A New High-Speed Train Will Connect These 2 Iconic Italy Destinations Directly

Starting in 2024, travelers will be able to take a single train (versus a cumbersome connection) to travel from the capital to this famed archaeological site.

Ruins in Pompeii

Ruins of the ancient city of Pompeii, which was destroyed by a volcanic eruption in 79 C.E. The place is a popular destination for tourists in Italy.

Photo by Shutterstock

Traveling from Rome to Pompeii in Italy will soon be much easier—and a lot faster.

The Italian government recently announced it is starting construction on a high-speed train that will link the capital to the city that was buried by volcanic ash from Mount Vesuvius in 79 C.E. and has since become an archaeological park.

There are currently no direct rail routes linking the two popular tourism destinations—travelers need to first take a train from Rome to Naples, just over an hour away, and then navigate the crowds at the Napoli Centrale train station to transfer to a regional train called the Circumvesuviana, bound for Pompeii. That train from Naples to Pompeii is known for being old and slow, with stops in several small towns along the way. The whole journey takes roughly two hours.

“The Roma-Pompeii line is going to be a total game changer. Door-to-door Roma-Pompeii and back with comfort, efficiency, and no worries,” says Erica Firpo, an AFAR contributor based in Rome. She adds, “In peak tourist season, the Roma-Pompeii day trip feels like an infernal eternity—shoulder-to-shoulder crowds, standing room only on the Circumvesuviana, and ancient ventilation. Repeat for the return.” Firpo recently experienced a train delay on the clunky rail route that required “a frenetic run through Napoli Centrale to make my connection.”

The venture includes the addition of a new train station and transportation hub near Pompeii; construction is scheduled to start this summer and conclude in 2024, though an exact completion date has yet to be announced. It will be built on an existing railroad line that connects Rome (and its Fiumicino Airport) to Naples and Salerno. It’s being funded by the Great Pompeii Project, an initiative spearheaded by the European Union in 2021. Full details have yet to be revealed, but the government has shared that passengers on the train will be able to watch a video about the history of Pompeii and its excavations, as well as buy entrance tickets to the archaeological site onboard.

Laura Itzkowitz, another AFAR writer based in Rome, says that while the streamlined service would definitely make it easier for people visiting Rome to a take a day trip to Pompeii, she “worries about overtourism, which already plagues the nearby Amalfi Coast and could harm the fragile archaeological site.”

Rome-based archaeologist Darius Arya tells AFAR that because Pompeii is the most famous archaeologicial site in the world, he’d argue it doesn’t need more tourists—and it could mean that countless people will now skip Naples and other Vesuvian cities like Herculaneum and Stabiae.

“That said, I think Pompeii’s current administration is up to the task,” Arya says. “Along with making Pompeii more accessible than ever with more of the site open, Pompeii has become a model site for site management, presentation and preservation, with more constant conservation work that is visible and tangible.”

Just shy of 3 million people visited Pompeii in 2022. The most visitors in a single year were 3.8 million people in 2019. According to the Italian newspaper Il Mattino, the new train could double the number of tourists who visit each day.

Those who visit Pompeii get to see a city frozen nearly 2,000 years in the past, including its frescoed villas, bathhouses, markets, theaters, brothels, and temples. The site is open to self-guided tours or those led by freelance guides (available on request from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.). Excavations of the ancient city began in 1748. Even today, roughly one-third of the former metropolis is still buried.

This article was originally published in May 2023 and has since been updated with new information.

Bailey Berg is a freelance travel writer and editor, who covers breaking news, trends, tips, transportation, sustainability, the outdoors, and more. She was formerly the associate travel news editor at AFAR. Her work can also be found in the New York Times, the Washington Post, National Geographic, Condé Nast Traveler, Travel + Leisure, the Points Guy, Atlas Obscura, Vice, Thrillist, Men’s Journal, Architectural Digest, Forbes, Lonely Planet, and beyond.
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