Tremiti Islands
San Domino, San Nicola, Capraia, Cretaccio and Pianosa — the only Adriatic archipelago of Italy, Province of Foggia, Puglia
📈 Trending today — Tremiti Islands
Blue Flag 2026 awarded to Cala delle Arene for the sixth consecutive year: the archipelago keeps making headlines for the quality of its waters.
Source: primonumero.it
The Diomedean archipelago at the heart of the Adriatic
The Tremiti Islands are an archipelago in the Adriatic Sea, roughly 12 nautical miles north of the Gargano promontory — the only Italian islands in the Adriatic, a sea whose coast tends to be drearier elsewhere. The Tremiti are a shining exception, presenting incredible natural beauty, significant history, and a laid-back vacation atmosphere. The tiny archipelago, with a whopping 310 hectares (766 acres) among all five islands, falls within Gargano National Park. → Source: frommers.com
The five islands — San Domino, San Nicola, Capraia, Cretaccio and Pianosa — belong to the Province of Foggia, in Puglia, the region forming the heel of Italy’s boot. San Domino and San Nicola are the only inhabited islands and the only ones where you can stay overnight. The other three are smaller and wilder: Capraia, a paradise for snorkelling and diving; Cretaccio, a small rocky outcrop; and Pianosa, the most remote, sitting at the centre of a strictly protected marine reserve established in 1989. → Source: theglobetrottingteacher.com
Sources: italia.it · National Geographic · ferryhopper.com
Ancient beauty between legend and limestone
The tremitesi and many a classical scholar believe that the Homeric warrior-hero Diomedes lived out his final days on the Tremiti islands, which were in antiquity known as the Insulae Diomedeae. A more imaginative version of the legend holds that the islands were created when the hero tossed a few pebbles into the Adriatic. An ancient Greek tomb is in fact preserved on the island of San Nicola, venerated to this day as the Tomba di Diomede. According to the story, when Diomedes died, Aphrodite turned his grief-stricken companions into shearwaters — birds whose plaintive nighttime calls still echo across the islands during breeding season. → Source: frommers.com
Part of Gargano National Park, the five-island archipelago is marooned in the Adriatic Sea, some 14 miles off the coast of Puglia. The colour scheme of the Tremiti Islands hints at what’s on offer: azure seas, honeystone houses and emerald forests. Pinewoods act as a canopy for a prolific macchia mediterranea, thick with fragrant junipers, capers, rosemary and myrtle, while the squiggly coastline is dotted with picturesque coves. → Source: National Geographic
Why the Tremiti Islands are unique
🌊 Blue Flag for the sixth consecutive year
In 2026 the Tremiti received the Blue Flag of the Foundation for Environmental Education for the sixth year in a row — a recognition that certifies not only water quality but also waste management and the local infrastructure. → Source: primonumero.it
🏛️ A thousand-year-old abbey-fortress
San Nicola has been used as a place of confinement since ancient times — Roman emperor Augustus exiled his granddaughter Julia the Younger here. The imposing abbey-fortress complex of Santa Maria a Mare, dating to the 11th century, dominates the coast and is the historic heart of the islands. → Source: myitchytravelfeet.com
🐟 A Neapolitan island within Puglia
Due to its singular history of repopulation, the population of the Tremiti Islands speaks the Neapolitan dialect rather than Pugliese, and the islands’ restaurants turn out dishes that have more in common with Campanian tradition than with the rest of Puglia’s cuisine. → Source: frommers.com
The five islands, island by island
Abbey of Santa Maria a Mare
Built in 1045, the abbey preserves admirable fragments of Romanesque-Byzantine mosaics, including a painted cross over three metres high, perhaps made in Tuscany in the 13th century. → visitvieste.com
Castello dei Badiali
A fortress adjacent to the abbey church, built to defend the monastery from pirates and usurpers — the steep limestone steps and a single great wooden door still guard the only entrance to the historic settlement. → myitchytravelfeet.com
Tomb of Diomedes
An ancient Greek tomb from the Hellenic era, known as the Tomba di Diomede, is located on the grounds behind the monastery — not easy to find, but a fascinating link to the island’s mythical past. → theglobetrottingteacher.com
The historic heart of the Tremiti
This tiny landing point, just 500 m across the water from San Domino, is where most of the islands’ year-round residents live, and where the principal monuments of the archipelago are found. → frommers.com
Cala delle Arene
San Domino has most of the tourist infrastructure thanks to the presence of the only sandy beach of the archipelago — golden sand and clear, shallow water perfect for families. → hotelpaglianza.it
A well-marked perimeter trail
A well-marked trail circles the perimeter of San Domino, passing through pine forest and along clifftops with vertiginous views; the full circuit takes around two hours at a relaxed pace, with no cars on the island. → beautifulpuglia.com
Grotta del Bue Marino & Grotta delle Viole
The boat tour around San Domino reveals fascinating sea caves, including the Grotta del Bue Marino, where the boat slips inside to give visitors a closer view of the cavern’s striking interior. → myitchytravelfeet.com
Cala Matano
Local legend says Italian singer-songwriter Lucio Dalla composed some of his most famous songs on these islands, drawn to coves like Cala Matano — still one of the most beautiful and least-known places in Italy. → manuelalenoci.com
A diver’s paradise
The second-largest island by area, Capraia is entirely uninhabited and inaccessible on foot. Its waters contain the wreck of a Roman ship, the Tre Senghe, dating to the 2nd century BC, with extraordinary underwater visibility. → beautifulpuglia.com
Submerged statue of Padre Pio
Hidden between Capraia and San Nicola islands lies a surprise: a nearly 10-foot (3 m) tall statue of Saint Padre Pio, made by sculptor Mimmo Norcia, visible by scuba diving, snorkelling, or even from above the water. → theglobetrottingteacher.com
Cala di Sorrentino, “the Cave of Love”
This small bay set in a paradisiacal scenery with emerald green waters is also known as the “Cave of Love”, preferred by couples for its romantic atmosphere and privacy. → ferryhopper.com
Where the seagulls reign
Close to San Nicola, Capraia is now deserted, its rough landscapes and rocky terrain a haven for seabirds rather than people — its wild, unspoiled nature makes it a favourite for divers and snorkelling enthusiasts. → italyunseen.com
An intriguing ghost island
More geological feature than island, Cretaccio is an uninhabited slab of clay rock sitting between San Domino and San Nicola. According to local legend, a prisoner was executed here and his ghost still wanders the rock. → beautifulpuglia.com
A strictly protected marine reserve
Pianosa is the most remote of the five, a flat rocky outcropping at the centre of a strictly protected marine reserve established in 1989. Bathing, boating and fishing are effectively prohibited here. → beautifulpuglia.com
Roman amphorae beneath the waves
The waters around Pianosa give up fragments of Roman amphorae with some regularity — a quiet reminder that this isolated outpost has been part of Mediterranean maritime history for over two thousand years. → beautifulpuglia.com
Shipwrecked halfway to Croatia
Pianosa sits further afield than the other islands, all but shipwrecked halfway to Croatia — a place for a yoga mat in an empty cove rather than crowds, embodying the archipelago’s “splendid isolation”. → National Geographic
A culinary journey through Tremiti flavours
Because most of the islands’ roughly 400 to 500 permanent residents are descended from 19th-century “colonists” sent from Naples, the local cuisine on the Tremiti is quite similar to Neapolitan culinary tradition — lots of fresh fish dishes and heaping plates of pasta with crustaceans, shellfish, and pomodorini (cherry tomatoes), rather than the inland cooking typical of the rest of Puglia. → Source: frommers.com
🍝 Dishes you should try
Brodetto di pesce (fish soup)
A rich and flavourful fish soup, the most iconic local speciality of the archipelago, made with the day’s catch of fresh Adriatic fish. → Source: hotelpaglianza.it
Cavatelli con le cozze
Hand-rolled pasta tossed with mussels, alongside other dishes made with local olive oil, tomatoes and fresh vegetables found across the island restaurants. → Source: hotelpaglianza.it
Seafood spaghetti with clams
The fish soup and seafood spaghetti are staples on every Tremiti menu, with the day’s catch determining exactly which fish appear on the plate. → Source: wanderlog.com
Treccine (anise pastries)
The most famous Tremiti dessert: small breadsticks made with anise, white wine and extra virgin olive oil, soaked in Vermiglio, the red wine typical of the islands. → Source: theglobetrottingteacher.com
Mixed fried fish & Neapolitan pastiera
Fried cod and a mixed fried fish plate are island favourites, while the dessert menu pays tribute to the islands’ Neapolitan heritage with classics like pastiera. → Source: manuelalenoci.com
Caper gin
A modern island twist: local gin distilled with capers from the Tremiti, served in creative cocktails at the bars of San Domino’s port. → Source: wanderlog.com
🍷 The Adriatic’s bounty
The archipelago diet, cucina delle Tremiti, revolves around anything that can be foraged from the forest or hauled up from the sea: lemons, figs, goat, snails, rockfish and snapper. The macchia mediterranea covering the islands is thick with fragrant junipers, capers, rosemary and myrtle — ingredients that find their way naturally into the local kitchen. → Source: National Geographic
Traditions and history of the Tremiti Islands
⚓ A history of exile and confinement
Roman emperor Augustus exiled his granddaughter Julia the Younger to San Nicola for having an affair with a senator. In 1793, King Ferdinand IV of Naples turned San Nicola into a penal colony; in 1843, Ferdinand II of the Two Sicilies repopulated the islands with people from Naples. In 1911 around 1,300 Libyans opposing Italian colonial occupation were confined here, and during the Fascist era the islands hosted political opponents, including future Italian President Sandro Pertini. → Source: myitchytravelfeet.com
🎼 A muse for Italian music
There must be a reason why the celebrated Italian singer-songwriter Lucio Dalla composed some of his most famous songs on these islands — the Tremiti remain a deep source of inspiration, with crystal-clear seas shifting between shades of blue and green at every dive. → Source: manuelalenoci.com
🏰 The Rural Village of San Domino
An ancient village in the pine forest of San Domino, with 12 colonial houses built in 1935, is one of the eight unmissable places on the islands — between nature walks and archaeological sites, memorable corners await discovery throughout the archipelago. → Source: ferryhopper.com
⛪ Myth, monks and pirates
From ancient monastic settlements to their use as a place of exile during Fascist Italy, the Tremiti hold a rich history. Archaeologists believe the islands have been inhabited since the Iron Age (4th to 3rd centuries BC), and Diomedes’ legendary tomb still draws curious visitors behind the monastery on San Nicola today. → Source: italyunseen.com
The Abbey of Santa Maria a Mare and the fortifications
One of the most dramatic buildings on the Tremiti is the Abbey of Santa Maria a Mare, which rises majestically on the coast of San Nicola, dominating the sea as well as the land further inland. This former monastery is a thousand years old and has a spellbinding mosaic floor. Legend tells that a hermit monk arrived at the island’s shore and dreamed of the Virgin Mary, who told him where to build the abbey. → Source: National Geographic
The steep stone steps leading up the limestone cliff to the populated portion of San Nicola feel like walking into history when passing through the huge wooden door — the only entrance onto the island. At the top stand the fortifications where monks of the Middle Ages, who began populating the island around the ninth century, defended themselves from pirates and usurpers, including the Castello dei Badiali adjacent to the church. → Source: myitchytravelfeet.com
The charm of life on the Tremiti
Off season, the population of the Tremiti goes down to about 400 souls, most of whom are descended from fishermen — or, depending on which version you believe, mobsters and ladies of ill repute — from Naples. To this day the local dialect on the islands is much more Neapolitan than Pugliese. → Source: frommers.com
Cars are prohibited on the islands; San Domino’s internal transport is a handful of electric golf carts, so the walking is genuinely peaceful. At the sole settlement on San Domino, locals adore a morning stroll along the round-the-island trail through groves of arbutus strawberry trees, with seascapes all around. → Source: National Geographic
San Domino’s trails, coves and sea caves
A well-marked trail circles the entire perimeter of San Domino, passing through pine forest and along clifftops with vertiginous views down to the water. The full circuit takes around two hours at a relaxed pace, with no cars to disturb the walk. → Source: beautifulpuglia.com
🥾 Short trip (1 day): San Domino on foot
Morning: first swim at Cala delle Arene, then a walk through the pine forest towards Cala Matano. Afternoon: trail towards Cala dei Benedettini and the rocky coves further along the coast. Evening: seafood dinner at one of the restaurants near the village square.
🛥️ Extended stay (3 days): the full archipelago
A typical Tremiti itinerary devotes two days to San Domino (beaches, trails, caves), one day to visiting San Nicola (abbey, fortress, historic centre) and one day by boat to Capraia for snorkelling in its untouched coves.
However, to grasp the full magic of San Domino, a boat excursion is essential. The coastline is full of fascinating cavities: the Grotta del Bue Marino with its depth of 70 metres, the Grotta delle Viole — named for the purple reflections of the algae lining its walls — and unique geological formations like the Rocca dell’Elefante (Elephant Rock) and the distinctive silhouettes of the Pagliai stacks north of the port. → Source: theglobetrottingteacher.com
How many days, where to stay, when to go
⏱️ Recommended length of stay
The Tremiti welcome the highest number of travellers between July and August, making the shoulder months of June and September an ideal time to visit. For those short on time, the essentials can be enjoyed with a day trip by boat between the various islands; planning a longer stay of three or four days allows for the slower, more authentic pace once the daytime crowds have gone home. → Source: italia.it
🏨 Where to stay (by type)
Hotels on San Domino
San Domino has the widest selection of accommodation — small hotels, holiday villages and a campsite. Hotel Kyrie, for example, is only a few minutes’ walk from Cala delle Arene and offers a pool, fitness centre and restaurant. → Source: theglobetrottingteacher.com
B&Bs on San Nicola
San Nicola has very limited accommodation options and is better suited as a day visit from San Domino, though small B&Bs such as La Casa di Gino are available for those who want a quieter, more historic base. → Source: theglobetrottingteacher.com
Trabocco-style guesthouses
For a truly memorable stay, look for one of the small hotels perched above the water with direct sea access — waking up on the Tremiti and stepping straight into the Adriatic before breakfast is an experience that requires no further justification. → Source: beautifulpuglia.com
Capraia, Cretaccio and Pianosa: no accommodation
The other three islands have no accommodation at all — and that’s all part of their charm. They are visited as day excursions only, by boat from San Domino or San Nicola. → Source: National Geographic
📅 How to get there
The islands are connected to the mainland all year round. Ferry services leave from Termoli in Molise, from Peschici, Rodi Garganico, Vieste and Bari in Puglia, and from Vasto in Abruzzo, reaching the two main ports of San Domino and San Nicola. Only the Termoli route operates year-round; other ports run from roughly June to September. A scheduled helicopter service connects Foggia to the islands 365 days a year, operated by Alidaunia. → Source: italia.it
Capers, olive oil and the Tremiti’s edible souvenirs
The local gin distillery on San Domino uses capers from the Tremiti, capturing the island’s most distinctive wild ingredient in a modern, drinkable form — a popular souvenir alongside the traditional Vermiglio red wine used to soak the islands’ anise treccine pastries. → Source: wanderlog.com
The macchia mediterranea covering the islands is thick with fragrant junipers, capers, rosemary and myrtle, all of which find their way into local kitchens and souvenir stalls. Restaurants also serve a variety of dishes made with local olive oil, tomatoes and fresh vegetables typical of the wider Puglia region. → Source: hotelpaglianza.it
Indicative prices: ferries, accommodation and restaurants
🌧️ Return ferry ticket
(from Puglia ports)
A return ticket costs around €45 depending on the departure port; non-resident service typically starts in June. → Source: italyunseen.com
☀️ Crossing time
Depending on the departure point and ferry type, the crossing takes from about one hour to just under two hours. → Source: italyunseen.com
🛥️ Water taxi (San Nicola–San Domino)
From €6 return during the day to €10 return in the evening, for the short crossing between the two inhabited islands. → Source: manuelalenoci.com
🦞 Restaurant meal
A fish soup (brodetto) typically costs around €20, while a full seafood dinner with starters and wine can run €33–60 per person. → Source: wanderlog.com
Restaurants: dining on the Tremiti Islands
🐟 Architiello da Carolina
A restaurant on San Domino known for the quality of its excellently processed raw ingredients — try their classic but very tasty spaghetti with clams, a dish that is never missing from the menu. → Source: manuelalenoci.com
🏰 Da Enrichetta
Famous for its dessert menu worthy of a star, including Neapolitan pastiera and cheesecake. The fried cod simply melts in the mouth — a favourite for both savoury and sweet courses. → Source: manuelalenoci.com
🍔 Capatosta Tremiti Island
A blend of restaurant and tiki bar in Villaggio San Domino, serving innovative cocktails, gourmet burgers and local specialities from breakfast until late at night — including their own caper-infused gin. → Source: wanderlog.com
🥪 Quick bites at the port
For pizza by the slice at the sandy beach of Cala delle Arene, head to a nearby pizzeria; the dockside kiosk on San Domino also does good panini and take-away fare for picnics aboard a rented gommone. → Source: frommers.com
3-day itinerary, step by step
San Domino: Cala delle Arene and the pine forest
Arrival at the port of San Domino, first swim at Cala delle Arene (the only sandy beach, Blue Flag) and a walk through the pine forest towards Cala Matano, following the coastal trail described by beautifulpuglia.com.
San Nicola: the abbey-fortress
Water taxi to San Nicola to visit the Abbey of Santa Maria a Mare and the Castello dei Badiali, followed by an evening stroll through the historic settlement.
Boat tour: Capraia and the sea caves
A boat excursion to Capraia to admire its lighthouse, the submerged statue of Padre Pio and untouched coves, with a stop at San Domino’s sea caves on the way back.
FAQ — Tremiti Islands
Ferry services leave from Termoli in Molise (the only year-round port), and seasonally from Peschici, Rodi Garganico, Vieste and Bari in Puglia, plus Vasto in Abruzzo. The crossing takes between one and two hours depending on the departure point. A scheduled helicopter service from Foggia is also available year-round via Alidaunia. → Source: italia.it
A return ticket costs around €45 depending on the departure port, with non-resident service typically starting in June. Prices and exact fares vary by company and season. → Source: italyunseen.com
Cars are prohibited on the islands. San Domino’s internal transport consists of a handful of electric golf carts, and travel between San Domino and San Nicola is by water taxi. → Source: National Geographic
Cala delle Arene on San Domino is the only sandy beach of the archipelago and was awarded the Blue Flag of the FEE for the sixth consecutive year in 2026. Its shallow, sandy waters make it ideal for families. → Source: primonumero.it
The archipelago welcomes the highest number of travellers between July and August, making the summer shoulder months an ideal time to visit. The best period from October to March offers a slower pace, while winter is excellent for a relaxing beach getaway with mild temperatures. → Source: italia.it
Pianosa sits at the centre of a strictly protected marine reserve established in 1989. Bathing, boating and fishing are effectively prohibited, and it is the most remote and least accessible of the five islands. → Source: beautifulpuglia.com
Restaurants and accommodation are concentrated on San Domino, the most touristic island, while San Nicola — focused more on heritage — offers a much smaller selection. Booking ahead in high season is strongly recommended. → Source: theglobetrottingteacher.com
Brodetto di pesce (fish soup), cavatelli con le cozze, seafood spaghetti with clams, and treccine — anise pastries soaked in local Vermiglio wine — are among the specialities reflecting the islands’ distinctly Neapolitan culinary heritage. → Source: hotelpaglianza.it
The Diomedean archipelago, a paradise worth discovering slowly
The Tremiti Islands form the only Italian archipelago in the Adriatic Sea: a corner of paradise where pine forests, white cliffs, mysterious caves and turquoise waters alternate within a few square kilometres of land. From the pine forest of San Domino to the thousand-year-old walls of San Nicola’s abbey, from the untouched coves of Capraia to the severe silence of Pianosa, each island tells a different part of the same story — that of an archipelago the sea has protected and isolated for centuries.
A day trip lets you savour the islands’ most immediate beauty, but it is by spending at least one or two nights here that you discover their most authentic face: the evening face, when day-trippers have already returned to the mainland and all that remains is the call of the shearwaters, the light of sunset on the limestone cliffs, and the scent of pine and sea.
You don’t just visit the Tremiti — you inhabit them, even if only for a few days.
Who wrote this article? On what basis?
📋 Transparency and verifiability
Author: Giuseppe Baldassarri — ItalyTrade.org.
Method: Every piece of content was verified online
before publication. Green links point to the original sources. Any
content for which no verifiable source was found was not included.
English-language sources used: frommers.com,
nationalgeographic.com, italia.it, ferryhopper.com,
theglobetrottingteacher.com, italyunseen.com, beautifulpuglia.com,
myitchytravelfeet.com, visitvieste.com, hotelpaglianza.it,
manuelalenoci.com, wanderlog.com.
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
“Bringing Italian excellence to global visibility in the age of artificial intelligence”
Luxury real estate | Export | Luxury Wedding | Travel Design
Privacy Policy » Cookie Policy » Terms of Service » Image Licences » Sitemap » Services » Reviews » Contact » Work with us