The Amalfi Coast — A Private Guide to the World's Most Extraordinary Coastline
By Melissa Martin, Founder & CEO, Sculptured Journeys
There are places on earth that require no introduction and yet resist all description. The Amalfi Coast is one of them. I have returned to it more times than I can count — first as a traveller falling in love with Italy, later as someone who has made it her life's work to understand what makes a destination truly extraordinary. The Costiera Amalfitana has never once disappointed me. It has, however, changed. And knowing how to navigate that change — how to experience it at its finest, on your own terms, beyond the reach of the summer crowds — is precisely what this guide is for.
This is not a list of things to do. It is an intimate portrait of a coastline I know deeply, written for those who wish to experience it as our most discerning clients do: privately, unhurriedly, and without compromise.
The Landscape: Built Into the Rock

Before anything else, you must understand what the Amalfi Coast physically is — because nothing about it is accidental. This is a coastline carved into near-vertical limestone cliffs that plunge directly into the Tyrrhenian Sea. The villages do not sit beside the coast. They grow out of it — stacked, tiered, terraced into cliff faces at seemingly impossible angles, connected by staircases rather than streets, built over centuries by people who had no flat land to spare.
The Monti Lattari form the dramatic spine of the Sorrentine Peninsula, rising to over 1,400 metres and dropping almost sheer to the Tyrrhenian Sea. The famous SS163 — the road of a thousand bends — was blasted from the rock face in 1852, connecting the coastal villages for the first time and creating one of the most spectacular drives in the world. In the quieter months of May, September and October, travelling this road with a private driver is an experience in itself — the cliff-hugging bends, the sudden openings onto the sea, the villages appearing and disappearing as the road rises and falls. Our clients travel this coast by private driver, private helicopter or private boat depending on their itinerary and their wishes. Each reveals a different face of the same extraordinary landscape.
The lemon groves terraced into the cliffs above the sea are not decorative. The sfusato amalfitano lemon — elongated, intensely fragrant, with almost no pith — is unique to this coast and protected by IGP designation, the European Union's Protected Geographical Indication, which ensures that only lemons grown along these specific coastal terraces can carry the name. It perfumes the air in spring and early summer, finds its way into every kitchen, and becomes the limoncello that ends every meal. To walk through a lemon grove above Positano in May, the air thick with blossom, is to understand something essential about this place.
The Gateway: Naples, Pompeii and the Road South

Most journeys to the Amalfi Coast begin in Rome or Naples, and the drive south is an experience in its own right — one of the great approaches to one of the world's great coastlines. A natural and deeply rewarding stop along the way is Pompeii.
Preserved beneath volcanic ash since the eruption of Vesuvius in 79 AD, Pompeii is not a ruin in any conventional sense. It is a city — its streets, bakeries, frescoed villas and intimate domestic spaces intact in extraordinary detail, suspended at the precise moment the ancient world went silent. To walk through it with one of our private guides is to experience something entirely removed from the ordinary visit. Our guides are exceptionally knowledgeable, eloquent and deeply attuned to this place — they bring the city alive through context, story and a rare understanding of what these streets, these walls and these objects mean. We arrange private early access before the site opens, which transforms the experience entirely.
From Pompeii, the Sorrentine Peninsula unfolds beautifully as the road follows the edge of the coast. Sorrento is a gracious and elegant place — a lovely stop for a long lunch by the sea, or a night or two for those who wish to ease gently into the pace of southern Italy before the Amalfi Coast begins in earnest.
Nerano: Where the Coast Begins
At the very tip of the Sorrentine Peninsula, looking directly across to Capri, Nerano is the kind of village that rewards those who find it. Quietly beautiful and unhurried, it is best approached by boat. The local restaurants — among them Da Tommaso and Ristorante Maria Grazia — serve some of the finest simple food on this stretch of coast, and spaghetti alla Nerano, the dish of fried zucchini and Provolone del Monaco that was born here, remains one of the great pleasures of arriving in this part of Italy.
Positano: The Icon, Approached Correctly

Positano does not need to be described. Every photograph of the Amalfi Coast that has ever made someone want to visit is essentially a photograph of Positano — the pastel-coloured houses cascading down the cliff face, the bougainvillea, the dome of the Chiesa di Santa Maria Assunta. It is impossibly, almost theatrically beautiful. The village is best explored on foot in the early morning before nine o'clock, or in the early evening from around five or six — the quieter hours when the light is at its most extraordinary and the lanes belong to those already there.
The main beach draws large numbers of visitors in high season and is not where we direct our clients. Our preferred properties all offer private beach access or private boat transfers to more secluded coves along the coast — remote, crystal-clear, and reached only by water. Positano looks directly out onto the Galli Islands, the small archipelago just offshore where Rudolf Nureyev once lived, and the view across the water to these jagged limestone outcrops is one of the quiet pleasures of being here.
The pleasure of Positano for our clients is found in the detail — a morning gelato before the day begins, a long lunch somewhere unhurried, the rhythm of a place that still, beneath the attention it receives, has a genuine character. We curate everything around each client's pace and interests, keeping the itinerary private and the discoveries their own.
Le Sirenuse is one of the most storied hotels in the world. Founded in 1951 by the Sersale family and still owned and managed by them today, it has held its position at the summit of the Positano experience for over seventy years — receiving writers, artists, royalty and those who simply understand that some addresses are irreplaceable. Our relationship with this property is one of long standing, and our clients benefit from the priority and care that comes with it.
The interiors are exceptional — a deeply personal collection of antique and contemporary furniture sourced from Europe and the East, the rooms each distinct in character, the bathrooms in marble with handmade tiles, every window framing the sea. It is the kind of hotel where the aesthetic is felt rather than designed. The cuisine at La Sponda — candlelit each evening with hundreds of candles — is romantic and serious in equal measure, the wine list considered, the bar at Aldo's a place where a single Negroni can become an entire evening. For our clients staying here, we arrange private hikes through the hidden stairways of Positano — the network of stepped lanes, small piazzas and beautiful chapels that the village keeps to itself — along with early morning yoga, private wine tasting and bespoke boat charters along the coast.

Il San Pietro di Positano is, without question, one of my most adored properties on the Amalfi Coast. There are hotels that are exceptional. And then there is Il San Pietro — a place that occupies an entirely different category.
The story begins with Carlino Cinque, a dreamer of extraordinary conviction who rowed his fishing boat each afternoon to a limestone promontory two kilometres south of Positano and imagined something the world had not yet seen. He built it himself — architect, engineer, site supervisor and interior designer in one — carving the hotel into the cliff face on multiple levels, blasting an elevator shaft through the rock to connect the main lobby, 88 metres above the sea, to the beach club below. When Carlino died in 1984, 2,000 people attended his funeral. His niece Virginia Attanasio has been the soul of Il San Pietro ever since, and her sons Carlo and Vito Cinque now run the property with a standard of hospitality that has never wavered across three generations.
The position is unlike anything else on this coast — the hotel dominates its promontory with a quiet authority that is almost painterly. Multiple restaurants serve exceptional cuisine, drawing from the hotel's own magnificent kitchen gardens — abundant, productive, supplying the kitchens with vegetables, herbs and fruit through the season. The terrace for cocktails is one of the great sunset experiences on the Amalfi Coast. The tennis court, carved into the rock face, is among the most spectacular in the world. The private beach and beach club are reached by the famous cliff elevator — one of the most extraordinary arrivals in Italian hospitality — and cocktails on the beach as the sun drops behind the cliffs above are a memory our clients carry home. The rooftop swimming pool looks out across the full panorama of the coast. Over 200 staff ensure that every detail is attended to with a warmth and consistency that only a family-owned hotel of this depth and history can sustain.

Villa Treville is the property on this coast that we speak of with particular reverence. Once the private residence of Franco Zeffirelli, it is a small, extraordinarily refined collection of suites and villas — more private residence than hotel — set in terraced gardens above a private sea platform. It accepts very few guests. It is, for those who know it, the most exclusive address on the Amalfi Coast.
Set just beyond the centre of Positano, Villa Treville offers a rare sense of seclusion while remaining effortlessly connected to the village. Access is intentionally understated — a short drive, or more memorably, a private boat transfer that glides guests directly to the estate’s discreet jetty in just minutes. From here, the property reveals itself across cascading levels of historic villas and lush Mediterranean gardens, each vantage point framing uninterrupted views over Positano and the coastline. A private beach platform provides direct sea access reserved exclusively for guests — an exceptional privilege along this stretch of coast — while dining and social spaces remain deliberately intimate, reserved primarily for those in residence. Once a gathering place for the world’s cultural elite, the estate retains a quiet artistic legacy, now reimagined as one of the Amalfi Coast’s most private and architecturally distinctive retreats.

Praiano, Furore and Conca dei Marini
Between Positano and Amalfi, the coast reveals itself more quietly. Praiano is less visited and all the better for it — a place that has not yet entirely become a destination, where the evening light looking back towards Positano is extraordinary. Furore is one of the coast's most singular discoveries — a narrow inlet cut so deeply into the cliff that it is invisible from the road above, a small beach and a handful of houses at the bottom, the sea. Conca dei Marini offers the Grotta dello Smeraldo, a sea cave whose submerged light turns the water an extraordinary shade of green — one of the coast's genuine surprises.
Amalfi: The Historic Heart

The town of Amalfi is a reminder of what this coast once was — one of the four great medieval Italian Maritime Republics, its merchants trading across the Mediterranean, its legal code governing maritime law across the region for centuries. The Duomo di Sant'Andrea — with its Arab-Norman facade, black and white mosaic decoration and bronze doors cast in Constantinople — is extraordinary and should not be missed. The surrounding streets, with their paper shops, ceramic workshops and small restaurants in courtyard gardens, reward unhurried exploration.
Hotel Santa Caterina is a family-owned hotel of genuine elegance built into the cliff above Amalfi, its terraced gardens of lemon and orange trees descending to a private beach reached by funicular. It has the feeling of a place that has always been here and always will be.
Borgo Santandrea is one of the very few hotels on the Amalfi Coast to offer a private beach exclusively for its guests — a rare and singular privilege. Nestled into the cliffside between Amalfi and Conca dei Marini, its rooms frame the open sea through expansive floor-to-ceiling windows, while many suites feature their own plunge pools. A distinguished collection of mid-century furnishings imbues the property with timeless character and refined personality. For those who value intimacy, impeccable design, and the quiet pleasures of the coast, Borgo Santandrea remains an address of singular distinction.

Atrani: The Village That Time Forgot
Just around the headland from Amalfi, reachable on foot in minutes, Atrani is one of the smallest municipalities in Italy and one of the most unexpectedly lovely — its small piazza sitting just metres from the sea, none of Amalfi's visitor infrastructure and all of its beauty. Walking here in the early evening for an aperitivo in the square is a quiet pleasure worth knowing.
Ravello: Above the World

Ravello does not belong to the coast in the way the other villages do. It rises above it — 350 metres above sea level, reached by a road that climbs through terraced gardens and chestnut woods — and looks down on everything below with a certain aristocratic remove. Andre Gide described it as nearer to the sky than to the shore. He was right.
Writers, composers and artists have been drawn here for centuries. Wagner found the inspiration for Parsifal in these gardens. The Villa Rufolo hosts the Ravello Festival each summer — a programme of classical music of the highest calibre, performed on a clifftop terrace with the entire coast spread below and the sea darkening towards evening. To attend one of the finest concerts here is an experience that requires advance knowledge and planning — tickets for the most extraordinary performances are not widely known outside Italy and not easily obtained. This is precisely the kind of access we hold for our clients.
From Ravello it is a short and beautiful stroll to Villa Cimbrone, a medieval villa whose gardens are among the most romantic on the coast. The Belvedere of Infinity — a terrace at the garden's edge with a row of classical busts and a view that encompasses the entire Gulf of Salerno — is one of the most beautiful places in Italy to stand quietly and look.
Palazzo Avino — the pink palace of Ravello — is the other exceptional address we work with in the village. Its position and character are distinct from the Caruso, and for clients whose instinct runs towards something more intimate and architectural, it is a magnificent choice.
Caruso, A Belmond Hotel stands on a quiet piazzetta in Ravello's centre, a former palazzo that has become one of the most celebrated hotels on the coast. The infinity pool commands a view that spans the entire coastline south towards Amalfi and beyond to the island of Capri — the kind of view that leaves you speechless. The pool club below, with its shaded cabanas, is the place to spend a long afternoon in complete peace. The cuisine is deeply rooted in the traditions of Campania — fresh, considered and beautifully matched with wine. The village of Ravello is only a short stroll from the hotel and rewards every step.

Minori and Maiori: The Further Reaches
East of Ravello, the coast continues to Minori and Maiori — less visited, more local, with wide beaches and a pace of life that feels closer to the real Campania. We take clients here occasionally, always by water, and the contrast with Positano is striking and deliberately so. Maiori is the furthest point east we travel on this stretch of coast.
Private Villas on the Amalfi Coast
For clients who seek complete privacy — a property entirely their own, with dedicated concierge services, private staff, and the freedom to move at their own pace — we source a curated selection of private villas along the coast and on Capri. These are extraordinary residences, each with its own character, position and history — not rental properties in any conventional sense.
Private villas in this region vary considerably in size, position and category. Pricing reflects the property, the season, and the level of service included. Generally, exclusive villa rentals in this area begin around 35,000 to 40,000 euros per week for a Saturday to Saturday booking, with the finest properties and high season bookings — particularly July and August — commanding significantly more. The most exceptional villas book out a year or more in advance during peak season, and for ultra-high-net-worth clients who value flexibility as much as privacy, a private superyacht charter during the height of summer can offer a more considered and often extraordinary alternative.
All villa rentals arranged through Sculptured Journeys include our full concierge services — private chef arrangements, boat transfers, drivers at disposal, restaurant reservations, and the accumulated knowledge of a team that knows this coastline intimately.
The Islands: Capri, Ischia and Beyond

No visit to this coast is complete without time on the water, and no time on the water is complete without the islands.
Capri is not an island you pass through. It is one you inhabit — and the distinction matters entirely. The secret lies in timing and discernment. Come in the shoulder season — May through June, or September into October — and stay for several nights. Once the day visitors depart, the island assumes a quieter, more intimate character. The piazzetta empties. The light softens. Capri, finally, belongs to those who remained.
Our clients arrive as they should — by private helicopter transfer from Naples or the Amalfi Coast, or by private boat across waters that, on a clear morning, are an extraordinary shade of blue. The arrival itself sets the tone for everything that follows.
We place our clients in some of the most exclusive private villas on the island — residences of genuine distinction, priced accordingly, and staffed to the highest standard. Full butler service, dedicated housekeeping, and the kind of attention to detail that transforms a villa into a private world.
For those who prefer a hotel to a private villa, we work with properties on the island that meet our standard without compromise. Among them, Jumeirah Capri Palace in Anacapri — a genuinely world-class address, home to one of the Mediterranean’s most celebrated medical spas, and positioned away from the crowds in the quieter upper reaches of the island. And Tiberio Palace, elegantly situated in Capri town itself, where the design is impeccable and the terrace views across the bay are, quite simply, difficult to leave.
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Anacapri, the island’s quieter upper village, rewards those who seek it. Removed from the bustle of the Marina and the main piazzetta, it offers a different Capri entirely — unhurried, residential, and possessed of views that stop you mid-sentence.
Beyond the villas, we curate the island’s finest private experiences. Cultural tours led by those who know Capri not as a destination but as a place lived in and understood. Private shopping arranged with the discretion our clients expect. And at dusk, a sunset journey by private boat around the island — which is, without exception, the moment Capri reveals itself most completely.
From the water, the island is a revelation. We take our clients through turquoise waters into the Green Grotto, beneath the sacred stalactites of the White Grotto, and past the natural arch — the elephant’s trunk — that frames the sea between Marina Piccola and Marina Grande. The Faraglioni rock formations rise from the water with a drama that photographs never fully capture. And weather and vessel permitting, our captains can navigate through the central opening of the rocks themselves — a passage that requires both skill and the right boat, and which those who experience it do not easily forget.
On the water’s edge and beneath canopies of lemon trees, we reserve tables at the finest restaurants on the island — among them a Ma Re Capri and Il Riccio, perched above the Blue Grotto with a menu dedicated entirely by the morning's catch; Da Paolino, where dining beneath a ceiling of lemon trees has made it one of the most coveted tables on the island for decades; and Aurora, the islands most enduring institution, where the energy is unmistakable and the food entirely worthy of the reputation. For those seeking something quieter and more considered, Da Tonino rewards those who seek it out — refined, unhurried, and consistently exceptional. And for the definitive fine dining experience on Capri, L'Olivo at Capri Palace holds two Michelin stars and remains the benchmark against which everything else is measured.
This is Capri approached correctly. Not rushed, not crowded — but known, at a pace it deserves, with the access that makes all the difference. The island rewards those who linger. It always has.

Ischia is the thermal island of the archipelago — larger, more varied, remarkable for its volcanic landscape and natural hot springs. It is a beautiful destination for private boat excursions and a wonderful place to spend a night or more. The smaller island of Procida lies close by and makes for a beautiful circumnavigation by boat — its painted harbour at Marina Corricella is one of the most visually distinctive sights in the Bay of Naples.
Private Yachting: The Finest Way to Know This Coast
To experience the Amalfi Coast and its islands from the water is to know them in a way the road cannot offer. The sea reveals a different face entirely — cliff faces without roads, coves without names, private moorings at the foot of properties that cannot be reached any other way.
We design bespoke private yacht charters across a range of vessels and durations. A three to five day charter covering Capri, Ischia and the Amalfi Coast is one of our most requested itineraries — enough time to move at a proper pace, anchor in quiet coves, and take dinner ashore at a favourite seaside restaurant as the sun goes down. For those who wish to venture further, we design extended superyacht journeys combining the Amalfi Coast with Sardinia, with the island of Ponza, or continuing south to Sicily — journeys of ten days to over one month that represent some of the finest sailing available in the Mediterranean.
Our fleet ranges from elegant 80 foot yachts to superyachts up to 100 metres. Every vessel comes with a dedicated professional crew. Every itinerary is designed entirely around the client.

Private Experiences: What We Curate
The Path of the Gods: The Sentiero degli Dei is one of the legendary walks of southern Italy — a trail along the ridge of the Lattari Mountains above the coast, with views across the sea that justify every step of the ascent. We arrange private guided walks with the finest local mountain guides, managing all logistics so that the walk itself is the only thing on the mind.
Private Sunset Charters with Seaside Dining: One of the great pleasures of the Amalfi Coast is to be on the water as the sun goes down — the cliffs turning gold, the villages lit from within, the sea darkening. We arrange private sunset charters combined with dinner at a carefully chosen seaside restaurant, arriving by boat as any arrival on this coast should be.
Limoncello and the Local Towns: The sfusato amalfitano lemon is at the heart of this coast's identity. For a true taste of the Amalfi Coast, we arrange private limoncello experiences — visits to local producers, tastings, and an understanding of how this singular citrus moves from the cliff-face terraces into the glass. Combined with private exploration of the smaller coastal towns, this is one of the most genuine encounters with the coast's character that we offer.

Private Cooking Classes: The culinary tradition of this coast is bold, seasonal and deeply rooted in the landscape. Private cooking classes — in cliff-top kitchens, with local ingredients, guided by those who have cooked this food their entire lives — are among the most memorable experiences we arrange here.
Ceramics and Craft: The ceramic tradition of the Amalfi Coast — the bold colours, the lemon motifs, the hand-painted tiles — is genuine craft with centuries of roots. We know where the finest ceramic artists work and arrange private visits and commissions.
Pompeii with a Private Guide: A private guided visit to Pompeii — with early access, an exceptional guide, and the kind of depth and context that transforms an archaeological site into an unforgettable encounter with history.

Private Helicopter Charters: For clients who wish to arrive directly to a clifftop property or transfer between locations, we arrange private helicopter charters throughout the region.
Private Drivers at Disposal: Every Sculptured Journeys itinerary on the Amalfi Coast includes private drivers available throughout — managing the complexity of the road so that our clients experience only the beauty.
When to Visit
This is perhaps the most important practical question we are asked about the Amalfi Coast, and our answer is consistent: May to early June, or mid-September through October.
May and early June offer the coast at its most beautiful — the lemon blossom is on the trees, the light is extraordinary, the temperatures warm but not oppressive, and the visitor numbers have not yet reached their summer peak. The sea is swimmable from late May. The hotels are at their most attentive.
Mid-September to October is our other preferred window. The summer crowds have largely departed. The sea is still warm. The light has changed — softer, more golden, with a quality that belongs to autumn in southern Italy and cannot be found anywhere else. The restaurants are at their most focused. The villages are more themselves.
July and August are high season. The coast is magnificent and our preferred properties offer genuine exclusivity regardless of the date — but for clients on a private yacht during these months, the experience acquires an additional dimension of freedom. The water is uncrowded even when the coast is not, and the ability to anchor in a quiet cove while the world moves elsewhere is one of the quieter satisfactions of this kind of travel.

Families on the Amalfi Coast
The architecture of this coast — built into cliff faces, organised around staircases rather than level ground — means that several of our preferred properties are genuinely unsuitable for very young children. This is a physical reality, and we are always honest about it.
For families travelling with children, we typically recommend private villas, which offer the space and safety that cliff-edge hotels cannot, or properties specifically suited to families — including certain hotels in Sorrento, and on Capri where we know the terrain is more accommodating. Children are generally welcomed from around 12 years of age at the cliff-top properties, though this varies by property and is always discussed in detail during the consultation process.
BEGIN YOUR PRIVATE AMALFI COAST JOURNEY
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the best time to visit the Amalfi Coast for a private luxury experience?
May to early June and mid-September through October are the seasons we consistently recommend. The coast is at its most beautiful, the hotels are at their most attentive, and the villages retain something of their authentic character. July and August are spectacular but require careful planning — a private yacht charter during these months resolves many of the challenges entirely.
Which are the finest luxury hotels on the Amalfi Coast?
Our Gold List properties include Le Sirenuse and Il San Pietro di Positano in Positano, Villa Treville just outside Positano, Borgo Santandrea and Hotel Santa Caterina in Amalfi, Caruso A Belmond Hotel and Palazzo Avino in Ravello. Each has a distinct character and suits a different kind of client. We match properties to people, not the other way around.
Can I arrive at the Amalfi Coast by private helicopter?
Yes. We arrange private helicopter transfers throughout the region — from Naples, Rome, and other departure points directly to clifftop properties and helipads along the coast. It is the most dramatic arrival the coast offers and, on busy days, also the most efficient.
What does a private yacht charter on the Amalfi Coast involve?
We design bespoke private yacht charters ranging from three to five days exploring the coast and the islands of Capri and Ischia, to extended superyacht journeys combining the Amalfi Coast with Sardinia, Ponza or Sicily. Every charter is designed entirely around the client — vessel, itinerary, pace, and the experiences we arrange along the way.
Are the Amalfi Coast's luxury hotels suitable for families with young children?
Several of our preferred cliff-edge properties are genuinely unsuitable for very young children due to their architecture and terrain. We are always candid about this. For families, we typically recommend private villas or properties in Sorrento and on Capri where the terrain and hotel design are more appropriate. We guide every family to the right arrangement for their specific situation during the consultation process.
How far in advance should I book a private villa on the Amalfi Coast?
Private villas in this region, particularly on Capri, are among the most sought-after in Italy. We recommend beginning the conversation at least twelve months in advance for peak season. July and August villas book earliest and are priced at a significant premium — a private superyacht charter during these months is an exceptional and often more flexible alternative for our most discerning clients.
What private experiences does Sculptured Journeys arrange on the Amalfi Coast?
We curate private guided walks along the Sentiero degli Dei, cooking classes, wine tastings, limoncello experiences, visits to ceramic artists, private guided tours of Pompeii with early access, sunset charters with seaside dining, private boat transfers, helicopter charters, and drivers at disposal throughout. We also secure access to the Ravello Festival and other experiences that require the kind of local knowledge and relationships that most visitors simply do not have.
What is the best way to travel between villages on the Amalfi Coast?
By private boat wherever the itinerary allows. Moving by water between villages reveals a completely different face of the coast and is often more practical during busy periods. We also arrange private drivers for road transfers and private helicopter and private jet charters for those who wish to arrive directly. The choice depends entirely on the client's itinerary and preferences.
Can Sculptured Journeys arrange a visit to Pompeii as part of an Amalfi Coast journey?
Yes — it is one of our most rewarding inclusions. A certified private guide with early-access entry and a visit timed to the quietest hours of the day transforms Pompeii entirely. It works particularly well as part of a journey arriving from Rome, with Pompeii as a meaningful stop on the way south to the coast.
Is the Amalfi Coast suitable for a superyacht journey to Sicily or Sardinia?
Absolutely. We design multi-destination superyacht itineraries that begin on the Amalfi Coast and extend south to Sicily, across to Sardinia, or to the island of Ponza — journeys of ten days to over one month that represent some of the finest sailing available in the Mediterranean, and a way of experiencing southern Italy that very few people ever know.
Begin Your Private Journey
The Amalfi Coast rewards those who know where to look and when to arrive. Sculptured Journeys has spent over twelve years building the relationships, the knowledge, and the access that make the difference between an extraordinary visit and an ordinary one.



































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