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Visiting Cagliari in March

Visiting Cagliari in March

Weather in March: Average high 14.6°C, 45mm rainfall.

# Cagliari in March: Honest Thoughts

March in Cagliari sits in that awkward in-between zone where winter hasn’t fully let go but summer feels genuinely close. Average temperatures hover around 14-15°C, which sounds reasonable until a wind comes off the sea and reminds you this is still technically the shoulder season. Pack a proper jacket. You’ll want it in the evenings especially, when the temperature drops and the waterfront gets breezy in a way that feels personal.

The 45mm of rain across the month means you’re not looking at constant grey misery, but you should expect several days where the sky turns dramatic and showers roll through. The upside is they usually pass quickly, and the light afterwards on the old limestone buildings in Castello quarter is genuinely beautiful. Every cloud, literally.

Crowds are minimal, and honestly that’s the main argument for coming now. The city belongs to locals in March. You can wander through the historic centre, sit in a café on Piazza Yenne, or walk the Poetto beach without anyone trying to sell you anything or jostling for position. Restaurants are operating normally and happy to see you. Hotels are cheaper by a significant margin compared to summer.

Everything is open and functioning. This isn’t one of those destinations that hibernates completely. The National Archaeological Museum is excellent and far more enjoyable when you’re not shuffling through in a crowd. The street food scene around the market district operates year-round.

**Is it worth it?** For culture-focused travellers, photographers, food lovers, or anyone who finds peak-season tourism genuinely exhausting, yes, absolutely. For people wanting beach weather and guaranteed sunshine, wait until June.

**One practical tip:** Book accommodation in the Castello or Villanova neighbourhoods rather than near the port. You’ll walk everywhere more easily, you’ll feel more embedded in the actual city rather than the tourist-adjacent version, and you’ll spend less time on transport. Cagliari rewards wandering, and March is one of the better months to do exactly that without melting or fighting the crowds.

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