Anywhere Italy
Stemma di Salò

Lombardy · Brescia

Salò

On the deepest gulf of Lake Garda, with the lake's longest waterfront promenade and the cathedral of the Riviera di Salò.

39 km / 24 mi

Nearest hub (Brescia)

10,417

Population

Apr–Oct

Best time to visit

Why come

Salò sitson the deepest gulf of Lake Garda, between the Brescia hills and the western lakeshore. Ancient Romans founded the colony of Pagus Salodium here; the modern commune separated from Brescia at the end of the 13th century. From 1334 to 1797, Salò was the capital of the Magnifica Patria, a federation of town councils along the western lakeshore and the Valsabbia, first known as Riperia Lacus Gardae Brixiensis. The Duomo of Santa Maria Annunziata, a 15th-century late-Gothic church designed by Filippo delle Vacche with a façade left unfinished, holds works by Romanino and Zenon Veronese. In 1943-1945 the town gave its name to the Italian Social Republic, Mussolini's last German-backed state, headquartered in commandeered villas along the lakefront. Today Salò runs on tourism, lake events, and the MuSa museum, which opened in 2015 in the former church of Santa Giustina.

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Gallery

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Known for

  • Duomo di Santa Maria Annunziata

    Late-Gothic 15th-century cathedral by Filippo delle Vacche, with an unfinished façade, a rose window of 1506-1508, and altarpieces by Romanino and Zenon Veronese.

  • MuSa

    Civic museum opened in 2015 in the former church of Santa Giustina, covering Salò and its territory from Roman times through the Italian Social Republic.

  • Lungolago

    Three-kilometer lakeside promenade, the longest on Lake Garda, running between the central pier and the gulf's southern point.

  • Palazzo della Magnifica Patria

    Sixteenth-century palace that housed the federal council of the Riviera di Salò until 1797, when Napoleon dissolved the Venetian Republic.

  • Chiesa di San Bernardino

    Fifteenth-century church above the lakefront, with frescoes from the Lombard school and a small monastic cloister.

When to visit

Best months · Apr–Oct

  • J
  • F
  • M
  • A
  • M
  • J
  • J
  • A
  • S
  • O
  • N
  • D
  • Best
  • Hot or crowded
  • Quiet
  • Mostly closed

April through October is the long Garda season. April and May bring camellias along the lungolago, the lake stays mild, and the western coast road is open without the August traffic. June through August is peak season, with hot days, swimming weather, and the lakefront cafés full from morning to midnight. September and October are the recommended months: harvest in the Garda Bresciano hills, lake light turning toward gold, and the heavier crowds gone. November through March is quieter, with mountain fog rolling onto the lake some mornings; the Duomo, MuSa, and most year-round restaurants stay open through winter.

How to get there

From Brescia, Salò is roughly 39 km by road. Allow about 3347 minutes depending on traffic and route choice (autostrada vs scenic).

Drive time to the nearest gateway airports

  • Milan1h 8m
  • Verona1h 10m
  • Bologna2h 19m

Elevation 65 m

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