What to see in Caserta in 2 days: the Royal Palace, the medieval village and secret Campania
Two days in Caserta: the Bourbon Royal Palace with its immense park, medieval Casertavecchia on the hill, the Carolino Aqueduct, San Leucio and the most authentic buffalo mozzarella.
Caserta in 2 days: Italy's Versailles and its secrets
Caserta is known almost exclusively for the Royal Palace, yet the surroundings hide an enchanting medieval village, a unique eighteenth-century social experiment and countryside producing the world's finest buffalo mozzarella. Two days let you discover all of this.
Day 1: The Royal Palace and Park
Morning
Devote the entire morning to the Royal Palace of Caserta, the world's largest royal residence by volume (1,200 rooms, 47,000 sqm). Commissioned by Charles of Bourbon and designed by Luigi Vanvitelli in 1752, it rivals Versailles in magnificence. The Royal Apartments are a succession of baroque, rococo and neoclassical rooms: the Throne Room, Palatine Chapel and Court Theatre are the highlights.
Arrive at opening (8:30): early morning the interiors are nearly deserted and the light in the halls is perfect.
Afternoon
The Royal Park deserves at least 3 hours. Stretching 3 km, it unfolds along a perspective axis from the Palace to the final 78-metre cascade fed by the Carolino Aqueduct (38 km of conduit, an impressive engineering feat). The monumental fountains — Diana and Actaeon, Venus and Adonis, the Dolphins — punctuate the route.
Hidden gem: the English Garden, in the park's eastern corner, is a world apart. Designed by botanist John Andrew Graefer for Queen Maria Carolina, it is a romantic garden with artificial lake, fake ruins, exotic plants and a Bath of Venus of neoclassical sensuality. Many visitors never reach it through fatigue: that's a mistake.
Evening
Dine in Caserta's centre (Via Mazzini, Corso Trieste) trying Campanian cuisine: pasta e fagioli with pork rind, Caserta-style pizza (high soft crust), ultra-fresh buffalo mozzarella. Pallagrello and Casavecchia are the indigenous wines to discover.
Day 2: Casertavecchia, San Leucio and surroundings
Morning
Drive up to Casertavecchia (10 km, 20 minutes), the medieval hilltop village that was the original settlement before the Bourbons built the Palace on the plain. The twelfth-century Romanesque-Arab-Norman cathedral, with its octagonal dome on drum and tufa-and-marble inlays, is a unique jewel. The thirteenth-century bell tower and silent lanes complete the enchantment.
The village is nearly uninhabited and deserted on weekday mornings: you'll feel alone on a medieval film set.
Afternoon
Reach the Belvedere of San Leucio (3 km from the Palace), a revolutionary eighteenth-century social experiment. Ferdinand IV created here a workers' colony for silk production with advanced rules: compulsory education, gender equality, abolition of the dowry, healthcare. The Silk Museum in the royal apartments tells this extraordinary story. The silk workshops are still active.
Hidden gem: the Ponti della Valle, part of the Carolino Aqueduct visible between Maddaloni and Valle di Maddaloni. This three-tiered arcade structure (55 metres high, 529 metres long) is Europe's largest aqueduct by size: it rivals Roman ones and almost nobody knows it.
Evening
For your last evening, visit a buffalo farm in the Volturno plain (15-20 minutes) to taste mozzarella made just hours before. Some farms offer tastings with visits to the herds. It is an experience that forever changes your relationship with this cheese.
Recommended walking routes
- Palace interiors + park to the Great Cascade: 5 km one way (shuttle available), 4-5 hours total
- Complete Casertavecchia: from parking, village → Cathedral → Tower → alleys → viewpoint (1 km, 1.5 hours)
- San Leucio: Belvedere → silk workshops → garden → plain panorama (1 km, 1 hour)
Practical tips
- For the Palace park, bring water and a hat: there is no shade on the central avenue
- Tuesday the Palace is closed; book online to avoid queues
- At Casertavecchia in summer the Settembre al Borgo festival brings music and theatre among the stones
Further reading
For your stay, see where to stay in Caserta, where to eat in Caserta and how to get to Caserta.
Practical info
When is the best time to visit What to see in Caserta in 2 days?
The recommended time is March, April, May, September, October and November, when it is less crowded.
Is What to see in Caserta in 2 days crowded?
What to see in Caserta in 2 days is a very quiet destination compared with the more touristy ones.
Where is What to see in Caserta in 2 days?
What to see in Caserta in 2 days is located in Caserta, Campania, Italy.