Alessandro Palombo Profile picture
Mar 11 27 tweets 16 min read Read on X
I'm Italian. I just got back from Rome.

Over dinner, old friends and I started arguing about the same thing we always argue about: which cities in Italy are genuinely incredible but nobody ever talks about?

We went back and forth for hours. By the end of the night, we had a list.

7 hidden cities that most people, including most Italians, will never think to visit, let alone move to.

No crowds. No tourist markup. Insane quality of life.

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Italy has 7,904 municipalities. Tourists visit maybe 15.

These aren't "cheap places to test it out." They're cities where wealthy Italians live their best lives, completely off the radar.

For each one, I broke down property prices, nearest airport, population, who it's actually for, and the honest downsides you should be aware of.

7 cities I'd personally relocate to. Data on every single one:Image
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1/ TRIESTE, The Central European Hybrid

This isn't a typical Italian city. It's Vienna by the sea.

Habsburg architecture, historic literary cafés (Joyce wrote Ulysses here), and a vibe that's half Austrian, half Mediterranean.

I have a close friend from the area. One thing that always struck me: people in Trieste are always impeccably dressed. There's an elegance there you don't find in other Italian cities. It's the Viennese influence.

Understated, refined.

Population: 198,000. This is a REAL city, not a village.

€2,558/sqm (+9.3% YoY). €200-300K buys 80-120 sqm.Image
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Trieste's edge:

Trieste Airport 30 min. But here's what matters: Ljubljana (Slovenia) is 1 hour. Zagreb (Croatia) 2.5 hours. Venice 2 hours. You're at the crossroads of three countries.

Cost of living: €1,600/mo for a single. Rent €900/mo for 80 sqm. Monthly transport pass €40.

Growing tech ecosystem. University of Trieste + SISSA (top physics/math research institute). International community without the tourist inflation.

Slovenia's Alps are a day trip. Croatian coast is a weekend trip.Image
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Trieste truth:

The Bora wind is REAL. Gusts up to 150 km/h in winter. Not a joke. Buildings have handrails bolted to walls for pedestrians.

The city faces east, not south. Cooler summers, colder winters than the rest of Italian coast.

Italian spoken with Slavic influence. Less English than Milan or Florence.

Best for: remote workers who want a real city (not a village), people who value intellectual culture over beach culture, anyone who wants three countries within 2.5 hours.Image
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2/ LUCCA, The Walled City That Time Forgot

4 km of perfectly intact Renaissance walls. You walk or bike on TOP of them. The evening passeggiata on the walls, panoramic views over rooftops and Tuscan countryside, is daily ritual, not tourist attraction.

Flat, bikeable, car-restricted centro storico.

I was in Rome last week and my cousin, who's eaten his way across Italy, told me he's never eaten as well as in Lucca. That says something.

€2,321/sqm (+6.4% YoY). Peripheral areas from €1,440/sqm → 85-130 sqm for €200-300K outside the walls.Image
Lucca's killer advantage:

Pisa Airport is 25 minutes away. Ryanair, easyJet, BA, Lufthansa, KLM. You're connected to all of Europe for €30 flights.

94,000 people. Full services. Strong expat community. Digital nomad retreats are a thing here now.

Florence 90 min by train. Cinque Terre 2 hrs. The sea (Viareggio) 20 min.

Bilingual School Lucca is IN the city (ages 1-18). International School of Florence 1 hr for full IB.

Cost of living: €1,500-1,800/mo for a couple.

Best for: families with kids, remote workers who need airport access, anyone who wants Tuscany without the Florence price tag.Image
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By the way, I write about this every week on Substack. Deep dives on where to live, relocate, and build a life in Europe and beyond.

I'm building the best intelligence resource on this topic on the internet.

Subscribe here:

Now, let's get into more cities.palombo.substack.comImage
3/ LECCE, The Florence of the South

If you've followed me for a while, you know I've talked about Lecce extensively. It's one of my absolute favorites. And the data keeps proving me right.

The Baroque architecture here isn't just "nice." It's carved from golden Leccia stone that glows at sunset like the city is on fire. Every church, every palazzo, every doorframe. Hand-carved.

Population: 93,000. University city. Year-round life.

€1,647/sqm (+6% YoY). Centro €1,852/sqm. Peripheral areas under €1,000/sqm.

€200-300K buys 120-180 sqm. In the centro storico.Image
Lecce's strategic play:

Brindisi Airport 40 min. Ryanair hub with direct flights across Europe.

Salento's best beaches, Gallipoli, Otranto, Porto Cesareo, are 30-45 min away. Adriatic AND Ionian coasts accessible.

Cost of living: €1,300/mo for a single. One-bedroom €500-700/mo. Full dinner with wine €15-20.

Everything is below the Italian national average: food, transport, healthcare.

Growing remote work scene. University of Salento brings 25,000+ students = cafés, nightlife, cultural events year-round.Image
Lecce truth:

Summer is HOT. 35-40°C in July-August. Not mild Mediterranean. Proper southern heat.

Infrastructure is improving but still behind the North. Train connections to Rome take 5-6 hours. You fly or you drive.

Lecce is in Puglia = qualifies for the 7% flat tax on foreign income IF you register in a municipality under 20K people nearby (San Cesario di Lecce, Lizzanello, 10 min away).

Best for: retirees who want culture + beach access + low cost. Remote workers who can handle slower internet. People who care more about beauty than efficiency.Image
4/ MANTOVA, Italy's Most Underrated Renaissance City

Once ruled by the Gonzaga dynasty for 400 years. Palazzo Ducale has 500 rooms. Palazzo Te is one of the greatest Mannerist buildings in existence. Surrounded by three artificial lakes.

And almost NOBODY outside Italy knows it exists.

Population: 50,000. UNESCO World Heritage.

€1,614/sqm (+2% YoY). Centro €1,853/sqm. Outer areas €1,097/sqm.

€200-300K buys 130-270 sqm depending on zone.Image
Mantova's edge:

Verona Airport 30 min. Ryanair, Wizz Air, Volotea. Full European network.

Milan 1.5 hours. Bologna 1.5 hours. Venice 2 hours. Lake Garda 30 min.

You're in the center of Northern Italy's economic powerhouse, Lombardy, at a fraction of Milan's prices.

Mantova was ranked among Italy's top cities for quality of life (Il Sole 24 Ore). Repeatedly.

Cost of living: €1,400-1,700/mo for a couple. Full meal €12-18.Image
Mantova truth:

Po Valley fog is REAL. November-February can feel gray and damp. Summers are humid (35°C+ with continental humidity, not sea breeze).

Not a beach town. Not even close. This is flatland, rice paddies, pumpkin fields.

English is limited outside tourist sites. You need Italian.

But: if you care about Renaissance art, world-class cuisine (tortelli di zucca, sbrisolona), and a city that functions beautifully without a single tourist bus, Mantova is unmatched.

Best for: culture-focused retirees, families (Verona's international schools 30 min), remote workers who want Northern Italy access at Southern Italy prices.Image
5/ ASCOLI PICENO, The Travertine City

Built almost entirely from pale travertine stone. Piazza del Popolo is considered one of the 10 most beautiful squares in Italy. Not by me. By Italians.

Population: 45,000. Medieval streets, olive ascolane (the best fried olives on Earth), and a Saturday market that's been running for centuries.

€1,345/sqm (+3% YoY). Province up 13% YoY. This is accelerating.
€200-300K buys 150-220 sqm.Image
Ascoli's strategic position:

Between mountains and sea. Adriatic coast 30 min east. Sibillini Mountains 30 min west. You get beach AND ski in the same day.

Pescara Airport 1 hr 20 min. Ancona Airport 1 hr 30 min. Rome 2.5 hrs by car.

Not the most connected. This is the honest weakness. You need a car.

Cost of living: among the lowest in Central Italy. €1,200-1,500/mo for a couple.

Marche region = one of Italy's safest. Earthquake-affected areas nearby have additional tax incentives and reconstruction investment.

Best for: retirees who want authentic Italian life without ANY tourist infrastructure. People who value food culture (Ascoli's gastronomic tradition is legendary). Anyone who doesn't need daily flights.Image
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6/ ORVIETO, The City on the Cliff

Perched on a volcanic tufa plateau. You take a funicular UP to the town. 1,200+ Etruscan underground tunnels beneath your feet. One of Italy's greatest Gothic cathedrals above.

Killer offering. Incredible cuisine. Umbrian food is one of Italy's best-kept secrets.

Population: ~21,500. Headquarters of the Slow City (Cittàslow) movement.
€1,578/sqm (+1% YoY).

€200-300K buys 130-190 sqm.Image
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Orvieto's killer advantage:

Rome is 1 HOUR by fast train. This is the single most Rome-accessible small city in Central Italy.

You get medieval hilltop life + Roman infrastructure when you need it.

Strongest American and British expat community in Central Italy. You won't be alone.

Perugia Airport 30 min for regional flights. Fiumicino (Rome) 1 hr 15 min for international.

Orvieto Classico wine. Umbrian truffles. Dinner with local wine: €35 for two.

Cost of living: €1,300-1,500/mo for a couple.

Best for: retirees who want peace + Rome access. Writers, artists, anyone seeking a creative retreat. Couples who want "deep Italy" without isolation.Image
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7/ BERGAMO, The City Everyone Flies Into and Nobody Explores

This is the ultimate hidden-in-plain-sight city.

Orio al Serio is one of Europe's busiest airports. 16 million passengers a year fly in and immediately leave for Milan or Lake Como. Almost nobody looks up.

Meanwhile, Città Alta (the upper town) is one of the most stunning medieval cities in Italy. Venetian walls. Funicular access. Cobblestone piazzas with views of the Alps.

Population: 120,000.

€2,860/sqm city center. Peripheral areas ~€1,773/sqm.Image
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Bergamo's edge:

Orio al Serio Airport is 7 KM from the city center. 15 minutes. Ryanair's biggest Italian hub with direct flights to 130+ destinations across Europe.

Milan is 45 min by train. Lake Como 1 hour. Lake Garda 1 hour. Venice 2.5 hours.

Città Bassa (lower town) is a proper modern city: shopping, restaurants, services. Città Alta (upper town) is your medieval escape. You get both.

Quality of life index: 181.96 (Numbeo). "Very High." Purchasing power rated "Very High." Traffic commute: among the lowest in Italy.

Cost of living: €830/mo for a single (excluding rent). Rent 48.6% LOWER than Lisbon.Image
Bergamo truth:

It's NOT cheap by Southern Italy standards. €2,860/sqm in centro is real money.

Winters are cold. Po Valley fog rolls in. November-February is gray.

Less "charming village" energy, more "functional Northern Italian city." If you want postcard Italy, this isn't it.

But: if you want one of Europe's best-connected airports at your doorstep, Milan-level infrastructure without Milan prices, and a city that consistently ranks among Italy's best for quality of life, Bergamo is the play nobody's making.

Best for: remote workers and founders who fly frequently. Families who want Northern Italian schools + airport access. Anyone who prioritizes connectivity over beach vibes.Image
The comparative picture:

- Most affordable: Ascoli Piceno (€1,345/sqm)
- Best airport access: Bergamo (Orio al Serio, 15 min, 130+ destinations)
- Biggest city/most services: Trieste (198,000)
- Best culture per euro: Mantova
- Best beach access: Lecce (30-45 min to Salento beaches)
- Best Rome access: Orvieto (1 hr fast train)
- Fastest appreciation: Ascoli Piceno province (+13% YoY)Image
Who should consider each:

RETIREES:
→ Orvieto (Rome access + expat community)
→ Lecce (beach + low cost + cuisine)
→ Ascoli Piceno (authentic + affordable)

REMOTE WORKERS / FOUNDERS:
→ Bergamo (130+ destinations from Orio al Serio)
→ Trieste (real city + three-country access)
→ Lucca (Pisa Airport + fiber + Tuscany)

FAMILIES:
→ Lucca (bilingual school in city)
→ Bergamo (Northern Italian schools + connectivity)
→ Mantova (Verona international schools 30 min)

BUDGET OPTIMIZERS:
→ Ascoli Piceno (€1,345/sqm + Marche value)
→ Lecce (€1,647/sqm + 7% flat tax nearby)Image
The honest reality:

These aren't Milan. They don't have English-speaking staff at every café. They don't have Michelin-star restaurants on every corner. Bureaucracy is EVERYWHERE.

What they have: genuine community, architecture that took centuries to build, food that hasn't been adapted for tourists, and a cost of living that lets you actually enjoy life instead of surviving it.

Italy's hidden cities are hidden because they don't market themselves. That's the feature, not the bug.Image
If you're considering a move, three rules:

Visit in WINTER first. Not summer. If you can handle January, you can handle the city.

Hire a local commercialista (tax advisor). Non-negotiable. Don't DIY Italian bureaucracy.

Learn Italian to A2 level BEFORE you go. In these cities, it's not optional.Image
For complete guides on Italy's tax regimes (7% flat tax, €300K non-dom, Digital Nomad Visa), property analysis by region, and cost-of-living breakdowns, plus conversations with expats actually living in these places, I cover it all on Substack.

Subscribe here:

palombo.substack.comImage
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More from @thealepalombo

May 17
A glass of red wine at lunch, cheese with every meal, almost no fish, even on the coast.

This is what people in the world's longest-living region eat. Men there reach 100 at ten times the global rate. Not the Mediterranean diet we've all heard about.

I'm Italian. Longevity isn't my expertise, but the Blue Zone research caught me. I went deep on one question: which other Italian regions have the same patterns, and which qualify for the 7% retirement tax.

Below: Italy's full Blue Zone map. 1 certified, 6 candidates. 6 of 7 also 7% eligible. Plus a livable town for each.

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Quick reality check on what "Blue Zone" actually means before we get into it. It wasn't coined by a wellness app. Two demographers found it.

In 2004, Italian Gianni Pes and Belgian Michel Poulain were studying Sardinian centenarians. They drew blue circles on a map of villages where the centenarian rate was abnormally high. Dan Buettner picked up the brand and made the term global.

The criteria are stricter than most articles imply: rates around 50% above the national average, verified across church, civil, and military records, sustained for decades.

By that bar: Ogliastra is Italy's only certified Blue Zone. Cilento and the Sicilian Madonie have peer-reviewed studies showing similar patterns. Four other Italian regions are reported longevity hotspots but haven't been academically validated yet.

I'll mark each by evidence tier as we go. And by 7% eligibility at the end.

Let’s go.Image
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1/ Ogliastra (Sardinia). Officially certified Blue Zone.

Pes and Poulain's original 2004 map covered 14 mountain villages in southeastern Sardinia: Villagrande Strisaili, Arzana, Baunei, Talana, Urzulei, Perdasdefogu, and others.

Stats: highest concentration of male centenarians on earth. The Melis family of Perdasdefogu holds the Guinness World Record for the longest combined sibling lifespan, awarded in 2012 with nine siblings whose combined age was 818 years and 205 days.

Diet: pane carasau, pecorino sardo, cannonau wine, fava beans, almost no fish despite the coast.

Lifestyle: shepherds walked 5-10 miles a day on mountain slopes into their 80s.

Livable nearby: Tortolì (10K, coastal, hospital, airport 15 min, 7% eligible). No big city within an hour. Nuoro (35K, 1h15 inland) is the closest provincial capital.

The gold standard. If you're going to see one Italian longevity zone, see this one firstImage
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Read 19 tweets
May 14
I'm Italian, living in Portugal. From Lisbon, the Spanish border is two hours east.

I'm in Extremadura more than I'm in Porto.

Almost every foreigner who comes to Spain does the same trip:
Madrid, Barcelona, maybe Sevilla, Granada or Valencia.

The Spaniards I know don't spend their weekends there. They drive inland. To Castile, Extremadura, Aragón, Galicia. The interior that emptied out since 1950, what they call la "España Vaciada".

That's where the country still lives.

10 places I've stayed in. Some many times.

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How I filtered. Three things.

1. The history has to still be in use. Walls being walked on, monasteries with people inside, aqueducts still carrying water. Not behind glass.
2. The town has to function in February. Tapas bars open, schools open, doctors who'll see you that week. Not a place that empties on October 15.
3. It has to be reachable. From Madrid, Lisbon, Barcelona, or a regional airport. No five-hour drives.

Mallorca and Costa del Sol fail the second test. Both gorgeous, both off.

One important condition: go as a guest, not as a customer. These towns are still themselves because their visitors are mostly Spaniards. Don't be the one who turns them into Tulum.

2 in Extremadura, 1 in Andalucía, 1 in Castilla-La Mancha, 1 in Aragón, 1 in Castile-León, 1 in Navarra, 1 in País Vasco, 1 in Asturias, 1 in Galicia. Two nights each, minimum.

Sergio (Asturias) and Luis (Galicia) read this and corrected me on the north. Any mistakes left are mine.

Four also happen to be livable year-round: Cáceres, Cuenca, Hondarribia, Pontevedra. I'll mark them.

Let's go.Image
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1/ Cáceres (Extremadura)

Population 96,000. Livable year-round.

The most intact medieval old town in Spain. Cáceres sits 90 km inland from the Portuguese border. You can walk the old town in thirty minutes. In that walk you pass Roman walls, Arab alleyways, and Renaissance mansions. UNESCO listed it in 1986.

The Plaza Mayor is one of Spain's largest, framed by a sloping wall of 14th-century towers. Behind it, the Ciudad Monumental: 30+ noble towers, dozens of mansions, the Casa de las Cigüeñas (House of the Storks), the Aljibe (the Arab cistern), the Jewish quarter at San Antonio. Game of Thrones filmed King's Landing scenes here. Anything set in 15th-century Spain was probably shot here too.

Distance: 3h from Madrid by Alvia train. 3h30 by car. 4h from Lisbon by car. Closest airport: Badajoz, 1h south.

Eat: jamón ibérico de bellota (Extremadura is the cradle), migas extremeñas, Torta del Casar cheese. Pitarra wine straight from the barrel.

If you have one stop in Extremadura, make it this one. I keep going back.Image
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Read 21 tweets
May 9
I'm Italian. Greece has been my second country for years.

The Greeks I know rarely spend their summers on the cruise islands. Not Santorini. Not Mykonos. Not Crete. Not Rhodes.

They take the ferry from Piraeus to islands the world hasn't found, or drive into a continental mainland that foreign lists never mention.

Greece is the most layered civilization in Europe.

10 underrated places where the kafeneio is real, the ouzo is local, and history isn't behind glass.

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How I filtered. Three rules:

- History that doesn't sit behind glass. Frescoes still being painted, monasteries still inhabited, Roman aqueducts still carrying water.
- Real Greek life. Kafeneios, schools, fishermen, not the postcard version that empties on October 15.
- Reachable from Athens, Thessaloniki, or a small regional airport without a four-hour ordeal.

Same logic of my Italian selection. Santorini and Mykonos fail rule two. Both are gorgeous. Both stay off the list.

Four in Peloponnese, three in Epirus, one in Macedonia, two in small Cyclades. Two nights minimum per place. Greece reveals itself slowly.

This is a travel list first. Three of these places (Nafplio, Ioannina, Kastoria) are also genuinely livable year-round, and I'll flag them when we get there.

Let's go.Image
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1/ Nafplio (Peloponnese)

Population 14,000. Livable year-round.

The first capital of modern Greece, between 1828 and 1834. A four-year window of Italianate civility before Athens took over and the country reset itself around the Acropolis. Nafplio kept the architecture of those years intact: a Venetian harbor, a neoclassical lower town, three fortresses watching everything.

Palamidi, the upper fortress, is reached by 999 stone steps cut into the rock. Bourtzi, a tiny Venetian fortlet, sits on its own island in the bay. Akronafplia, the oldest, is built into the medieval castle hill above the old town. Capodistrias, the first head of independent Greece, was assassinated outside the church of Agios Spyridon in 1831. The bullet hole is still in the doorframe.

Two hours from Athens by car on the new highway. Buses run every hour from Kifissos.

Eat: bougatsa for breakfast, fresh fish at the harborfront tavernas, the local wine of the Argolida.

The Athenian default for a real weekend. Foreign tourists almost never come. The first time I sat in Syntagma Square at midnight in October, with the Bourtzi lit up across the water, I understood why every Greek I knew had told me to start here.Image
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Read 21 tweets
May 6
I'm from Central Italy.

The Italians I know rarely spend their weekends in the hotspot cities.

Not Florence. Not Rome. Not Siena. They drive an hour east, or south, to towns no foreign list ever mentions.

Central Italy is the most concentrated cluster of beauty in the world.

9 underrated towns where the piazza is yours, the trattoria is real, and the Renaissance still feels personal.

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Four things I screen for, in order:

1. Cultural depth. A fresco, piazza, festival, ruin you can't see anywhere else.
2. Real life. Bakeries, schools, doctors. Not a film set rented out from May to October.
3. "Beauty without the crush". Visitable in August without August ruining it.
4. Accessibility. Reachable from Rome, Florence, Bologna, or Ancona without a four-hour ordeal.

San Gimignano is gorgeous. Left it off. Fails the last two. Same for Assisi on a weekend in May (I've been there).

Three Marche, two Umbria, two Tuscany, two Lazio. Two nights minimum per town. Anything less and you miss the tempo.

This is mostly a travel list, but a few of these towns are also genuinely livable year-round.

Let's begin.Image
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1/ Ascoli Piceno (Marche)

Population 47,000.

Piazza del Popolo is one of the three most beautiful squares in Italy. The only one most foreigners have never heard of. Travertine paving so polished it mirrors the sky on a wet morning. Renaissance arcades on three sides. Caffè Meletti, an Art Nouveau bar untouched since 1907, on the fourth.

Two rivers wrap the historic center. Over a hundred medieval towers once stood here; about fifty are still visible. More towers than San Gimignano, in a town six times the size that doesn't make a tourist industry of them.

Train from Rome 3h30, from Ancona 1h30 by car. Best base: a small hotel inside the centro storico. You walk everywhere.

Eat olive all'ascolana, the fried stuffed olives invented here. The version at Migliori, on Piazza Arringo, is the original.

I've taken five different friends here. Not one of them had heard of Ascoli before. All five came back.Image
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Read 20 tweets
May 2
Everyone praises the Swiss Alps.

Almost nobody talks about the Italian ones. Which is strange. The Dolomites are on the Italian side.

Same Mont Blanc and Matterhorn views. Better food. Better wine. Top-tier healthcare. Real working towns where Italians actually live year-round.
And property at a third of the Swiss price.

One of the most underpriced retirement lifestyles in Europe.

Here are 11 alpine towns to actually retire to.

6 in the Dolomites, 5 in the Western Alps.

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First, why that? It's mostly a marketing story.

To be clear: the Swiss reputation is fully earned. World-class healthcare, infrastructure, public services, the Alps as national identity. They built something extraordinary, and they deserve every bit of it. The point isn't that Switzerland is overrated.

The point is that Italian alpine country sits at almost the same level on most lifestyle dimensions, and almost nobody outside Italy talks about it.
Switzerland and Austria spent the 20th century branding themselves as alpine destinations. Italy never did. Italians treat their mountains as a place to live, not a product to sell.

The asymmetry is striking. The Italian Dolomites (UNESCO heritage, 18 mountain groups, hundreds of peaks above 3,000m) see a fraction of the international attention of a single Swiss canton. Mont Blanc has two sides: the French (Chamonix) marketed globally for a century, the Italian (Aosta Valley, Courmayeur) quieter, cheaper, equivalent views.

For a retiree, that asymmetry is a gift. World-class alpine without world-class prices.

How I built this list: I called friends from the North for ground-truth on what daily life actually looks like (bakery hours in February, which hospitals work, where the locals send their parents). Merged with my own years in the Italian Alps and Dolomites. Cross-checked against the data: Sole 24 Ore Qualità della Vita rankings, ISTAT population, regional healthcare scores, real estate platforms.

11 towns. The output of those findings.Image
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What you get:

Real year-round working towns where Italians actually retire. Food and wine cultures intact (Teroldego in Trentino, Lagrein in Alto Adige, Nebbiolo at altitude in Valtellina). Some of the best regional healthcare in Italy, more on that below. Train connections to Munich, Zurich, Vienna, and Milan in 2-4 hours.

11 towns. 6 in the Dolomites, 5 in the Western Alps. Cortina and Courmayeur excluded (too touristy, too expensive, too seasonal).

For each: prices, airport, hospital, population, who it's for, and what's not perfect.

Starting with the Dolomites.Image
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Read 22 tweets
Apr 29
I've been covering Italy's hidden cities for a while.

Recently a reader asked a question that made me think harder: where in Italy can you actually retire by the sea?

Not Capri. Not Portofino. The real version of that life.

Then Italy raised the eligibility cap for the 7% flat tax reform from 20,000 to 30,000 residents. Roughly 70 new towns just qualified. Ostuni is the headline. Roseto degli Abruzzi is the surprise.

The question became more urgent.

Here are 11 real coastal towns where Italians themselves retire.

6 qualify for the 7% flat tax. 5 don't, but earn their place anyway.

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Italy's 7% flat tax on foreign income, for 10 years, is the best retirement deal in Europe right now.

Eligibility: a foreign pension (state, occupational, private annuity, US Social Security) plus a Southern town under the population cap. Until April that cap was 20,000. The reform raised it to 30,000.

Six towns below qualify under the new cap. Two of those – Ostuni and Roseto degli Abruzzi – are newly eligible since April. Five don't qualify, but I'd recommend them to a parent or close friend who wanted to retire by the sea in Italy without the tax angle.

For each: property prices, nearest airport, hospital access, population, who it's for, and the honest downsides.

11 cities. Data on every single one. Starting with the 7%-eligible:Image
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1/ PIZZO CALABRO, The Calabrian Cliff Town 🇮🇹

Population 9,200. 7% eligible.

A medieval town on a cliff over the Tyrrhenian, the Aeolian Islands smoking on the horizon at dusk. Tartufo gelato that locals will fight you over. A real fishing port that still feeds the town.

€1,437/sqm. €250K buys a 150 sqm villa with sea views.

Pizzo's edge:

Lamezia Airport 15 minutes away. Ryanair to 52 destinations across 19 countries. That's the unlock that makes everything else work for a town this small.

Hospital in Vibo Valentia, 25 minutes. SSN healthcare functions properly.

A friend's parents moved here from Milan three years ago. She said: "In Milan we knew the doorman. Here, by month four, we knew the baker, the butcher, the doctor, and the fishmonger. They knew us back." That's what the regime really gives you.

Pizzo truth:

Winter is real. November to March the rhythm slows. Restaurants reduce hours, not all closed. English is rare outside the airport so you will need Italian.

Best for: retirees who want the lowest tax + lowest €/sqm combination on the list and don't mind learning Italian and absorbing a seasonal swing.Image
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Read 22 tweets

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