The Versilia IndexA Directory of the Tuscan Coast · Est. 2024
Issue No. 07
Viareggio, Italy
Around

Lucca as a Half-Day Trip

Twenty-six minutes by regional train. What to do in four hours, and why the walls are better than the churches.

Where
Lucca, inland Tuscany
From Viareggio
~26 min direct regional train; ~€4 one-way
Time needed
4–6 hours minimum
Walls
Le Mura, 4 km circumference, walkable/cyclable
Main sights
San Michele in Foro, Duomo di San Martino, Piazza dell'Anfiteatro, Casa Natale di Puccini
Best for
A slower pace than Pisa; rewards walking
Last revised
April 2026

Lucca is the walled town every other Tuscan walled town compares itself to, usually unfavourably. It sits twenty-six minutes by regional train from Viareggio Stazione, inland and slightly uphill. A flat centre, a complete ring of ramparts, a cathedral smaller than expected — and the smaller-than-expected part is the point.

Day-trippers over-schedule it. They pile in mid-morning, tick off the Duomo, eat an indifferent lunch on a named piazza, and leave before the light gets good. A better version of the same day exists, and it involves spending most of it on top of a wall.

Two figures walking on the raised brick rampart of the Lucca city walls at dusk, pink sky above
Le Mura at the hour it is best photographed and least photographed — walkers on the upper promenade, the brick still warm from the afternoon.

Why Four Hours Is Enough

Most directories recommend a full day. We disagree, at least for travellers based on the coast with dinner plans back in Viareggio. Four hours covers the walls, one church, one piazza, one museum, and a coffee. Six hours allows a proper lunch and a second circuit of the ramparts at a different hour. Longer risks a late-afternoon slump in a shuttered town where everything useful closes between one and four.

A defensible itinerary, starting from Lucca station:

  1. Walk ten minutes to Porta San Pietro and go up onto the walls.
  2. Half-loop the ramparts anti-clockwise to Porta Santa Maria (about 2 km).
  3. Descend for San Michele in Foro, then Piazza dell'Anfiteatro.
  4. Lunch or a coffee one street off the Anfiteatro.
  5. Casa Natale di Puccini, via di Poggio 30 — twenty minutes, no more.
  6. Complete the wall loop if time permits; catch the regional back.
Getting there. Regional trains from Viareggio to Lucca run roughly hourly on the Viareggio–Lucca–Firenze line, direct, journey time 25–28 minutes. Fares typically €3.60–€4.20 one-way, second class, from the Trenitalia app, the station counter, or the yellow self-service machines. Validate paper tickets on the platform. From Lucca station, the walled centre is a five-minute walk north across Piazzale Ricasoli.

The Walls — Walk or Cycle

Walls, not churches, are the sight here. Le Mura di Lucca are among the best-preserved Renaissance fortifications in Europe: a 4-kilometre circuit of brick and earthwork ramparts built in stages between 1504 and the mid-seventeenth century. They never saw military use. In the 1820s Maria Luisa di Borbone converted the top into a tree-lined public promenade — a raised ring-road for pedestrians, cyclists, joggers, dog-walkers, and, on summer weekends, the city's entire population.

A full loop is comfortable in an hour on foot, faster by bike. Rental is available near the main gates; €4–€5 per hour for a standard city bike, €3–€4 more for an electric. You do not need electric. Everything is flat.

The walls deserve more time than any single church in the town. Day-trippers who spend forty-five minutes inside the Duomo and fifteen on the ramparts have, we think, inverted the ratio.

Views from the top are the ones travel writing rarely captures well. Not a panorama — ramparts are too low, and plane-trees on the inside cut the sightline. What you get instead is a cross-section: on one side, red-tiled roofs and bell-towers of the walled town in miniature; on the other, the plain running toward the foothills of the Apuan Alps. Best at the hours the low sun rakes across the brick — around 10 a.m. in spring, around 5 p.m. in summer.

Sight / activity Entry fee Notes
Walls of Lucca (Le Mura) Free Open access, pedestrian and cycle
Bike rental (1 hour) €4–€5 Standard city bike; electric on request
Duomo di San Martino ~€3 (cathedral + sacristy) Combined tickets available for bell tower
San Michele in Foro Free Donations welcomed; opening hours vary
Casa Natale di Puccini €9 Via di Poggio 30; small museum, one floor
Regional train, Viareggio → Lucca ~€4 one-way 26 min direct, roughly hourly

Piazza dell'Anfiteatro Without the Crowds

Curved yellow and ochre buildings following the elliptical line of Piazza dell'Anfiteatro in Lucca, with cloudy sky overhead
The back of the ring, where the curve is clearest. The buildings are not decorative — they were built into the surviving seating tiers of the Roman amphitheatre below.

Piazza dell'Anfiteatro does an honest trick. You enter through one of four low tunnels cut into the ring of buildings and emerge into an oval about 75 metres across, surrounded by houses that follow the elliptical footprint of the second-century Roman amphitheatre they are built into. Arena floor buried under three metres of infill; the cavea survives in the masonry of the surrounding residences. One of the clearest pieces of urban archaeology in Tuscany you can stand inside for free.

Predictably, a tourist magnet. Also a restaurant trap. Cafés under the arcades are acceptable for a €3 espresso and a ten-minute sit; they are not worth a full meal. Eat one street out, along Via Fillungo or the side lanes toward San Frediano.

Best times to see the oval without the phones-up crowd: before 9.30 a.m. or after 7 p.m. Enter, circle once, leave. Seven minutes. Twenty if you sit.

The Puccini Stop

Giacomo Puccini was born at via di Poggio 30 on 22 December 1858, in a second-floor apartment now preserved as the Casa Natale di Puccini museum. Small — one floor, seven rooms, the composer's upright piano, costume designs from early productions of La Bohème and Turandot, the overcoat he wore in Paris. Admission €9. Visits take fifteen to twenty-five minutes.

Editor's aside. Casa Natale pairs well with our entry on the Puccini Festival at Torre del Lago — the house in town where he grew up, the lake house where he wrote most of the operas, and the open-air stage where they are performed. Seen in that order, the Lucca museum stops being a box to tick and becomes the first chapter of a longer story. Seen alone, a pleasant twenty minutes and a slightly overpriced ticket.

A bronze Puccini sits in Piazza Cittadella directly outside, cigarette in hand. Most-photographed object in Lucca after the cathedral facade. Take the photograph; do not linger.

What to Skip

Not everything in a Lucca guidebook is worth the walk. Some honest cuts:

A remark on lunch. Lucca lacks the Versilian coast's fish economy, and ordering seafood here is a mistake day-trippers make once. Eat what the inland plain does well: tordelli lucchesi with a meat ragù, farro soup, rovelline of braised beef. Current openings are tracked sensibly on TripAdvisor's Lucca pages, with the usual caveats about ranking noise.

For the return: last regional to Viareggio typically leaves Lucca around 22:30, but the schedule thins after 21:00. Catch something mid-evening. See our entry on Viareggio Station & the Coastal Line for the onward coastal timetable; if the airport leg is still ahead, Pisa Airport to Viareggio is covered separately. For a different sort of inland day, marble rather than walls — see The Carrara Marble Quarries.