R I V A DEL G A R D A
travel guide
With a few hundred in my bank account, I had no business flouncing around Lake Garda’s Riva del Garda, let alone for a month. This Northern Italian town is the type of place you imagine yourself counting your lottery winnings, on a boat, in a straw hat no less. I may not have been counting my millions, rather pennies, but I felt glamorous in the process.
I’m not a luxury traveller, quite frankly, I can’t afford to be. The payoff was that I ended up spending more time in my kitchen and rummaging around the vegetable aisle of Supermercato Poli than in any of the highly rated restaurants.
The truth is Riva is luxurious. If you’ve the money to spend then this town will embrace you, from the private boat tours to luxury boutiques and high end restaurants where the salumerias used to be; the money almost spills out of your account. Footstep by footstep. Tourists are dressed for an occasion they haven’t been invited to, heels, elegant cocktail dresses and fancy shirts, just for a picture perfect, 90 minute dinner on the cobblestones.
On the other hand, this is also a town for the adventurers, the people looking for a thrill only mother nature can give. I found my place during sunrise hikes to Chiesa di Santa Barbara, each hot and panting breath taking me to a real life painting of orange rooftops in need of a paint job, blue lakes with one too many boats and shimmering mountain peaks. The type of thing no bank balance can buy. The descent was powered by the thought of warm rösti – greasy hands and gouda slowly running down my chin.
So this broke traveller navigated Riva on her feet. No luxury boat trips – instead I clambered mountains, cycled historic mountainside paths, lazed on the beaches, and saved my cash for the creamy cuttlefish risotto from Leon d’oro.
Riva del Garda Essentials
The bits worth knowing first.
Where To Stay In Riva del Garda
Riva del Garda is a fantastic base whether you’re after adventure, lakeside romance, or just somewhere to eat well for a week. The town is compact enough to walk everywhere, and the bus and ferry network out of Riva means you can reach most of the lake’s other towns without a car, which is how I did it for the month I lived here. If you’re planning a longer car-free trip around the lake, my guide to the best Lake Garda towns to stay in without a car breaks down the options beyond Riva itself.
There are three areas worth considering, and they suit slightly different trips.
Riva del Garda Centre — best for first-time visitors
The historic centre is where you want to stay if it’s your first trip and you want everything on your doorstep. You’re a five-minute walk from the lake, a one-minute walk from the main piazza, and surrounded by restaurants, gelaterias, and bars that spill onto the cobbled streets in the evenings. The trade-off is that summer nights are lively (live music on Piazza III Novembre most evenings) so it’s not the place if you need silence to sleep.
Hotels in Riva del Garda Centre
$$ Hotel Sole | A 4-star hotel right on the main piazza with lake-view rooms, complimentary bikes, and a small wellness centre with a sauna and Turkish bath. The location is unbeatable if you want to roll out of bed and into the heart of the old town.
$$$ Lido Palace | Riva’s most luxurious option, with a lakefront position, a Michelin-starred restaurant on site, and a spa that’s worth the stay alone. Recently renovated rooms feel modern and elegant, and the terrace overlooks the water.
Porto San Nicolò — best for beach access and quieter nights
A 15-minute walk south of the centre, Porto San Nicolò is the area to choose if you want the beach genuinely on your doorstep, Spiaggia Sabbioni is right there. It’s quieter than the centre in the evenings but you’re still close enough to walk in for dinner. Good pick for couples who want lakeside calm without sacrificing convenience.
Hotels in Porto San Nicolò
$$$ Du Lac Et Du Parc | A sprawling lakeside resort that genuinely feels like a private village, with two pools, several restaurants, and private villas dotted through the gardens. The Garden Suites (€350-500/night) work well for families, and there’s a private beach and an extensive breakfast buffet that makes it the right pick for longer stays.
$$ Hotel Luise | A boutique-style hotel with themed rooms, a rooftop pool with mountain views, and bike hire on site. Located in a quieter pocket of the area, so you get peaceful nights but you can still cycle into the centre in five minutes.
Varone — best for budget travellers who don’t mind a walk
Varone is a small village a 25-minute walk (or 10-minute cycle) north of Riva, best known for its dramatic gorge waterfall. Rooms are bigger and cheaper than anything you’ll find lakeside, and you get mountain views that the centre doesn’t have. The trade-off is the daily walk back into town, which is fine in good weather and a slog in bad. If you’re cycling anyway, it’s a non-issue.
Hotels in Varone
$ Hotel Campagnola | Family-run with spacious mountain-view rooms (some with balconies) and an outdoor pool. The kind of place where you’ll get a friendly welcome and pay roughly half what you’d pay in town for a room twice the size.
Where To Stay In Riva Del Garda On A Budget?
Looking for a budget-friendly stay? Hotels in Riva del Garda skyrocket in price during peak season, but Arco, just 10 minutes away, offers charming accommodations for a fraction of the price. Plus, with bike-friendly roads and a laid-back vibe, it’s a great alternative for outdoor lovers.
These are a few nice hotels in Arco:
- Pace 1954 Hotel has large spacious rooms with complimentary bikes
- River Inn Arco is a guesthouse with river views, some rooms even feature a kitchen
- Hotel Garden Arco has an incredible outdoor pool with a mountain view
Travel Insurance
The boring bit that matters.
Pick your policy by passport, not by destination.
Nobody buys travel insurance with any enthusiasm, and almost everyone wishes they had at some point, usually around the moment a Vespa scrape becomes a hospital visit, or a delayed flight wipes out a non-refundable hotel. Two providers cover almost everyone reading this:
True Traveller
If you hold an EU passport, True Traveller is the most sensibly priced option I’ve found, and although it’s an EU-citizen-only product, it covers you anywhere in the world. They also let you buy cover after you’ve already left home, which most insurers refuse to do.
Get a quote →World Nomads
For travellers from outside the EU, and for anyone planning a longer trip with the usual mix of hiking, scooters, and ill-advised cliff-jumping, World Nomads remains the standard. They cover adventure activities most insurers won’t touch, and you can extend from the road.
Get a quote →Getting To Riva del Garda
One app, every platform.
Omio — the easiest way to book buses and trains across Europe.
I use Omio for one reason: it’s the easiest place to compare trains, buses, and the occasional ferry across Europe in a single screen. You search a route, see Trenitalia and Italo (and any relevant bus options) side by side, book in two taps, and the ticket lives in the app on your phone.
The real value: every ticket lives on your phone. No printing, no fishing through inboxes on a platform when the conductor walks past.
The booking process takes about thirty seconds. The ticket arrives instantly. On the day of travel, you open the app, show the QR code or the seat number to the conductor, and that’s it.
Book on Omio →Getting Around Riva del Garda
Bus
Lake Garda has a decent bus service, ran by a local company called ATV, it includes routes around Lake Garda and to cities like Venice and Verona. We mostly used the bus, it was comfortable, had AC and was frequent. The only catch is the traffic, but I used it as an excuse to get a little nap.
- Line 484 is the main line to explore the eastern shore travelling from Riva to Garda.
- Line 483 goes further south from S.Benedetto – Peschiera – Lazise – Bardolino – Garda to Malcesine. We used this one the most
- LN027 between Desenzano and Riva del Garda, stopping at towns including Salo and Limone Sul Garda.
You can purchase Lake Garda bus tickets from the Verona bus app in advance, but you can also pay onboard with cash, however that carries a small surcharge. I found the drivers to be a little grumpy so make sure you have the correct change.
Car
Honestly, a car is not a necessity for Riva del Garda. Buses and ferries reach the main towns around Lake Garda and there is enough to do in Riva that you don’t really have to leave. I wrote a full guide on where to stay in Lake Garda without a car which breakdown the towns that really don’t require you to have a car.
It is worth noting that east Lake Garda is much easier to explore without a car than the west side due to public transport limitations.
If you do decide to drive, the traffic can be heavy during the summer, especially around the scenic west lake route. However the less scenic A22 Brenner Motorway is much faster. There are also Limited Traffic Zones (ZTL) in the historic centres, if you even accidentally drive through one, you will be automatically fined (there are cameras). For more information on driving in Italy, check my guide here.
Don’t want to go without a car?
DiscoverCars for the best prices, every time.
If a car is non-negotiable for the trip you’re planning, DiscoverCars consistently finds the best price by comparing every rental company at the airport in a single screen. Pick up at the airport, drop off at the airport, and let the cities have their pedestrian peace.
Check prices →Cycle
Riva is a dream to cycle around, it reignited my love for the bike. It’s actually considered one of Europe’s top cycling destinations with the Ponale Road and Limone sul Garda offering epic mountainous scenery. You can certainly cycle to nearby towns, Malcesine is a 1 hour trip whereas Garda is 4 hours, both along the coastal road. Further north Arco is just 20 minutes away.
There are many bike rentals in Riva, I always had a positive experience with Energia Bike, who have a large range of quality bikes.
Best Things To Do In Riva del Garda


