Islands of the Gulf of Naples
Capri, Ischia and Procida — three souls, one gulf
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In 2026 Capri is introducing a Marine Protected Area that will ban motor boats from approaching the Faraglioni, while the landing tax rises to €5.
Three islands, one gulf, endless souls
Capri, Ischia and Procida rise at the edge of the Gulf of Naples, in the Tyrrhenian Sea, and together form the heart of the Campanian Archipelago: although they share the same sea, each island has a geological history and a soul profoundly different from the other two. Read more on Wikipedia
Capri is a limestone spur that broke away from the Sorrentine Peninsula in prehistoric times, while Ischia and Procida owe their origin to the intense volcanic activity of the Campi Flegrei: a geological difference still reflected today in the landscapes, the beaches and even the wines of the three islands. Source: Danpiz.net
Area and municipality data: Capri.com — island comparison
Centuries-old beauty and living culture
Capri was already known to the Greeks and mentioned by Virgil in the Aeneid; in Roman times Emperor Tiberius had numerous villas built there, of which Villa Jovis is the best preserved today and still towers over the Gulf of Naples. Source: Worldwide Charter
Ischia, colonised by the Greeks under the name Pithecusae, remained a small island of fishermen and farmers until the mid-20th century, when its thermal waters turned it into an international destination; today it is nicknamed the “Green Island” for its lush nature and the hiking trails that climb up to Mount Epomeo. Source: Metour.it
Why each of these islands is unique
🏛️ Capri, the most cosmopolitan
Capri offers the largest number of historical and cultural sites of the three islands, from Villa Jovis to the remains of Tiberius’s villas, from Villa San Michele (the house-museum of Axel Munthe) to the majolica floor of the Church of San Michele in Anacapri. Source: Capri.com
🌋 Ischia, the green island of thermal springs
Of volcanic origin like Procida, Ischia is the largest and most extensive of the Campanian islands, with beaches ranging from volcanic sand to natural thermal springs such as the Bay of Sorgeto in Forio, where seawater mixes with hot water from the fumaroles even in winter. Source: Worldwide Charter
🎣 Procida, the most authentic
The smallest and wildest of the three, Procida has preserved an atmosphere reminiscent of 1950s Italy, with colourful houses, a relaxed pace of life and a historic fishing fleet still among the most important in the Mediterranean. Source: Capri.com
The wonders of the islands of the gulf
Villa Jovis
The largest of Tiberius’s imperial villas, from where the emperor administered the Roman Empire while overlooking the gulf. Source: Metour.it
Aragonese Castle
Built according to tradition in 474 BC by Hiero of Syracuse, it is the island’s most visited monument and its cathedral holds a crypt with frescoes by the school of Giotto. Source: Italia.it
Terra Murata and the Abbey of San Michele
The island’s highest and oldest point, overlooking the Golfo di Genito between Procida and Vivara; the Abbey houses an ancient library. Source: Italia.it
Villa Lysis and the Charterhouse of San Giacomo
Historic residences of the island; the Charterhouse still displays works by the artist Diefenbach. Source: Capri.com
Faraglioni and the Blue Grotto
The three iconic rock stacks and the famous sea cave with its silvery reflections, among the most photographed spots in the Mediterranean. Source: ProntoIschia.it
Maronti Beach and the Bay of Sorgeto
Three kilometres of sand and pebbles in Barano, and a bay where seawater is naturally warmed by volcanic fumaroles. Source: Worldwide Charter
Pozzo Vecchio Beach
Known as “the Postman’s Beach” for scenes from the film Il Postino, with dark volcanic sand and turquoise waters. Source: Worldwide Charter
Mount Epomeo
The island’s highest peak, over 750 metres, reachable on foot with a panorama that spans the whole archipelago. Source: Metour.it
Villa San Michele and the Church of San Michele
The house-museum of Swedish physician Axel Munthe in Anacapri, and the church famous for the majolica floor depicting the “Earthly Paradise”. Source: Metour.it
La Mortella Gardens
Botanical gardens of rare beauty in Forio, home every summer to a Greek Theatre hosting international classical music concerts. Source: Eventi.Ischia.it
Pithecusae Archaeological Museum
Home to the famous Cup of Nestor, one of the oldest known Greek inscriptions, housed inside Villa Arbusto. Source: Capri.com
Sant’Angelo
A fishing village perched on a headland, accessible only on foot at its centre, with views over Maronti Beach. Source: Danpiz.net
Marina della Corricella
The island’s most painted and photographed fishing harbour, with colourful houses perched above the sea. Source: Voyage Privé
Serrara Fontana
A village on the southern slopes of Epomeo, at 452 metres above sea level, with views over the Campi Flegrei. Source: Danpiz.net
Anacapri
The island’s second municipality, quieter and more authentic than Capri town, reachable by the historic chairlift to Mount Solaro. Source: Metour.it
A culinary journey through the flavours of the islands
The cuisine of the three islands reflects Neapolitan tradition, blending produce from land and sea, but each island has its own signature dish: in Ischia it is not fish but meat that surprises visitors, with the famous rabbit Ischia-style. Source: Tommasone Vini
🍝 Dishes not to miss
Rabbit Ischia-style
Slow-cooked in a terracotta pan with cherry tomatoes, garlic, white wine and wild marjoram; a Slow Food project protects the island’s pit-raised rabbit. Source: Il Giornale del Cibo
Rabbit Procida-style
The Procida version, cooked very slowly in a terracotta casserole with tomato, rosemary, white wine and garlic. Source: Dissapore
Procida lemon salad
Procida lemons cut into rough pieces with garlic, onion, olive oil, mint and chilli: the local excellence in its simplest form. Source: Cookist
La Zingara
An Ischia sandwich born in 1977 at the “La Virgola” pub in Ischia Ponte: country bread, cured ham, mozzarella, tomato and mayonnaise. Source: Il Giornale del Cibo
Caprese-style ravioli
Filled with eggs, parmesan, marjoram and caciotta cheese, they became Capri’s gastronomic flagship thanks to praise from Gabriele D’Annunzio. Source: SorrentoInfo
Caprese cake
A flourless almond and chocolate cake, today the island of Capri’s signature dessert. Source: Capri.com
🍷 The wines of the islands
Capri DOC, granted in September 1977, includes a white made from Falanghina and Greco grapes (with possible Biancolella) and a red based on Piedirosso; production is limited, grown on terraces overlooking the sea. Source: Quattrocalici.it
Ischia DOC is older (recognised in 1966) and produced in seven styles including Biancolella, Forastera and Piedirosso, also as a passito sweet wine; the vineyards, on well-drained volcanic soil, are often found at around 200 metres of altitude on terraces. Source: Vicino.it
Traditions and festivals: the islands’ calendar
🎉 The calendar of events
Feast of Santa Restituta — 16-18 May, Lacco Ameno (Ischia)
Patron saint of the island of Ischia: on 16 May her martyrdom and landing in the Bay of San Montano are re-enacted, on 17 May her statue is carried by ferry to Casamicciola, and the celebrations close on 18 May with fireworks. Source: Ischia.it
Feast of San Michele Arcangelo — 29-30 September, Sant’Angelo (Ischia)
A liturgical celebration with a procession through the fishing village and a fireworks display on the evening of 29 September. Source: ProntoIschia.it
Procession of the Misteri — Good Friday, Procida
An age-old procession held on the island since the late 17th century, featuring elaborate allegorical floats created by local craftsmen. Source: Isoladischia.com
🍇 Food and wine festivals
In Procida the Wine Festival is celebrated in the historic district of Terra Murata, where local restaurants serve traditional dishes such as pasta with rabbit ragù, while in Ischia autumn is marked by Andar per Cantine and Andar per Sentieri, tastings and walks through vineyards and historic wine cellars. Source: ProntoIschia.it
The charm of life on the islands
On Procida life still revolves around fishing: its fleet remains one of the most important in the Mediterranean, and many people from Procida work as engine and deck officers on merchant ships and cruise liners around the world. Source: ProntoIschia.it
Ischia, by contrast, is historically an inland-facing island devoted to agriculture and especially viticulture: seafaring trades have always been less central than in Procida, while Capri lives a balance all its own between the international jet set and the quiet trails of Anacapri. Source: ProntoIschia.it
How many days, where to stay, when to go
⏱️ Recommended length of stay
Procida can comfortably be visited in a single day, Capri requires at least two or three days to go beyond the main attractions, while truly discovering Ischia, the largest of the three, takes anywhere from three days to a week. Source: Capri.com
🏨 Where to stay
Hotels and resorts
Ischia offers hotels for every budget, from economy rooms starting at around €50 a night up to luxury resorts with private thermal parks. Source: Rumi Hotels
B&Bs and holiday homes
Procida is the most affordable of the three islands: the simplest accommodations start at around €25 a night, ideal for those who want to experience the island at a slow pace. Source: Rumi Hotels
Thermal spas and parks
In Ischia, many public thermal parks offer affordable day passes, alongside free public gardens and equipped beaches. Source: Rumi Hotels
📅 Best time to go and access to Capri
In summer 2025, Capri recorded peaks of over 16,000 visitors a day against a resident population of just under 13,000, with accommodation fully booked as early as the first weekend of August: for this reason the municipality has introduced priority lanes on the funicular and buses reserved for residents and hotel guests, and from 2026 a Marine Protected Area will make the Faraglioni inaccessible to motor boats. Source: Uffici Stampa Nazionali
Made in Italy products of excellence
Capri sandals are a craft icon rooted in Roman times: today they are handmade by the island’s shoemakers using Tuscan leather and kid or calf skin, often adorned with coral, gemstones or crystals, in a tradition that won over stars such as Jacqueline Kennedy and Maria Callas. Source: Snap Italy
In Ischia, local craftsmanship produces sandals with leather, suede or velvet uppers decorated with brass and crystals, while on the table the true star remains the Procida lemon, a particularly large, sweet and juicy variety also used for limoncello and lemon-pesto spaghetti. Source: ProntoIschia.it
Dream wedding locations
Capri is considered the island of love: among the most sought-after venues are panoramic terraces, gardens and viewpoints overlooking the Faraglioni, or symbolic ring-exchange ceremonies inside the Blue Grotto. Source: VisitNaples.eu
In Ischia couples can marry at the Church of Santa Maria del Soccorso in Forio, considered one of the most beautiful in Italy, or choose the Aragonese Castle for a ceremony in a medieval fortress perched above the sea; in Procida, weddings involving foreign couples tend to have fewer guests (60-80, compared with the 150-200 typical of local weddings) and are concentrated between May and September. Source: Il Procidano
Luxury real estate in the Gulf of Naples
Capri remains Italy’s most expensive island for buying a home: according to Immobiliare.it Insights, in 2026 the average asking price is €8,869 per square metre, with peaks of up to €17,000/m² for panoramic penthouses on Via Camerelle, Via Tragara and Marina Piccola. Source: Sbircia la Notizia
Ischia and Procida play in a far more accessible price bracket: the average home in Ischia costs about €3,550/m², in Procida about €3,524/m², values that allow buyers to acquire more than double the floor space compared with Capri for the same budget. Source: Stylo24
Stay prices: low and high season
🌧️ Low season
(November-March)
Double room in Procida or Ischia, with discounts of up to 30% compared with summer. Source: Rumi Hotels
☀️ High season
(July-August)
In Capri, around 6,500 beds were occupied between Capri and Anacapri on the first weekend of August 2025. Source: Uffici Stampa Nazionali
🍽️ Trattoria in Ischia
Full meal per person at a trattoria; pizza is available from €7 to €12. Source: IschiaHotel.net
🦞 Gourmet restaurant
Gourmet seafront restaurants, generally pricier than those further inland. Source: IschiaHotel.net
Restaurants: the different types across the islands
🐟 Harbourside seafood restaurant
In Procida, in the eateries near the harbour, you can enjoy octopus alla Luciana and spaghetti with sea urchin in a setting of fresh air and breathtaking views. Source: SorrentoInfo
🍷 Winery with traditional cuisine
The wineries of Forio, such as those in the Pietratorcia area, offer guided tastings led by sommeliers, paired with dishes from Ischia’s farming tradition. Source: SorrentoInfo
🥗 Family-run trattoria
For an authentic experience, family-run trattorias away from the seafront in Ischia Ponte, Sant’Angelo and Forio still serve rabbit cooked in a wood-fired oven. Source: IschiaHotel.net
🍦 Historic pastry shop and gelateria
The Calise croissant, from a historic pastry shop in Ischia Porto also present in Casamicciola Terme, is a must-try for breakfast or a late-night snack on the island. Source: Il Giornale del Cibo
Tourism statistics and flows
Capri’s ISTAT arrivals grew from 2 million in 2013 to 2.7 million in 2023, a trend confirmed in 2024-2025 as well; at summer peaks the island receives over 16,000 visitors a day against a resident population of around 13,000. Source: Uffici Stampa Nazionali
Bed occupancy rate in Ischia (87.5%, year 2023): Source: ISTAT — Statistica Today Turismo 2023
The “Sorrento Coast and Capri” tourism brand recorded a +13.2% increase in overnight stays in 2023 compared with 2022, one of the best performances among the 22 territorial tourism brands identified by ISTAT in Italy; Ischia, by contrast, shows a -6.3% decline in overnight stays over the 2014-2024 decade, according to analysis by Sociometrica based on ISTAT data. Source: Sociometrica — La ricchezza dei comuni turistici 2025
Where do visitors come from?
The Campania Region does not yet have official island-by-island data on visitor provenance: in March 2026 the regional government established a Regional Tourism Flows Observatory specifically to fill this gap, flagged as particularly critical for high tourist-density destinations such as Ischia, Capri and Procida. Source: Il Golfo 24
At a regional level, data from the Chambers of Commerce Tourism Observatory (ISNART) for 2023 shows that in summer the majority of tourists in Campania come from North America (around 30%), while in winter tourism is once again predominantly domestic (64% Italian); half of all visitors belong to Generation Y and Z, born after 1981. Source: Regione Campania — SRM Report
On a broader scale, another survey attributes to Campania a majority share of American tourists (57% of international bookings), followed by Britons (11%) and Australians (8%); in Procida specifically, local operators report a preference among British, French and American visitors for the island, while Russians and Germans tend to favour Ischia. Source: Il Giornale del Turismo
3-day itinerary, step by step
Capri — Faraglioni and the Blue Grotto
Arrival at Marina Grande, a boat trip to the Faraglioni and the Blue Grotto, then up to Anacapri by chairlift to Mount Solaro for sunset over the gulf.
Ischia — Aragonese Castle and thermal baths
Ferry to Ischia, a visit to the Aragonese Castle and its cathedral, an afternoon at the thermal parks or the Bay of Sorgeto, then dinner with rabbit Ischia-style in Ischia Ponte.
Procida — Marina della Corricella and Terra Murata
Ferry to Procida, a stroll among the colourful houses of the Marina della Corricella, up to Terra Murata to visit the Abbey of San Michele Arcangelo, then lunch with Procida lemon salad and fresh fish.
FAQ — Islands of the Gulf of Naples
Procida can be visited in a single day, Capri needs two or three days, while Ischia, the largest of the three, is best explored over three days to a week. Source: Capri.com
Procida is the most affordable and accessible, with rooms available from around €25 a night; Capri is the most expensive of the three. Source: Capri.com
Rabbit Ischia-style, slow-cooked with garlic, cherry tomatoes and white wine: it is considered the island’s emblematic dish, so much so that a Slow Food project protects the island’s pit-raised rabbit. Source: Tommasone Vini
The three islands are reachable from the port of Naples (Molo Beverello) and from Mergellina by hydrofoil and ferry; for Ischia and Procida, the port of Pozzuoli can also be convenient. Source: Danpiz.net
To manage summer overcrowding, which brings over 16,000 visitors a day: from 2026 a Marine Protected Area will ban motor boats from approaching the Faraglioni, alongside priority lanes for residents on the funicular and buses. Source: Uffici Stampa Nazionali
In Capri the average asking price in 2026 is €8,869/m², compared with about €3,550/m² in Ischia and €3,524/m² in Procida: the same budget buys more than double the floor space on the two smaller islands. Source: Sbircia la Notizia
Ischia DOC (since 1966) produces seven styles including Biancolella, Forastera and Piedirosso; Capri DOC (since 1977) offers a white based on Falanghina and Greco and a red based on Piedirosso. Source: Quattrocalici.it
Yes: weddings of foreign couples in Procida typically have 60-80 guests, compared with the 150-200 of local weddings, and are concentrated between May and September. Source: Il Procidano
Embracing Italian culture on the islands of the gulf
Capri, Ischia and Procida are not simply variations on the same seaside holiday: they are three different ways of experiencing the Mediterranean, from the international glamour of the Faraglioni to the thermal wellness of the Green Island, all the way to the timeless authenticity of Procida’s fishermen.
Whether you choose a single island or go island-hopping across all three depends only on how much time you have: what remains constant is the chance to find, just a few miles apart, profoundly different experiences united by one stunning gulf.
Three islands, one gulf, one unrepeatable idea of Italy.
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 throughout the text (ISTAT, Regione Campania, Immobiliare.it Insights, tourism and food-and-wine trade publications).
Are there other points of view: Yes, indicated where
relevant (e.g. ISTAT data showing growth on the Sorrento Coast and Capri against a decline in Ischia).
Possible hidden interest: None. Independent
editorial content.
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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