Getting to Italy
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Getting to Calabria is Easy & Affordable

Flight times are only 2½ hours from the UK. Low cost flights are available with Ryanair from Stansted. More flights and connections are to be added soon. A further airport is being developed in the area which currently services internal flights.

Calabria has two International Airports

Reggio di Calabria Airport Reggio di Calabria Airport 
 

 

Reggio di Calabria Airport, also known as Strait of Messina Airport, is in the process of redevelopment. It has ambitious plans to become a central hub for the Mediterranean basin, primarily because of its strategic geographic position, serving the two most popular tourist destinations in Italy.  Its attractive buildings offer a spectacular view of nearby Sicily. At this time there are two runways and there is an ambitious plan to strengthen the infrastructure and auxiliary services.

 Lamezia Airport   

    Lamezia Airport

 

Lamezia Terme Airport is reachable by direct flights from many European cities. Travellers from the America's and Asia change make connections in either Milan or Rome with promotions available throughout the year.

Travelling to Calabria is easy and affordable. Both Ryanair and Easyjet have cheap flights to Rome where a connection can be made on the Italian airline Alitalia which flies several times a day to the two airports in Calabria: Reggio Calabria and Lamezia Terme.

Ryanair fly to Rome Ciampiano from Dublin, Tees Valley Glasgow, East Midlands, London Luton, Liverpool and London Stansted.

Direct flights from Dublin and Belfast to Reggio Calabria and Lamezia Terme are expected very soon and as is common with direct flights being introduced an increase in property values could be expected.

BY ROAD TO CALABRIAItalian Autostrada Sign

The new A3 Motorway runs west down the coast linking with the A1 up into northern Italy. The road puts you within easy reach of resorts that are fun and lively in the summer, deserted in the winter. Some villages have a distinct flavour of Greece, with whitewashed walls and a cuisine that owes much to those ancient invaders from across the Ionian Seas. There are many Greek and Roman remains, and untouched beaches shelter beneath precipitous roads clinging to the scrubby mountainside.