Trade the city crowds for Italy's most photographed coastline: five pastel fishing villages stacked on terraced cliffs above the Ligurian Sea, linked by a scenic rail line and footpaths. From Livorno you ride north to La Spezia, then hop the Cinque Terre line between Monterosso, Vernazza, Manarola and the rest, walking the open trail sections and standing over the harbors that fill every Italian-Riviera postcard. It's one of the easiest signature days to self-organize and a complete change of pace from Florence's galleries.
What to expect
You'll board a regional train north from Livorno to La Spezia, then step onto the Cinque Terre rail line—a scenic shuttle threading between five pastel villages perched on terraced cliffs above the Ligurian Sea. Between train hops, you walk open footpaths that connect Monterosso, Vernazza, Manarola and the rest, standing directly over the harbors that define every Italian-Riviera photograph. The day unfolds at your own pace: jump off at a village, explore the narrow streets and waterfront, grab lunch overlooking the sea, then catch the next train to your next stop. It's a complete shift from Florence's crowded galleries—pure coastline, working fishing towns, and the rhythm of the Italian railways.
Direct wins on price, ship wins on safety net. DIY by train is ~$40-60 pp vs the ship's $179-199 Cinque Terre tour — a $120-150 pp saving — and the train hop is genuinely easy. But Cinque Terre is the farthest reach from Livorno with the tightest return margin; if you're not confident navigating Italian regional rail under a hard all-aboard clock, the ship's bus (or a direct operator that guarantees your return) is the worry-free call. Never gamble the ship on a missed train.
Good to know
Depart Livorno on the regional train to La Spezia (build in buffer time for potential delays), then purchase the Cinque Terre Treno MS Card (~€19.50) for unlimited village-to-village trains and trail access. Plan to be back at La Spezia station at least 2+ hours before your ship's all-aboard time—Cinque Terre is the farthest reach from port with the tightest return margin, and missed trains are a real risk. Wear comfortable walking shoes for the open trail sections, bring sun protection and water, and carry small cash for the train card and village meals; the trains run frequently enough to self-organize easily, but always confirm return schedules at La Spezia before you go deep into the villages.