The fastest way to cross Italy is a high-speed train. The best way is a slow one.
La Dolce Vita Orient Express runs itineraries across the country in carriages inspired by 1960s Italian design, with cuisine under the direction of Heinz Beck and routes that treat landscape as the main event: Tuscan hills, southern coastlines, the approach to Venice across the lagoon.
The train as the destination
Luxury travel keeps rediscovering an old truth: the journey can be the product. A sleeper train removes the airport, the transfer, the fragmentation of a trip into logistics, and replaces it with a single continuous experience: dinner, night, landscape, arrival.
The 1960s reference is well chosen. That decade is Italy’s most exportable dream: Cinecittà, Riviera glamour, tailoring, the sweet life the name promises. The train sells a period of Italian confidence as much as a route.
Who it is for
Rail cruising suits a specific traveller: couples marking an occasion, multigenerational groups who want movement without effort, and connoisseurs of the format who have already done the classic routes elsewhere in Europe.
It also solves a genuinely hard problem: seeing more than one region of Italy deeply without spending half the holiday in transit.
The bigger signal
Italy’s luxury rail moment is part of a wider shift toward slower, higher-touch travel. The same instinct drives the return of grand hotels, long villa stays and yacht itineraries built around fewer stops. Speed was the last century’s luxury. Time is this one’s.
Luxury.it perspective
Treat the train as the centrepiece of a longer itinerary rather than a novelty in isolation: a few nights in a city on either end turns a journey into a season.
Related guides
Luxury Train Journeys in Italy · Luxury Hotels in Venice · Luxury Hotels in Sicily · Destinations
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