Contact

Get in touch about an article, a correction, an Italian itinerary you’re planning, or a tip about a town you love that I haven’t written about yet.

How to reach me

A proper contact form is going in here shortly. In the meantime, the best ways to get in touch are:

Corrections or factual updates

If you’ve spotted a mistake — an out-of-date price, a closed restaurant, a wrong opening hour, a misidentified painting — let me know. Site is running on a traveller’s budget and a fact-check is worth its weight in olive oil.

Leave a note via the contact form (coming soon) or catch me on social.

Itinerary suggestions

I don’t build itineraries professionally, but I read every message and am happy to throw a few thoughts at an idea that’s shaping up. If you’re trying to decide between Urbino and Orvieto for a three-day swing, or whether a week in Calabria is enough, leave a note with a bit of context and I’ll write back when I can.

Editorial and partnerships

Site is independent, ad-free, and funded by affiliate links to Viator, GetYourGuide and Booking.com. I don’t take sponsored content. If you’re a regional tourist board, a property owner, or an operator with something you think is genuinely world-class, the answer is probably no — but a short description of what you’d want to pitch can’t hurt.

What I’m not

I’m not a booking agent, not a travel agent, and not Italian (though I’d like to be). I don’t answer visa questions, can’t book your hotels, and can’t get you into the Uffizi if the timed slots are sold out. For those, there are specialists; this site is editorial.

On the writing

Every article on this site is researched, photographed, edited and published by one person. When you spot a typo or an obvious mistake, there is nobody to pass it to. That’s a feature and a bug. If something’s wrong, it’s on me, and I fix it as fast as I can.

Most articles here are about places I’ve visited personally over the last 20 years, informed by the original italianvisits.com work that Jesse Andrews and others wrote in the 2000s. Where I’ve drawn on external research — particularly for historical or practical details — it’s noted.