white boat on body of water near green and brown mountain during daytime
|

Visiting Amalfi in July

Visiting Amalfi in July

Weather in July: Average high 28.5°C, 22.8mm rainfall.

# Amalfi in July: Beautiful, Busy, and Brutally Hot

Let me be straight with you: July in Amalfi is intense. The temperature sits around 28-29°C, which sounds manageable until you remember that the town is essentially a vertical cliff face and you’ll be climbing hundreds of steps in direct Mediterranean sun while wearing a backpack and sharing every staircase with approximately four thousand other tourists.

The heat is real but the bigger story is the crowds. July is peak season, full stop. The main piazza, the Cathedral steps, the waterfront promenade — all rammed by 10am. The narrow lanes trap heat and bodies equally well. Boats fill up, restaurants add outdoor covers that spill onto already-tight streets, and finding a quiet moment feels genuinely earned rather than accidental.

That said, everything is absolutely open. Every restaurant, boat tour, lemon grove visit, ferry connection to Positano and Ravello — it’s all running at full capacity. The sea is 26°C and crystal clear, which is legitimately wonderful. Evenings cool slightly and the waterfront becomes genuinely lovely around 8pm when the day-trippers have retreated. Dinner outside with a cold glass of Falanghina while the light disappears — that part lives up to the postcard.

Rain is minimal, around 23mm for the whole month, so you’re not worrying about weather ruining anything. It’s more the sun you need to manage than clouds.

**Is it worth visiting in July?** Honestly, it depends who you are. If you’re someone who travels for atmosphere and ease, go in May or September instead — same beauty, fraction of the crowds, still warm enough for swimming. July works well if you’re already on a broader southern Italy trip and Amalfi is one stop among several, or if peak summer is simply when you can travel. Families work well here in July too — kids don’t mind chaos the same way adults do.

**One practical tip:** Book the first ferry of the morning to Positano. Leave before the crowds remember they exist. You’ll have an hour of the coast almost to yourself.

Plan Your Trip

Similar Posts