Themed picks · Rimini · Adriatic coast
10 Adriatic seaside towns near Rimini
10 comuni · within 120 minutes of Rimini · drive times OSRM-computed
The Italian Adriatic coast from the Po Delta to the Conero promontory is the country's longest stretch of swimmable shore, almost entirely lined with seaside comuni that have been working as beach towns since the 1920s. Rimini sits roughly at its centre and serves as both the most famous of them (the broad sand beach, the night life, the Fellini biographical connection) and the obvious base for day trips up and down the coast.
Two hours' drive from Rimini in either direction covers the working part of the riviera: north into Romagna (Cervia, Cesenatico, Ravenna's coastal frazioni, Comacchio in the Po delta), south into Marche (Gabicce, Pesaro, Senigallia, the Conero coast around Numana and Sirolo, Porto San Giorgio). Each stretch has a different character. Romagna is the broad-sand, family-resort tradition. Marche shifts to a more dramatic coastline as you head south, with the Monte Conero falling into the sea below Ancona.
We picked ten comuni that show the range, with deliberate balance between the Romagna and Marche stretches. Drive times below are OSRM-computed from Rimini Centrale by car; most are also reachable by the regional rail line that runs the spine of the Adriatic coast (the Bologna-Ancona-Bari mainline calls at almost every seaside town).
The ten
1Pesaro e Urbino · Marche · 45 min from Rimini
Gradara
The walled hill borgo at 142 meters above the Adriatic where Dante set the deaths of Paolo and Francesca, with one of Italy's best-preserved castles.
Why this one:Listed in I Borghi più belli d'Italia.
One of Italy's best-preserved medieval fortresses, twelfth-century core, finished under the Malatesta in the fifteenth century with double walls running almost 800 meters.
2Pesaro e Urbino · Marche · 41 min from Rimini
Gabicce Mare
The northernmost Marche seaside on the Adriatic, where the Riviera Romagnola meets the cliffs of the Parco del San Bartolo at the Romagna border.
Why this one:Carries the Bandiera Blu for certified swimmable water.
Northernmost Marche seaside, culturally part of the Riviera Romagnola continuum running up to Cervia, with a Bandiera Blu beach.
3Pesaro e Urbino · Marche · 60 min from Rimini
Mondolfo
A walled hill borgo at 144 meters above the Adriatic, with the frazione of Marotta and its Bandiera Blu beach below.
Why this one:Carries the Bandiera Blu for certified swimmable water.
Late fifteenth-century walls and bastion redesigned by the Della Rovere for early artillery defense, roughly 600 meters around the hill borgo.
4Forlì-Cesena · Emilia-Romagna · 52 min from Rimini
Cesenatico
An Adriatic fishing port whose canal was redrawn by Leonardo da Vinci in 1502, with ten historic sailboats moored as a floating museum.
Why this one:Carries the Bandiera Blu for certified swimmable water.
The Porto Canale was redrawn by Leonardo in 1502 on commission from Cesare Borgia, with his sketch preserved in the Codex L of the Institut de France.
5Pesaro e Urbino · Marche · 55 min from Rimini
Pesaro
The Adriatic port at the mouth of the Foglia, founded as Roman Pisaurum in 184 BC and given to the world by Rossini in 1792.
Why this one:Carries the Bandiera Blu for certified swimmable water.
Gioachino Rossini was born here in 1792; the Rossini Opera Festival each August and UNESCO's 2017 Creative City of Music designation both rest on his legacy.
6Ravenna · Emilia-Romagna · 59 min from Rimini
Cervia
The Adriatic salt town with 827 hectares of working saline, planned in 1697 around a grid of salt workers' houses.
Why this one:Carries the Bandiera Blu for certified swimmable water.
Cervia's sale dolce, lower in bitter chlorides than other sea salts, harvested from 827 hectares of saline still in operation.
7Ravenna · Emilia-Romagna · 75 min from Rimini
Ravenna
A 4-meter coastal capital of three successive empires, with eight UNESCO mosaic monuments from the fifth and sixth centuries.
Why this one:Carries the Bandiera Blu for certified swimmable water.
Eight monuments from the fifth and sixth centuries inscribed in 1996, including San Vitale, Galla Placidia and Sant'Apollinare Nuovo.
8Rimini · Emilia-Romagna · 48 min from Rimini
Verucchio
A spur over the lower Marecchia valley, cradle of the Villanovan civilization and birthplace of the Malatesta lordship of Romagna.
Why this one:Listed in I Borghi più belli d'Italia.
Twelfth-to-seventh-century BC settlement on the ridge, with a necropolis whose finds form one of the richest Villanovan collections in Italy.
9Rimini · Emilia-Romagna · 49 min from Rimini
Montefiore Conca
A 385-meter Malatesta hilltop above the Conca valley, dominated by a fourteenth-century fortress that was once a summer residence of the lords of Rimini.
Why this one:Listed in I Borghi più belli d'Italia.
Fourteenth-century Malatesta fortress, both a war machine and a frescoed summer residence that hosted Pope Gregory XII and Louis I of Hungary.
10Rimini · Emilia-Romagna · 38 min from Rimini
San Giovanni in Marignano
A walled Conca-valley borgo, granary of the Malatesta state, where the Notte delle Streghe has marked the summer solstice since 1988.
Why this one:Listed in I Borghi più belli d'Italia.
Over two hundred underground grain pits beneath the streets, the cereal reserve of the Malatesta state from the fifteenth century onward.
Why Rimini is the base
Rimini is the Adriatic's holiday-rail hub. The Centrale station handles 9 million passengers a year, with direct Frecciabianca service from Milan and Bologna in summer and dense regional connections up and down the coast year-round. The airport (RMI) handles charter and budget seasonal traffic. The city itself has a calmer side (the Tiberius Bridge, the Roman remains around Piazza Tre Martiri, the Fellini Museum at Castel Sismondo) for days that need a break from the beach.
When to go
June through mid-September is the working beach season; July and August are crowded but everything is open. May and late September are the shoulder months with the water still cool but the towns calmer. Avoid mid-August (Ferragosto). The off-season (November through March) thins the coast out almost entirely; some comuni close their seafront establishments. Ravenna and Comacchio stay open year-round because their pull is the basilicas and the Po Delta, not the beach.
How we picked these
We filtered every Adriatic-coast town within two hours of Rimini to those carrying a Bandiera Blu (the certified swimmable-water flag), a Borgo più bello, or a Bandiera Arancione, and ranked by signal density plus drive-time tightness. The radius is two hours rather than ninety minutes because the southern Marche coast (the Conero, Porto San Giorgio) is the strongest of the southern stretch and worth the extra drive.
Questions
- What is the closest beach to Rimini?
- Rimini's own beach is the obvious answer (a 15-km stretch of broad sand, with the historic centre 10 minutes' walk inland). For a quieter swim, Riccione (10 minutes south by car) and Cattolica (20 minutes) are the next two resort towns down the coast.
- Is the Conero coast worth visiting from Rimini?
- Yes. Sirolo and Numana sit below the Conero promontory about 90 minutes south of Rimini. The geography shifts: instead of broad sand, the coast becomes cliff and pebble beach with two bays (Le Due Sorelle) that are reachable only by boat. The food shifts too — brodetto alla anconitana, the local Adriatic fish stew, is at its base form here.
- Where is Italy's most famous seafood market?
- Cesenatico's fish market (Mercato Ittico, daily from 7am except Sunday) is the largest on the Romagna coast. The Leonardo da Vinci canal-port that runs through Cesenatico's centre is the visual signature; the market is at the seaward end of it.
- Is there a quieter alternative to the Romagna resort beaches?
- The Po Delta. Comacchio, Lido di Volano, and the Valli di Comacchio lagoon system run north from the riviera and feel structurally different (canals, fishing huts on stilts, the eel market). Reachable in about 90 minutes from Rimini by car.
Build a real trip around these
These are day-trip picks, the kind of list that works for a one-week stay in Rimini. For a longer slow trip across the country, our planner builds a multi-corner itinerary from your dates, months, and food and walking preferences.
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