An eleventh-century palazzo, an infinity pool one thousand feet above the sea, and one of the most photographed terraces in Europe. The view does not require an introduction.
"The infinity pool above Ravello is the most-photographed image on the Amalfi Coast for a reason. The hotel attached to it is somehow even better than the photograph."
Belmond Hotel Caruso occupies an eleventh-century palazzo in Ravello, the village a thousand feet above the Tyrrhenian that Wagner called the closest he ever came to the gardens of Klingsor. The building has been restored over decades with frescoes preserved, marble columns retained, and a pool added — the latter being the single most-recognised image on the Amalfi Coast and arguably the most legitimate Instagram set-piece in European hospitality. The pool is heated, set on a stone terrace at the edge of the cliff, and lined up with the horizon so cleanly that the water and the sea become indistinguishable around midday.
There are fifty rooms and suites, all individually furnished, each one incorporating frescoed ceilings or arched windows or the kind of marble bathroom that a former cardinal would have approved of. The Belvedere and Exclusive suites face directly down the coast toward Capri; the standard rooms face an internal courtyard or the gardens, both of which are quieter and arguably the more intelligent booking. Antique furniture is mixed with contemporary pieces, beds are excellent, and the bathrooms are large enough to argue in. Service is at the level the price commands — multilingual, anticipatory, and capable of arranging a private boat to Capri or a helicopter to Naples airport without theatricality.
Two restaurants operate on the property. Belvedere serves regional Campanian cuisine on a covered terrace facing the sea — the lunch view alone justifies a stay of one extra night. The pool restaurant, more casual, is where most guests end up reluctantly leaving the pool to eat. The wine list runs deep on Campanian and Sicilian whites, the bar is excellent for late-night negronis, and the breakfast — served until eleven, which is the correct decision — includes the best fresh ricotta on the coast and pastries that have ruined other hotels for many returning guests.
The gardens descend in terraces below the main building — lemon trees, bougainvillea, ancient cypresses, and a long stone walk that ends at a viewpoint over the entire coast. The spa is small but well-equipped. Ravello itself is the quietest of the major Amalfi Coast villages, which means the hotel functions more as a sanctuary than a base — most guests barely leave, descending to Positano or Amalfi only for a single afternoon excursion.
Caruso is the Amalfi Coast hotel for major anniversaries. The drama of the location, the gravity of the building, and the unhurried pace of Ravello create an atmosphere that suits milestone celebrations more naturally than the busier addresses in Positano. Book a Belvedere suite, request a private dinner on the terrace, and arrange a helicopter tour of the coast for the morning of the day itself. Few hotels handle this category of occasion with comparable polish.
The infinity pool at sunset is the obvious answer, but the Belvedere terrace at golden hour is equally photogenic and considerably more private. The concierge has staged enough proposals at this hotel to make the logistics invisible. If she says yes, the dinner at Belvedere afterwards is the natural sequel; if she does not, the hotel will pretend it never happened with the discretion that has been a Caruso speciality since the 1890s.
For couples whose honeymoon priority is privacy and atmosphere over nightlife, Caruso is the better Amalfi Coast choice than the Positano hotels. Mornings at the pool, afternoon hikes to the Villa Cimbrone gardens, and dinners on the Belvedere terrace make for an itinerary that does not require leaving the property unless absolutely necessary. The hotel arranges this category of stay frequently.
Piazza San Giovanni del Toro 2
84010 Ravello, Salerno
Campania, Italy
1,000 ft above the sea, central Ravello
50 individually furnished rooms and suites
Deluxe Garden View from €820/night
Sea View Rooms from €1,400/night
Belvedere Suites from €3,200/night
Check-in: 3:00 PM
Check-out: 12:00 PM
Minimum stay: 2 nights peak season
Heated infinity pool
Belvedere & pool restaurants
Spa & fitness
Terraced gardens
Concierge with helicopter access
Open: April – early November
Peak: June–August
Best value: April, October
High-speed WiFi throughout
Strong signal in rooms and on terraces
International power sockets in all rooms
From €820/night. Closes early November; opens early April. Book six months out for peak weeks.
Book This Hotel →Family-run since 1951. La Sponda Michelin star. The pool above Positano. The benchmark.
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