Infiorata di Spello: the complete guide to the most beautiful flower festival in Italy in 2026

The complete guide to the Infiorata di Spello in 2026: when it takes place, how to reach it, what to expect, the best viewing spots. The Corpu

The Infiorata di Spello is the most beautiful flower festival in Italy, and almost no foreign tourist knows it. Every year, on the Sunday of Corpus Domini (late May-early June), the inhabitants of the Umbrian medieval village carpet 3 km of stone streets with carpets of fresh petals, leaves, colored gravel, and dried flowers, elaborate compositions prepared all the previous night and walked over during the morning religious procession.

The history of the Infiorata di Spello

The tradition of the Infiorata di Spello goes back to 1831, the first "flowering" of Spello's streets for the Corpus Domini procession is documented with that date. Over 190 years, the festival has evolved from a simple laying of flowers into a true artistic competition: the rioni of Spello (the village is divided into historic districts like a Palio) compete to create the most elaborate and most beautiful carpets. The carpet designs are chosen and planned months ahead, the participants work the entire Saturday night (from 22:00 until morning) to complete the petal compositions before the Sunday 10:00 procession.

How it actually works: what the guides don't tell you

The Infiorata is prepared on Saturday night (the evening before the Corpus Domini Sunday), this is the part very few tourists see and the most fascinating. From around 22:00, Spello's streets become open-air workshops: the residents of each rione work in groups on their carpet segments, using rose petals, laurel leaves, wildflowers, white gravel, red earth, crushed eggshells, spices, all gathered in the previous weeks and stored in sacks. You can watch this nighttime preparation by walking freely through the village, it's an extraordinary experience of a community working together. Sunday morning: the religious procession with the bishop walks the carpet at 10:00-12:00, the moment when all the 12 hours of work is slowly trodden over. After the procession (from 12:00 on) the carpet starts to be destroyed by people passing, arrive early to photograph it intact.

How to reach Spello for the Infiorata

Spello (PG) is 50 km from Perugia (30 min by car) and 6 km from Foligno (a railway station with trains from Rome and Florence). By train: from Rome Termini to Foligno (1h50, Frecciarossa + regional, €15-25) then a bus or taxi to Spello (10 min, €8-12 by taxi). By car: from Rome 170 km (1h50 via A1 + Orte junction), park at lower Spello + a shuttle minibus to the upper village on Infiorata day (a free service organized by the City). Spello's parking lots fill up quickly on Infiorata day, arrive on Saturday night if you want to see the preparation and find parking without queues.

Where to stay for the Infiorata

The best places within 10 km of Spello: Spello itself (about 8 B&Bs and small hotels, sold out 2-3 months ahead for the Infiorata weekend; book at least 3 months in advance); Assisi (12 km, dozens of hotels of every level, the best logistical base); Foligno (6 km, less picturesque but with more availability); Perugia (50 km, the largest Umbrian city with the most hotel options). Agriturismo in the area: look on Agriturismo.it with the "Spello" filter, the properties nearby are ideal for those who want to combine the Infiorata with rural Umbria.

Infiorata Spello 2026: when exactly does the Corpus Domini Sunday fall?

Corpus Domini always falls on the Thursday after the second Sunday of Pentecost, but in Italy it's celebrated the following Sunday. In 2026 Corpus Domini falls on June 7, 2026 (Sunday), always check on www.comune.spello.pg.it for the official date and the Infiorata program, which includes the Saturday evening events (carpet preparation, guided night tours) and the Sunday ones (procession, concerts, markets). The full program is published on the City of Spello's website in April-May of the current year.

Infiorata Umbria: are there other Infiorate in Italy besides Spello?

Yes, the Infiorata is an Italian Corpus Domini tradition that exists in dozens of towns. The most famous besides Spello: Noto (SR, Sicily), the Infiorata di Noto (mid-May) decorates Via Nicolaci with Baroque floral carpets; it's the most photographed in Italy for the staging of the Baroque street as a backdrop; Genzano di Roma (RM, Castelli Romani), the Infiorata di Genzano (June) is the longest in Italy (120 m of Via Italo Belardi) and decorates a street in the historic center of the Castelli; Bolsena (VT, Lazio), Bolsena is the place of origin of Corpus Domini (the 1263 miracle that gave rise to the festival), the most significant historic Infiorata for its religious value. Spello is the one with the greatest artistic value and the hardest to reach for unorganized tourists.

Related guides on ItalyPlanner.ai

Italian festivals Festival calendar Umbrian art Authentic Umbria Tuscany and Umbria Day trips in Umbria Umbrian agriturismo St. Francis in Assisi

Practical questions about Italy: what prepared travelers already know

How the ticket machines work on Italian regional trains, and how to avoid the fine for failing to validate

Trenitalia regional train tickets (not the High Speed) bought at the counter or the automatic machines must be validated (stamped) before boarding the train, the yellow or green machines on the platforms have a slot where you insert the ticket, which is printed with the date and time. An unvalidated ticket is equivalent to traveling without a ticket, the fine is €50+ even if the ticket is valid. The exceptions where you must NOT validate: tickets bought online with a QR code (already "activated" digitally), reserved High Speed tickets, tickets bought via the Trenitalia app. The simple rule: if you have a paper ticket with a generic printed date, validate it before boarding. If you have a QR code, you don't need to. If in doubt, always validate: it's never a mistake to validate a ticket that didn't need validating, but it's a problem not to validate one that did.

How to buy tickets for Italian ferries (Sardinia, Sicily, minor islands) without paying double

The ferries to Sardinia and Sicily have the lowest prices if booked 2-4 months ahead in high season. The main companies: GNV (www.gnv.it), Genoa/Civitavecchia→Palermo, Palermo→Tunis; Tirrenia (www.tirrenia.it), Civitavecchia→Cagliari, Naples→Cagliari; Moby Lines (www.moby.it), Livorno/Genoa→Olbia; Grimaldi Lines (www.grimaldi-lines.com), Civitavecchia→Palermo/Cagliari. The price for a cabin in high season (July-August): €60-120/person for a 10-14-hour overnight crossing with an inside cabin. The low-price trick: a reclining seat (in a lounge) costs €30-50/person, less comfortable than the cabin but doable for 8-10-hour crossings with a good inflatable pillow. The ideal booking: 2-3 months ahead for July-August; 3-4 weeks for the low-season periods.

How to talk about sport in Italy without offending anyone: football as a social minefield

Football in Italy is a matter of regional and family identity, getting the sporting affiliation wrong in certain situations can create unexpected tension. The main divisions: Rome (two rival clubs, Roma and Lazio, with politically opposite fan bases); Milan (Internazionale and AC Milan, historically tied to the worker and the bourgeoisie); Turin (Juventus vs Torino, Juventus is hated in almost all of Italy outside Piedmont as a symbol of national football arrogance). The safe rule: don't claim to support a team if you don't know where you are, ask first "di che squadra siete?" and answer vaguely if you don't want to commit. Alternatively: "I follow rugby more" works everywhere with no consequences.

How to handle Italian museum hours: the evening openings, the Monday closures, the seasonal changes

The most important rule many tourists forget: most Italian museums are closed on Monday. The main exceptions (open on Monday): the Vatican Museums (open Monday, closed Sunday to the public with some exceptions), the Colosseum (open every day), the Uffizi (open Monday, always re-check on uffizi.it, which changes frequently), the Galleria Borghese (open by booking even on Monday). The evening openings: many Italian museums open until 22:00 or 23:00 on certain days of the week during the summer (June-September), always check the specific hours on the museum's official site. The first Sunday of the month (free): valid only for state-run museums, not for the Vatican Museums (Vatican-run), not for the Galleria Borghese (privately run), not for the municipal museums. The list of state museums free on the first Sunday is on www.beniculturali.it.

10 Italian facts that transform how you see the trip

Italy in depth: more essential practical tips

How to book boat excursions along the Italian coasts safely

Boat excursions along the Italian coasts (trips to the Aeolian Islands, the Cinque Terre, the Blue Grotto of Capri, the coves of Sardinia) are booked in three ways: through international platforms like GetYourGuide or Viator (more expensive but with a guaranteed refund in case of bad weather); directly at the port the day before with the local operators (cheaper, but the refund in case of bad weather depends on the operator); through the hotel or B&B, which almost always has agreements with local operators (often an intermediate price). Cancellation for bad weather: boat excursions are subject to cancellation for rough seas, always ask the refund policy before booking. In summer (June-August) the weather is generally stable but afternoon thunderstorms are frequent, the morning excursions have fewer risks. Book the day before, not weeks ahead, the 24h weather forecast is much more reliable than the 7-day one.

How to behave in Italian churches: the dress code and the unwritten rules

Italian churches (cathedrals, basilicas, chapels) are places of active worship, tourists are welcome but some rules always apply: (1) Covered shoulders: a sleeveless top or a torn top isn't allowed, always carry a scarf or a pashmina in your backpack to put over your shoulders (even in August); (2) Covered knees: shorts above the knee aren't allowed, women in a skirt must have the skirt at least at the knees; (3) Silence during Mass: if you enter a church while a religious service is being celebrated, you can stay but in silence and without passing in front of the altar; (4) No flash: almost always, both out of respect for the place and to protect the artworks; (5) Voluntary offering: many churches have an offering box at the entrance, it isn't mandatory but it's courtesy; (6) Mobile phone: on silent. Breaking the rules can lead to expulsion from the church by the sacristan, without discussion.

6 things about Italy that surprise first-time visitors

✍️ By the TourLeaderPro.com editorial team, licensed tour guides in Italy, Rome. Verified on the ground, updated for 2026.

Plan your trip to Italy

Book top-rated tours & skip-the-line tickets for this trip