Louise and I decided to test our sanity: spending Ferragosto weekend at the Italian seaside. If you don’t know Ferragosto, think of it as the Italian Super Bowl of summer holidays where literally everyone heads to the beach. Shops close, sun beds sell out, and the whole country seems to gather on the sand.
We chose Pesaro, a city on the Adriatic that combines sandy beaches, opera, and delicious food. From Friday, August 15th to Monday the 18th, we lived our best beach-town lives: swimming, strolling, and eating our way through the long weekend.

Ferragosto, on August 15th, is like Italy’s national holiday; a mix of Fourth of July and Thanksgiving. Shops close, families head to the coast, and the whole country celebrates summer with food, sun, and sea.

Day 1 (Friday): Seafood, Sand, and Sunset
We rolled into Pesaro on Friday just in time for lunch. Instead of pasta or pizza, we went straight for the sea: seafood salad piled high with mussels and shrimp, followed by a grilled tuna salad that tasted like it had just jumped from the Adriatic onto our plates. Light, fresh, and exactly what you want before slipping into a swimsuit.
In the afternoon we wandered down to Baia Flaminia, where rows of umbrellas lined the shore like a giant, colorful quilt. By evening the crowds had thinned just enough for us to take a sunset stroll along the water, toes in the sand, watching the sky fade from peach to lavender.
Not a bad start to Ferragosto.

Day 2 (Saturday): Sweet Breakfast & Mayonnaise Pizza
The next morning, our hotel’s buffet breakfast delivered exactly what we needed: cornetto (Italian croissant) and strong caffè — plus a dozens of other cakes (did you know Italians eat cake for breakfast?). The combination is dangerously habit-forming—plus as food bloggers we are constantly doing the dishes. It's nice to have someone cook for your for once.
Fueled up, we set out on a long walk through the city and along the seaside promenade. Pesaro is perfect for walking and running—flat, breezy, and full of people-watching opportunities (the Italians get SO beautifully tanned without burning).
By lunchtime, we went to Piadineria - piadina is a local flat bread you can stuff with a million things such as ham, cheese, veggies and more. It's perfect for a take out lunch. Our favorite local spots are piadineria close to the city center and da Peppe right on the seaside.
Dinner that night? Gelato and another passeggiata (evening stroll). Ferragosto means you don’t really need an excuse—just join the parade of people drifting along the lungomare, ice cream cone in hand.
Day 3 (Sunday): Market Buzz & Beach Life
On Sunday morning we wandered through Pesaro’s weekly market, weaving between stalls of peaches, sandals, and beach towels with neon dolphins. Louise bought cherries, I ended up with a straw hat two sizes too big.
We then biked along the seaside trail to Sottomonte, one of the free beaches tucked below the cliffs. It was packed—Ferragosto-style packed—but the energy was contagious. Families picnicked on piadina stuffed with prosciutto, kids built sandcastles, and the Adriatic shimmered in the heat.
For lunch, we went classic: prosciutto e melone, that perfect sweet-salty combo that tastes like pure Italian summer.
By late afternoon, we needed shade, so we lingered over spritzes at a café before heading back out for one last swim.

Day 4 (Monday, August 18): A Slow Goodbye
Monday was for lingering. Another cornetto-and-caffè breakfast, a final dip in the sea, and a slow walk through town before packing up. Even the city seemed to sigh as the Ferragosto crowds trickled away—umbrellas closing, sunburnt families hauling coolers back to their cars.
We left Pesaro with salt in our hair, sand in our bags, and the memory of that mayo-and-egg pizza burned into our foodie souls.

What We Loved (and You Should Try)
- Seafood salad & grilled tuna salad — simple, fresh, perfect seaside fare.
- Pizza Rossini — it sounds like a dare, but it’s a must.
- Pizza al tonno — a seaside classic, salty and satisfying.
- Cornetto & caffè breakfast — breakfast in Italy at its sweetest.
- Pesce grigliato — simply grilled fish with olive oil, lemon, and herbs.
- Prosciutto con melone — sweet melon, salty ham, pure summer on a plate.
- Gelato — because no Italian beach trip is complete without it.
Final Thoughts
Would we do Pesaro again on Ferragosto? Absolutely. Sure, it was crowded, loud, and a little chaotic, but that’s the point—you’re part of Italy’s biggest beach party. Pesaro gave us opera vibes without the formality, beaches with personality, and food we’ll be talking about for years.
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