Alberobello is a fairy-tale UNESCO World Heritage hillside of over 1,500 trulli — whitewashed conical drystone houses topped with grey limestone cones and painted with mysterious symbols, found nowhere else on the planet at this density. Wandering the Rione Monti and the quieter, more authentic Rione Aia Piccola with a guide who can explain the mortarless drystone craft and the tax-dodging origins of the roofs is genuinely one-of-a-kind. It pairs naturally with Matera on a single inland day, making for the ultimate double-UNESCO Puglia bucket-list run.
What to expect
Rione Monti is the photogenic, busier zone with trulli now housing boutiques and ceramics shops; cross to Rione Aia Piccola for the lived-in, residential trulli that feel untouched. You'll see the two-story Trullo Sovrano and the trullo-shaped Church of Sant'Antonio. The cobbled lanes are charming but uneven. Mornings are noticeably calmer than mid-afternoon when day-trippers peak.
The cruise line's combined Matera+Alberobello day runs ~USD 230-270/person; the equivalent direct combined tour (Pugliamare) is roughly half that. Book direct unless you want zero logistical responsibility on a short call. Alberobello alone is also a doable self-guided stop, but a licensed guide is what turns a pretty photo-op into an understanding of why these roofs exist — well worth the modest direct fee.
Good to know
Alberobello is ~55 km / ~1 hour from Bari port and ~45 min from Matera, which is why the two are so commonly combined into one inland day. Pre-book the combined tour to lock your transport. Bring cash for the small ceramics and food artisans, wear flat shoes for cobbles, and keep one eye on the clock — combined days are long, so confirm a generous return buffer before all-aboard.
Sail there
Luxury cruises that call at Bari — book through us, the fare is identical and your concierge stays on your side.