’s great mass of water, allows palms, olive trees, lemons and other Mediterranean plants to grow even at the alpine latitudes of its far north — a contrast that already fascinated Goethe during his 1786 journey through Italy.

Source: Trentino.com

Uniqueness

Why Lake Garda is unique

🏛️ The largest Roman villa in Northern Italy

The Grotte di Catullo, on the tip of the Sirmione peninsula, are the remains of the largest and most extensive Roman patrician residence in Northern Italy, over two hectares overlooking the lake. Source: Italian Ministry of Culture

🏰 Scaliger villages and Orange Flags

The lake is dotted with medieval castles built by the Della Scala family of Verona, and villages such as Gardone Riviera, Tremosine and Limone sul Garda belong to the club of Italy’s Most Beautiful Villages. Source: Instagarda

🍷 A terroir with four denominations

On the Verona shore alone, four different DOC wines coexist — Bardolino, Chiaretto, Lugana and Custoza — thanks to the mild microclimate created by the lake and the moraine soils. Source: Tasteverona.com

Places and sights

The wonders of Lake Garda

Southern Verona/Brescia shore

Sirmione

Stretched along a long peninsula, it is dominated by the 14th-century Rocca Scaligera, one of the rare examples of a castle built directly on the water with a fortified inner harbour.

Source: Terredelgarda.net
Verona shore

Malcesine

The Scaliger Castle rises on a rocky outcrop steep above the lake; here in 1786 Goethe was nearly arrested after being mistaken for a spy while sketching the fortress.

Source: Pushstart.it
Trentino shore

Riva del Garda

Encircled by medieval walls with three access gates, it faces the lake with the Torre Apponale (34 metres, 170 steps) and the MAG museum housed in the ancient castle.

Source: Livelagodigarda.it
Brescia shore

Salò

Has the longest lakefront promenade on Lake Garda (around 3 km) and a late-Gothic cathedral housing paintings by 14th- to 16th-century artists such as Romanino.

Source: Curiosandoingiro.com
Malcesine

Monte Baldo and its cable car

The rotating cabins of the Malcesine-Monte Baldo cable car carry visitors from 90 to 1,760 metres in about 20 minutes, with 360° views over the lake, the Dolomites and the Po Valley.

Source: Gardavisit.it
San Felice del Benaco

Isola del Garda

The largest of the lake’s five islands hosts an early-20th-century Venetian neo-Gothic villa and Italian gardens, reachable only by boat.

Source: Isoladelgarda.com
Monte Baldo

The “Garden of Europe”

During the ice ages, the sheltered position of Monte Baldo, between the lake and the Alps, allowed numerous plant species that went extinct elsewhere to survive — today a paradise for hikers and paragliders.

Source: Pushstart.it
Torri del Benaco

Crero Suspension Bridge

Opened in 2019, it is 34 metres long and suspended around 45 metres high; on clear days Malcesine and Riva del Garda can be seen.

Source: Gardavisit.it
Gardone Riviera

Il Vittoriale degli Italiani

The residence-monument built by Gabriele d’Annunzio between 1921 and 1938 includes a mausoleum, an open-air theatre and the bow of a warship set into the hillside.

Source: Lake Garda Travel
Sirmione

Grotte di Catullo

The site, partly carved into the rock, includes a long underground cryptoporticus and an archaeological museum opened in 1999 with Roman finds and remains of the ancient pile dwellings.

Source: Visitsirmione.com
Sirmione

Rocca Scaligera

Founded in 1277 by the Della Scala family as a castle-military port, it still preserves the fortified boat dock and the swallowtail-shaped battlements.

Source: Terredelgarda.net
Gardone Riviera

André Heller Botanical Garden

More than a traditional garden, it’s a total work of art where botany, contemporary sculptures and installations intertwine right next to the Vittoriale.

Source: Lake Garda Travel
Verona

Torri del Benaco

Its castle houses Lake Garda’s oldest still-active lemon house (1760), plus an ethnographic museum dedicated to lake fishing.

Source: Instagarda
Brescia

Limone sul Garda

Famous for its historic lemon houses, such as the still-visitable Limonaia del Castel, and for the new cycle path suspended over the lake with views of Malcesine and Monte Baldo.

Source: Gardavisit.it
Brescia

Gardone Riviera

A village among Italy’s Most Beautiful Villages, also awarded the Blue Flag for water quality, at the start of the so-called Lemon Riviera.

Source: E-borghi.com
Verona

Borghetto sul Mincio

The village of the water mills, crossed by the Ponte Visconteo, is the home of the Valeggio tortellini and site of the famous “longest dinner in Italy”.

Source: Sagr.it
Gastronomy

A culinary journey through the flavours of Lake Garda

Lake Garda’s cuisine reflects the influence of the three surrounding regions, but has two constants: extra virgin Garda DOP olive oil and the area’s DOC wines as seasoning and accompaniment to every dish.

Source: Souvenirdiviaggio.it

🍝 Typical dishes not to miss

Tortellini di Valeggio

Ultra-thin dough closed by hand, filled with meat and Bardolino wine, served in broth or with butter and sage. Also known as the “Love Knot”.

Source: Italyfood24.it

La Carbonèra

A poor dish of the charcoal burners: polenta seasoned with extra virgin Garda DOP olive oil and Monte Veronese cheese.

Source: Navigazionelaghi.it

Bigoli con le sarde

Fresh egg pasta sautéed with lake sardines, Garda DOP olive oil, garlic and parsley: a simple, inexpensive classic.

Source: Souvenirdiviaggio.it

Stewed pike with polenta

Along with whitefish, pike is the lake’s most caught fish, stewed and served with soft polenta.

Source: Sillaepepe.it

Sarde in saor

Fried sardines marinated with onions, raisins, pine nuts and vinegar: a preservation method born from fishing tradition.

Source: Europlan.it

Olio Garda DOP

Produced from centuries-old olive groves that benefit from the lake’s microclimate, with a delicate, fruity flavour and hints of almond.

Source: Explorelakegarda.com

🍷 Wines from the Verona shore

Bardolino, made from Corvina, Rondinella and Molinara grapes, has been the lake’s most representative red wine since 1968 (Veneto’s first DOC); in its Chiaretto version it becomes a fresh, citrusy rosé. On the southern shore, between Peschiera and Sirmione, Lugana is produced instead — a structured white wine made from the native Turbiana grape.

Source: Tasteverona.com and Mtvveneto.it

Traditions

Traditions and festivals: Lake Garda’s calendar of events

🎉 The year’s key dates

Bardolino Grape and Wine Festival — late September/early October

Born in 1929 to celebrate the grape harvest, it brings the Bardolino lakefront to life with allegorical floats, DOC wine tastings, live music and a closing fireworks display.

Source: Gardavisit.it

Festa del Nodo d’Amore — Valeggio sul Mincio, June

On the Ponte Visconteo in Borghetto, a dinner is set up for around 4,000 people, considered the longest dinner in Italy, dedicated to local tortellini.

Source: Sagr.it

Lugana Festival — May

Tastings of Lugana wine along the lake shores, one of Italy’s most award-winning white wine denominations.

Source: Instagarda.net

⛪ Traditional festivities

Every December, in Cisano di Bardolino, an artistic nativity scene is set up floating directly on the waters of the lake, one of Lake Garda’s most distinctive Christmas attractions.

Source: Instagarda.net

Daily life

The charm of the Lake Garda lifestyle

The climate, tempered by the lake, allows palms, lemons and olive trees to be grown even close to the Alps: days on Lake Garda are spent swimming in crystal-clear waters, walking along the shore, and enjoying sports like sailing, windsurfing and mountain biking, favoured by the constant “Ora del Garda” wind that blows from south to north in the mornings.

Source: Trentino.com

Planning

When to go and where to stay

🏨 Where to stay

Hotels

Lake Garda’s hotel offering is vast, from 2 to 5 stars: as an example, a 4-star hotel on the Trentino shore offers lake-view rooms from around €65 per person per night in the low season.

Source: Garda-See.com

Campsites and mobile homes

The lake is also one of Italy’s camping capitals: facilities apply different rates depending on the season, with minimum stays ranging from 3 days in the low season to 7 in the high season.

Source: Camping-Eden.it

📅 Best time to visit

May and September are considered the best months to visit Lake Garda: excellent climate, fewer crowds, and coinciding with important events such as the Lugana Festival and the Bardolino Grape Festival. July and August offer the liveliest atmosphere but also the highest prices and biggest crowds.

Source: Instagarda.net

Local specialties

Products of excellence from the area

Three products tell the story of the area better than anything else: extra virgin Garda DOP olive oil, made from centuries-old olive groves; hand-made Tortellini di Valeggio, produced in the village’s artisan pasta workshops; and the lake’s DOC wines — Bardolino, Chiaretto, Lugana and Custoza — which have accompanied the Lake Garda table for centuries.

Source: Lagodigardaveneto.com

Destination wedding

Dream wedding locations

Isola del Garda, with its early-20th-century Venetian neo-Gothic villa and Italian gardens, is one of the lake’s most exclusive locations for ceremonies and receptions, reachable only by boat from the port of San Felice del Benaco. Those looking for more accessible venues can turn to the Castle of Malcesine, the Castle of Torri del Benaco, or the historic villas of Gardone Riviera, such as Villa Feltrinelli and Villa Fiordaliso.

Source: Isoladelgarda.com and Chiarabevents.com

Real estate

Luxury real estate at Lake Garda

The luxury property market at Lake Garda, together with that of Lake Como, has a total offering value exceeding 4 billion euros, equal to 5.7% of the entire Italian prestige housing market. In the municipalities of Bardolino and Peschiera del Garda, record prices exceed 10,000 euros per square metre.

Source: QuiBrescia.it and MilanoFinanza.it

Where to eat

Restaurants: the types of dining at Lake Garda

🐟 Lake fish restaurants

Serve whitefish, pike and perch caught directly from the lake, often prepared with local Garda DOP olive oil.

Source: Explorelakegarda.com

🍷 Wine bars and osterias

Offer tastings of Bardolino, Chiaretto, Lugana and Custoza paired with cold cuts and traditional Verona dishes.

Source: Beeboatservice.it

Visitor analysis

Where do Lake Garda’s visitors come from?

In 2025 the province of Verona, which includes much of the lake’s Verona shore, recorded nearly 20 million tourist stays, over 80% of which were foreign. Germany remains the top market with over 6.8 million stays, followed by the Netherlands, the United Kingdom and, growing strongly, the United States.

Source: VeronaSera.it

Distribution of tourist stays by origin, province of Verona 2025 ~20 million stays/year
  • 21% Italian tourists
  • 34% Germany
  • 7% Netherlands
  • 5% United Kingdom
  • 33% Other foreign countries

Source: analysis based on data from VeronaSera.it / Verona Chamber of Commerce

📊 Lake Garda tourism figures

0 Million stays in 2025 across the whole lake Source
0 Million stays in the province of Verona Source
0 % growth in stays 2014-2024 Source
0 Km² surface area of the lake Source
Detailed itinerary

3-day itinerary step by step

Day 1

Sirmione

Visit the Rocca Scaligera and walk to the Grotte di Catullo, at the tip of the peninsula, with the option of a boat trip along the coast.

Source: Bidibrescia.com

Day 2

Bardolino and Malcesine

Morning dedicated to wineries and a stroll along the Bardolino lakefront, afternoon in Malcesine with a cable car ride up Monte Baldo.

Source: Gardavisit.it

Day 3

Riva del Garda

Walk among the medieval walls to the Torre Apponale, visit the MAG museum and, for sports lovers, sailing or windsurfing thanks to the Ora del Garda wind.

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Source: Livelagodigarda.it

Frequently asked questions

FAQ — Lake Garda

With around 370 km² of surface area and 52 km in length, it is Italy’s largest lake. Its maximum depth reaches 346 metres.

Source: Wikipedia

The lake is shared by Lombardy (province of Brescia), Veneto (province of Verona) and Trentino-Alto Adige (province of Trento).

Source: Wikipedia

May and September offer the best balance between climate, events and manageable tourist numbers; July and August are the liveliest months but also the most crowded and expensive.

Source: Instagarda.net

In 2025 the lake recorded nearly 28 million tourist stays across all three shores combined, according to Garda Unico data.

Source: Gardapost.it

The two unmissable sites are the Rocca Scaligera, a 13th-century castle-port, and the Grotte di Catullo, the largest Roman villa in Northern Italy.

Source: Italian Ministry of Culture

By the panoramic cable car from Malcesine, whose rotating cabins take about 20 minutes to go from 90 to 1,760 metres in altitude.

Source: Gardavisit.it

On the Verona shore, Bardolino, Chiaretto, Lugana and Custoza are produced; Bardolino, made from Corvina, Rondinella and Molinara, was Veneto’s first DOC wine in 1968.

Source: Tasteverona.com

Every year between late September and early October, with allegorical floats, DOC wine tastings and a music programme on the lakefront.

Source: Gardavisit.it

Conclusion

Lake Garda, a lake that unites three regions

From the alpine profile of Monte Baldo to the thermal waters of Sirmione, from the Scaliger castles to the wineries of Bardolino, Lake Garda condenses the diversity of the Italian landscape into just a few dozen kilometres of coastline: mountains, hills and the Mediterranean meet in a single great body of water, Italy’s largest.

Source: Treccani

One lake, three regions, endless reasons to return.

Back to table of contents

  1. The heart of the Benaco
  2. Culture and nature
  3. Why it’s unique
  4. Places and sights
  5. Cuisine and wines
  6. Traditions and festivals
  7. Way of life
  8. When to go and where to stay
  9. Local products
  10. Weddings on the lake
  11. Real estate market
  12. Where to eat
  13. Tourism figures
  14. 3-day itinerary
  15. Frequently asked questions
Editorial transparency

Who wrote this article? On what basis?

📋 Transparency and verifiability

Who wrote it: Giuseppe Baldassarri — ItalyTrade.org.
What evidence it is based on: Verified sources, linked in the text, including Wikipedia, Treccani, the Italian Ministry of Culture, Garda Unico, the Verona Chamber of Commerce, and local media specialising in the Lake Garda area.
Are there other viewpoints: Yes, noted where relevant (e.g. variable event dates, market estimates).
Possible hidden interest: None. Independent editorial content.

Giuseppe Baldassarri – ItalyTrade.org

Giuseppe Baldassarri

Sales & Account Manager · Destination & Export Digital Marketing Manager · Travel Designer · TTO

Website: ItalyTrade.org — Travel & Business | Italy: Made in Italy

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Baldassarri Giuseppe Destination & Export Digital Marketing Manager