What to see in Gallipoli in 2 days: itinerary through the old island, golden beaches and hidden Salento

What to see in Gallipoli in 2 days: from the old town on the island to the Purità sea, with excursions to Punta della Suina and the underground oil presses of Salento.

What to see in Gallipoli in 2 days: itinerary through the old island, golden beaches and hidden Salento

Why Gallipoli deserves 2 days

Gallipoli is two cities in one: the new town on the mainland and the old city on an island connected by a 17th-century bridge. Beyond its summer reputation for clubs and crowded beaches, the old town preserves an intact baroque heritage and a relationship with the sea visible in every church, palazzo and olive press. Two days let you discover the real Gallipoli.

Complete your planning: where to stay in Gallipoli, where to eat in Gallipoli and how to get to Gallipoli.

Day 1: The old town on the island

Morning — Castle and walls

Cross the 17th-century bridge and stop at the Angevin-Aragonese Castle, surrounded by sea on three sides. The perimeter walls are walkable: the view spans from the fishing port to Santa Maria di Leuca on clear days. At the circular tower, the Rivellino hosts temporary exhibitions.

Hidden gem: the Greek Fountain outside the old town — considered Italy's oldest fountain (3rd century BCE), with mythological bas-reliefs in Lecce stone. Most people walk right past it.

Afternoon — Baroque churches and Purità Beach

Gallipoli has an impressive density of baroque churches. The Cathedral of Sant'Agata is a triumph of carved Lecce stone; the Church of San Francesco d'Assisi holds statues of the Two Thieves — among the most expressive sacred sculptures in southern Italy.

Descend to Purità Beach, the only one inside the walls: a handkerchief of white sand beneath the bastions, with crystal-clear water. In late afternoon locals use it as their living room.

Walking route: Bridge → Castle → Via Antonietta De Pace (main axis) → Cathedral → San Francesco → descent to Purità.

Evening — Fishing port and raw seafood

Aperitivo at the fishing port watching the boats return. Dinner with raw seafood (sea urchins, purple Salento prawns, oysters) at the restaurants on the inner waterfront — avoid those on the bridge, more touristy.

Day 2: Beaches and hinterland

Morning — Punta della Suina and Baia Verde

Punta della Suina (3 km from the centre, reachable by bike) is the most beautiful beach: Mediterranean pine forest reaching the sand, Caribbean-like water, free areas among the rocks. Lesser known: Lido Pizzo Beach, sheltered by scrubland with shallow waters — perfect for families.

Hidden gem: between Punta della Suina and Lido Pizzo, a 2 km coastal path crosses deserted rocky coves accessible only on foot.

Afternoon — Underground oil presses and inner Salento

Gallipoli's underground oil presses tell the story of the lamp oil golden age (16th-19th century): enormous underground millstones where trappetari worked — labourers who lived underground for months. The Frantoio on Via Micetti is the most atmospheric.

Then push on to Galatina (20 minutes), where the Basilica of Santa Caterina d'Alessandria holds the most important 14th-century fresco cycle in southern Italy — a small Puglian Sistine Chapel.

Evening — Strolling and pizzica

In summer the Salento lives through music: pizzica concerts in small squares, Notte della Taranta in neighbouring villages. Final dinner with fried pittule, octopus alla pignatta and warm pasticciotto.

Practical tips

  • Day 1: approximately 4 km, entirely on the island (flat)
  • Day 2: bicycle or car for beaches and Galatina
  • July to mid-August the city is very crowded: prefer June or September
  • The Sud Est train connects Gallipoli to Lecce (1 hour) — worth an extra day
  • The tramontana wind makes the Ionian sea crystal clear

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