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Palermo, Italy
Palermo

Sicily

Palermo

Base in the Centro Storico but pick your street with care, train in from Punta Raisi, and let the raucous markets and Norman mosaics set the rhythm.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 7 Jun 2026

Best length

2-3 nights

Airport

Palermo Falcone Borsellino / Punta Raisi (PMO), ~35km west

Airport to centre

Trinacria Express train ~50 min; Prestia e Comande bus ~50 min

Best base

Centro Storico (Kalsa) for atmosphere; Politeama for quieter hotels

In short

Palermo at a glance

Palermo is a loud, layered, food-first city break of 2-3 nights: stay inside or just off the Centro Storico, see the Norman Palace and Cathedral, eat your way through Ballarรฒ and the Vucciria rather than booking a string of restaurants, and walk almost everywhere because traffic makes driving pointless.

The short version

  • Base yourself in the Kalsa or just off Via Maqueda for atmosphere; pick Politeama or Via Liberta if you want quieter, more modern hotels.
  • The Palatine Chapel inside the Norman Palace is the one sight worth paying full price for; the gold mosaics are the reason to come.
  • Eat the markets standing up: panelle, an arancina and pane ca meusa cost a few euros each and beat most sit-down lunches near the sights.
  • Use the Trinacria Express train from Punta Raisi if you are near Palermo Centrale, or the Prestia e Comande bus to the Politeama end of the centre.
  • Two full days covers the Norman sights, the four markets and Monreale; add a third night for Mondello beach or a Cefalu day trip.

Palermo is Sicilyโ€™s capital and it does not tidy itself up for visitors: faded Baroque palaces sit next to bomb-scarred lanes, the traffic is a contact sport, and the four historic markets spill produce and frying smoke across the old town from dawn. Underneath the noise is an extraordinary layer-cake of Arab, Norman and Spanish history โ€” the gold mosaics of the Palatine Chapel are as good as anything in Italy โ€” plus the best street food in the country. The trick to a good first trip is to lean into that rather than fight it: book little, walk everywhere, and eat standing up at Ballarรฒ and the Vucciria instead of hunting for restaurants near the sights.

Two full days is enough to see the Norman Palace, the Cathedral rooftops and all four markets, with a half-day out to Monreale for the cloister and its mosaics. A third night buys you a Mondello beach afternoon or a Cefalรน day trip down the coast. Below, the structured planning โ€” where to stay in the Centro Storico without the worst of the late-night din, what the Norman sights actually cost, how to get in from Punta Raisi, and a realistic budget in pounds โ€” picks up from here.

Statutory facts โ€” passports, the GHIC, EU entry rules, roaming and the wider safety picture โ€” sit on the Italy country guide, which is the GOV.UK-anchored source for the whole vertical. This page sticks to the city itself.

Keep a first trip focused: book the big timed sights, then leave room for neighbourhoods and food.

Top things to do in Palermo

Massimo Theatre

The standard visit is a 40-minute guided tour, not a wander-at-your-own-pace ticket โ€” you go round the auditorium and a handful of grand rooms with a guide. It runs daily 09:30โ€“19:00 (last tour 18:20) and costs โ‚ฌ12 (about ยฃ10) full price, โ‚ฌ6 under-26. You can usually buy on the door, but English-language slots are timed, so booking ahead in summer saves a wait. If a performance is on while you're in Palermo, a cheap upper-gallery opera seat is the better way to see the place lit and full.

About 40 minutes fโ€ฆ โ‚ฌ12

Palermo Cathedral

Walking into the main nave of Palermo Cathedral is free, and a lot of visitors stop there and miss the point. The paid Monumental Area is what's worth the money: the royal tombs of Roger II and Frederick II, the treasury with Constance of Aragon's crown, and the rooftop walk for views over Palermo to the sea. Buy the โ‚ฌ12 complete-route ticket, allow an hour, and go up onto the roof if stairs and heights are fine.

About 1 hour for tโ€ฆ โ‚ฌ12

Where to stay first

The areas that make a first visit easier โ€” not an exhaustive directory.

Kalsa (Centro Storico)

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The most rewarding old-town base: seafront walks at the Foro Italico, the Kalsa's churches and gardens, and Vucciria nightlife within reach. It has been smartened up over the past decade, so it is less rough than its reputation, but ask for a quiet room.

Best for: First-timers, couples, atmosphere

Browse hotels Old city, seaward side

Around Via Maqueda and the Quattro Canti

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The dead centre, between the Quattro Canti crossroads and Teatro Massimo, with the Norman sights and Ballaro a short walk away. Brilliant for doing everything on foot, but the pedestrianised passeggiata gets loud well into the night.

Best for: Walking-led short stays, sightseeing

Browse hotels Central old city

Politeama and Via Liberta

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The modern grid north of the old town: wider streets, smarter hotels, the city's main shopping and easier car access. Quieter and cleaner at night, but you trade a little atmosphere and a 10-15 minute walk to the markets.

Best for: Quieter sleep, shopping, drivers

Browse hotels 10-15 min walk north

Mondello

ยฃยฃยฃ premium

The Liberty-era beach suburb with the white-sand bay, about 30 minutes out by bus 806. Lovely for a beach-first stay in summer, but you will commute for every sight and meal in the centre; not a first-trip base.

Best for: Summer beach stays

Browse hotels ~12km, 30 min by bus 806

Airport to city centre

Palermo airport transfer options
OptionTimeCostBook ahead?
Trinacria Express train to Palermo Centrale ~50 min about โ‚ฌ5.90 single (โ‚ฌ11 return) Best if staying near the central station
Prestia e Comande bus to centre ~50 min about โ‚ฌ6.30 single Stops near Politeama and Centrale; good with luggage
Taxi / official fixed fare ~35-45 min usually โ‚ฌ45-โ‚ฌ55 fixed Easiest late at night or in a group
Pre-book a door-to-door transfer

When to go

Sweet spot: April to June and September to October are the sweet spot: warm enough for Mondello and the rooftops, comfortable for long walks through the markets, and well short of the July-August heat that makes the old town sticky and airless.

High summer is hot, humid and busy, with the beach suburbs at their priciest; winter is mild, cheap and quiet but not a beach trip, and some sights keep shorter hours. Spring and early autumn weekends are the value pick, but book around Easter and the September feast crowds.

What it costs

UK return flights to Palermo are often ยฃ40-ยฃ90 outside school holidays when booked ahead, with Ryanair and easyJet flying direct from London in under three hours; summer and half-term fares climb steeply, so book early.

Daily budget per person

Sample trip: A realistic 3-night mid-range Palermo break for one person is roughly ยฃ380-ยฃ560 before shopping: ยฃ60-ยฃ140 flights, ยฃ190-ยฃ300 hotel share, ยฃ70-ยฃ100 food and local transport (street food keeps this low), and ยฃ40-ยฃ60 for the Norman Palace, Cathedral rooftops and a Monreale or market-food tour.

Palermo is one of the cheaper Italian city breaks, mostly because you can eat brilliantly from the markets for a few euros. The fastest way to overspend is sit-down restaurants on the main tourist piazzas; walk two streets back instead.

Book the essentials

Where to stay

Browse staysvia Booking.com

Tours & tickets

Book tours & ticketsvia GetYourGuide

Airport transfers

Pre-book a transfervia Welcome Pickups

Stay connected

Get an eSIMvia Airalo

Trains & rail passes

Book railvia Trainline

Also in Italy

See the full Italy guide

Palermo FAQs

How many days do you need in Palermo?
Two full days covers the Norman Palace, the Cathedral, the four historic markets and a Monreale half-day. Add a third night if you want a Mondello beach afternoon or a Cefalu day trip without rushing.
Where should first-timers stay in Palermo?
The Kalsa or just off Via Maqueda puts you in the atmospheric Centro Storico within walking distance of everything; ask for a quiet room. Choose Politeama or Via Liberta if you want a more modern, quieter hotel and don't mind a short walk to the markets.
Is Palermo safe for tourists?
Palermo feels intense and scruffy rather than dangerous, and violent crime against visitors is rare. The real risk is pickpocketing in crowded markets and on busy buses, so keep bags zipped and front-facing; the wider safety picture for Italy is covered on the Italy country guide.
Do you need a car in Palermo?
No. The centre is walkable and city traffic is brutal, so a car is a liability. Use buses 806 and 389 for Mondello and Monreale, and only hire a car when you leave for a wider Sicily road trip.

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