The Best Hotels in Sicily, Italy
Clifftop monasteries, volcanic retreats, Baroque palace hotels, and Aeolian island escapes — 15 exceptional picks with honest descriptions and VIP booking perks.
Sicily does something to you. It gets under your skin in a way that few destinations manage. A heady combination of ancient Greek temples glowing gold at sunset, the dramatic silhouette of Mount Etna dominating the northeastern skyline, the most complex and layered cuisine in Italy, and a pace of life that feels genuinely unhurried. And then there are the hotels.
A 14th-century monastery hovering on a cliff above Taormina with infinity pools and Michelin-starred dining. An organic farmhouse retreat nestled in vineyards on Etna's volcanic slopes, where you hike an active volcano before dinner. A restored 19th-century palace on the ancient island of Ortigia, where breakfast is served on a rooftop overlooking the Mediterranean. A minimalist island hideaway on Pantelleria reachable only by ferry or light aircraft.
I've rounded up 15 of the best hotels in Sicily, from iconic five-star international brands to intimate boutique retreats and off-the-beaten-path island escapes, covering every corner of this magnificent island. Each has been chosen not just for luxury, but for the depth of experience it offers: the sense that where you sleep is inseparable from where you are.
"In Sicily, the best hotels don't just give you a view. They give you the island itself: its history, its flavors, its landscapes, all within reach."
What Makes Sicily's Hotels So Special?
Sicily's hotel landscape is one of the most diverse in the Mediterranean, and one of the least fully appreciated by international travelers who tend to concentrate their Italy ambitions on Tuscany and the Amalfi Coast. This is a mistake. The island offers something genuinely different: a layering of civilizations, Greek, Roman, Arab, Norman, Spanish, that finds its expression in extraordinary architecture, incomparable food, and a landscape of almost violent beauty.
In Taormina, the island's most glamorous hill town, three of the finest hotels in all of Italy compete for superlatives: a Four Seasons in a 14th-century monastery, a Belmond perched beside the ancient Greek Theatre, and a beachfront villa retreat on the Bay of Mazzaro. Around them, the Ionian Sea glitters and Mount Etna looms magnificently. In the southwest, Rocco Forte's Verdura Resort sprawls across a private Mediterranean coastline with two championship golf courses. On the volcanic slopes of Etna, organic farmhouse retreats offer a completely different kind of luxury. And in the outer islands, Pantelleria and Vulcano, boutique hideaways offer the kind of total escape that feels increasingly rare.
What unites the best Sicilian hotels is their relationship to place. These aren't generic luxury properties that could exist anywhere. They are specifically, unmistakably Sicilian, and that's what makes them worth the journey.
Quick Picks: Best Hotels by Category
| Category | Top Pick | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Best Overall Editor's Choice | San Domenico Palace, Four Seasons | 14th-century monastery, clifftop drama, Michelin dining. Sicily's most iconic hotel |
| Most Dramatic Setting | Belmond Grand Hotel Timeo | Beside the Greek Theatre with infinity pools and Etna views |
| Best Beach Hotel | Villa Sant'Andrea, Belmond | Private beach on the Bay of Mazzaro with a helipad and seaside restaurant |
| Best Rocco Forte | Verdura Resort | Two golf courses, private beach, spa. Sicily's most complete resort |
| Best in Palermo | Villa Igiea, Rocco Forte | Belle Epoque splendor above Palermo's harbour with Michelin-starred dining |
| Most Unique | Hotel Villa Athena | Sleep adjacent to Greek temple ruins at Agrigento. Genuinely one-of-a-kind |
| Best for Wine Lovers | Monaci delle Terre Nere | Volcanic estate on Etna with on-site wine cellar, tastings, and lava-stone pool |
| Best Island Escape | Therasia Resort Sea & Spa | Cliffside luxury on Vulcano with volcanic spa treatments and Aeolian island views |
| Most Off-the-Beaten-Path | Sikelia Luxury Hotel | Remote Pantelleria island boutique, accessible only by ferry or light aircraft |
| Best Boutique Retreat | Dimora delle Balze | Artist-inspired suites among vineyards near Noto with saltwater pool |
Book These Hotels With VIP Perks
As a FORA-certified travel advisor, I can book many of these hotels with complimentary VIP perks: a room upgrade when available, complimentary breakfast daily, resort credits, and early check-in and late checkout. You pay the same rate as booking direct and you arrive to a better room with more included.
Palermo: Sicily's Baroque Capital
Palermo is one of the most layered cities in the Mediterranean. An extraordinary collision of Greek, Roman, Arab-Norman, and Baroque civilizations that plays out in its architecture, its markets, and its food. The city's hotel scene has come dramatically into its own in recent years, and the two properties below represent its finest expressions: a restored Belle Epoque villa overlooking the sea, and a historic art deco landmark at the center of urban Palermo's cultural life.
No. 1 · Belle Epoque Icon
Rocco Forte · VIP Perks Available
Villa Igiea is Palermo at its most glamorous, and Rocco Forte at its most characterful. Perched above the harbour at the foot of Monte Pellegrino, the hotel was originally built at the turn of the 20th century as a private residence for the Florio family, one of Sicily's most powerful dynasties. Its art nouveau interiors feel genuinely aristocratic: painted ceilings, period furnishings, and the kind of restrained opulence that announces itself quietly. The outdoor pool and terrace are among the finest in all of Palermo, and the hotel's position gives you easy access to the city's extraordinary markets, Baroque palazzi, and street food culture while providing an elegant retreat from the heat and noise.
No. 2 · Historic Landmark
VIP Perks Available
The Grand Hotel et Des Palmes carries the weight of Palermo's history in a way that few buildings can claim. Richard Wagner completed Parsifal here in 1881. It has hosted royalty, artists, and the city's intellectual elite for over a century. Its location, steps from the Teatro Massimo and within walking distance of the city's most extraordinary Arab-Norman churches, makes it the ideal base for a deeply cultural Sicilian experience.
Taormina: Sicily's Most Glamorous Address
Taormina is perhaps the most beautiful hill town in Italy. Perched on a clifftop above the Ionian Sea with Mount Etna rising dramatically to the south, it has attracted writers, artists, and aristocrats since the 19th century. Today, its hotel scene is genuinely world-class, with a concentration of exceptional properties, Four Seasons, two Belmond hotels, and a VRetreats resort, that rivals any resort town in Europe.
No. 3 · The Grande Dame of Taormina
Belmond · VIP Perks Available
The Timeo has been Taormina's grandest address since it opened in 1873, and under Belmond's stewardship it has only become more magnificent. The hotel's position is extraordinary: the ancient Greek Theatre is literally across the path, and from the terrace you look out over one of the greatest panoramas in the Mediterranean. The rooms are spacious and classically Italian in their elegance, and the restaurant Il Timeo draws serious food travelers from across Europe.
No. 4 · Beachfront Belmond
Belmond · VIP Perks Available
Four Seasons · VIP Perks Available
San Domenico Palace is, by most measures, the finest hotel in Sicily. The fact that it is set inside a working Dominican monastery founded in 1374 makes it one of the most extraordinary hotels in the world. Four Seasons took over the property in 2021 and executed a restoration that honors the building's history while bringing it into the 21st century with characteristic precision. The cloistered gardens, the frescoed chapel, the long vaulted corridors, all preserved and perfected. The views from the cliff-edge terraces over the Ionian Sea are genuinely breathtaking, and the hotel's restaurant, Principe Cerami, holds a Michelin star.
No. 6 · Modern Coastal Luxury
VRetreats · VIP Perks Available
Cefalù: The Seaside Medieval Town
Cefalù is one of Sicily's most photogenic towns. A medieval settlement built beneath a dramatic rocky promontory, its Norman cathedral rising above terracotta rooftops and a long sandy beach that stretches toward the Tyrrhenian coast. It is the most relaxed and immediately charming base on the northern coast, and the boutique resort below represents its most sophisticated address.
No. 7 · Minimalist Seafront Boutique
VIP Perks Available
Let Me Build Your Perfect Sicily Itinerary
As a certified travel advisor specializing in Italy, I can help you plan the perfect trip. From a one-on-one planning call to hotel bookings with exclusive perks and a full VIP itinerary service, I have options to suit every kind of traveler.
Southwest Sicily: Rocco Forte Country & the Valley of the Temples
Southwest Sicily is the island at its most ancient and its most expansive. The Valle dei Templi near Agrigento, a UNESCO World Heritage Site of extraordinary scale, with Greek temples more complete than anything that survives in Greece itself, stands alongside Rocco Forte's sweeping Verdura Resort as the twin poles of this undervisited region. If Taormina is Sicily's glamour, the southwest is its soul.
No. 8 · Golf, Wellness & Coastal Grandeur
Rocco Forte · VIP Perks Available
Verdura is Sicily on a grand scale. Set across an extraordinary stretch of the Mediterranean coast near Sciacca, this is Rocco Forte's largest and most comprehensive resort property. The two championship courses (designed by Kyle Phillips) are among the best in Italy. The spa is exceptional. The private beach is long and sun-drenched. And the private villa options, some with their own pools and outdoor lounges, represent some of the finest accommodation on the island.
No. 9 · The World's Most Atmospheric View
VIP Perks Available
There is nowhere else in the world where you can have breakfast on a terrace while looking directly at the Temple of Concordia, a perfectly preserved Doric temple built in 430 BC. Villa Athena is the hotel that occupies this extraordinary position, set within the Valle dei Templi UNESCO archaeological site itself. The hotel is boutique in scale, intimate in character, and the rooms have a quality that no amount of interior design can manufacture: that view.
Southeast Sicily: Baroque Towns & the Noto Valley
The southeastern corner of Sicily, the Val di Noto, designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site for its extraordinary concentration of Baroque towns, is one of the most beautiful and least overcrowded parts of the island. Syracuse and its ancient island of Ortigia, the honey-colored streets of Noto, the countryside around Ragusa: this is a region for slow travel, long meals, and the particular pleasure of discovering a part of Italy that most visitors overlook.
No. 10 · Art Deco on an Ancient Island
VIP Perks Available
VIP Perks Available
VIP Perks Available
The Islands: Aeolian Archipelago & Pantelleria
Sicily's outer islands, the volcanic Aeolian archipelago to the northeast and the remote island of Pantelleria to the southwest, represent some of the most exclusive and genuinely escapist travel in the Mediterranean. These are places where the pace slows to something approaching geological time, where the landscape is raw and elemental, and where the hotels have learned to make a virtue of remoteness.
No. 13 · Volcanic Cliffside Wellness
VIP Perks Available
VIP Perks Available
Mount Etna: The Volcano Stay
Mount Etna, at 3,357 meters the highest and most active volcano in Europe, is not merely a backdrop to northeastern Sicily. It is a presence, a personality, a force that shapes the landscape, the cuisine, and the character of everything within its considerable reach. Its slopes are covered in some of the most extraordinary vineyards in Italy, producing wines that have captured the attention of the world's best sommeliers. Staying on Etna itself is one of the most genuinely unusual hotel experiences in Italy.
No. 15 · The Volcano Retreat
VIP Perks Available
Monaci delle Terre Nere is the kind of hotel that changes how you think about Sicily. Set on the northern slopes of Etna, surrounded by vineyards and ancient lava flows, it occupies a restored 19th-century estate and operates as a working organic farm. The food, served at long communal tables under the stars or in the intimate dining room, is the most direct expression of what Sicilian cuisine can be at its best: hyperlocal, seasonal, deeply satisfying. The guided hikes to the crater rim are among the most memorable outdoor experiences in Italy.
Planning Your Sicily Stay: What You Need to Know
Best Time to Visit
The sweet spots are late May through June and September through October. The weather is warm but not brutal, the beaches are swimmable, and the crowds are manageable. July and August bring full Italian summer intensity. Spring (March through May) is spectacular in the interior and around the temples. November through February is quiet, with limited beach facilities but beautiful light and empty archaeological sites.
Which Area Should You Stay In?
Think about what you want most from Sicily. For glamour and the most iconic hotel experience, Taormina is irreplaceable. For urban culture, food markets, and Baroque architecture, Palermo is unmissable. For ancient history, base yourself near Agrigento or in Syracuse's Ortigia. For wine, hiking, and volcanic landscape, the slopes of Etna offer something genuinely unlike anywhere else in Italy. And for the total island escape, the Aeolian Islands or Pantelleria are in a category of their own.
How to Get There
Sicily has two main airports: Palermo Falcone-Borsellino (PMO) in the northwest and Catania-Fontanarossa (CTA) in the east. Palermo is best for Villa Igiea, Verdura Resort, and Susafa. Catania is better for Taormina, Mount Etna, and Syracuse. Renting a car is strongly recommended if you plan to explore beyond your hotel. The outer islands require ferries or light aircraft from the mainland.
How Many Nights?
A minimum of seven nights is ideal to feel unhurried in Sicily. The island is larger than many expect, and the diversity of landscapes means that moving between regions feels very different from moving around a smaller destination. Many travelers combine a few nights in Taormina with a countryside stay near Etna and a final night in Palermo.
Let Me Create Your Perfect Sicily Experience
As a certified travel advisor specializing in Italy, I can help you plan the perfect trip. From a one-on-one planning call to hotel bookings with exclusive perks and a full VIP itinerary service, I have options to suit every kind of traveler.
Sicily Hotel FAQs
Everything first-time visitors ask me before booking a hotel in Sicily, answered from personal experience traveling and advising on the island.
San Domenico Palace, A Four Seasons Hotel in Taormina is widely regarded as Sicily's most iconic luxury hotel. It occupies a 14th-century Dominican monastery perched on a cliff above the Ionian Sea, with panoramic views of Mount Etna. The Belmond Grand Hotel Timeo, beside the Greek Theatre in the same town, is a very close second. Both are genuinely extraordinary.
Taormina is the classic first-timer's base. It has the most concentrated selection of world-class hotels, extraordinary views, an ancient Greek Theatre, good restaurants, and easy day-trip access to Etna and the Ionian coast. For a more culturally immersive experience, Palermo offers Sicily's best food markets, Arab-Norman churches, and the island's most vibrant street food scene. Ideally, spend at least a few nights in each.
Late May through June and September through October offer the ideal combination: warm weather, swimmable sea, open beach clubs, and manageable crowds. July and August are peak season, excellent energy but very busy and very hot. Spring is magical for driving through the interior or visiting archaeological sites with virtually no crowds. Almond blossom season in February and March is spectacular in the southwestern valley areas.
Yes. As a travel advisor affiliated with preferred partner programs, I can book many of these properties, including Rocco Forte, Four Seasons, Belmond, and other independent luxury hotels, with complimentary perks like daily breakfast, room upgrades when available, resort credits, early check-in, and late checkout. You pay the same rate as booking direct, but arrive to more included. Contact me here.
Sicily is exceptional for a honeymoon, and significantly less traveled than the Amalfi Coast, which means more genuinely romantic moments and less fighting for restaurant reservations. For honeymooners, I'd suggest combining a few nights at San Domenico Palace or Villa Sant'Andrea in Taormina with something more intimate. Monaci delle Terre Nere on Etna, or Dimora delle Balze near Noto. The contrast between Taormina's glamour and the volcanic countryside is a perfect honeymoon arc.
A car is strongly recommended if you plan to explore beyond Taormina and Palermo. The Valley of the Temples, Mount Etna, the Noto Valley, and virtually all countryside properties require a car. Driving in Sicily is an experience in itself. The roads through the interior are beautiful, the traffic outside of cities is light, and the spontaneous stops at roadside markets, hilltop villages, and ancient ruins are among the best things about traveling here. Note that the Aeolian Islands and Pantelleria require ferries or light aircraft instead.
Final Thoughts: Choosing Your Sicily Hotel
Sicily rewards travelers who invest time in choosing where to stay. Because this is an island of genuinely extraordinary contrasts, clifftop glamour and volcanic humility, Greek temples and Norman cathedrals, world-class wine and simple cucina povera, the hotel you choose shapes the Sicily you experience. A week at San Domenico Palace gives you a very different island than a week between Monaci delle Terre Nere and Dimora delle Balze. Both Sicilies are wonderful. But they are not the same Sicily.
My honest advice: don't try to see too much. Give yourself time in each place. Book your restaurant reservations before you arrive. In Taormina especially, the best tables fill up weeks ahead in high season. And if you want someone to put together the whole picture, hotels, transfers, private guides, restaurant bookings, and VIP perks at every property, that's exactly what I'm here for.
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Karissa
✦ FORA Certified Travel Advisor
I split my time between the U.S. and Italy designing authentic, effortlessly luxurious travel experiences. Living part-time in Italy means you get real insider knowledge.
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