
Framura Beach
Blue Flag pebbles, blue water, and medieval towers above



About
Spiaggia di Framura stretches roughly 250 metres along the Ligurian coast near Cinque Terre, offering a pleasing mix of pebbles and sand lapped by blue water. The beach holds Blue Flag certification, a reliable signal of clean water and well-managed facilities. A designated naturist zone sits on part of the shore, so the beach quietly accommodates different preferences side by side. Medieval watchtowers watch over the hillside above, and the Ciclovia Maremonti — a converted railway path — delivers cyclists and walkers directly to the waterfront with sea views all the way. The overall feel is relaxed and family-oriented, without the intensity of the more famous Cinque Terre villages nearby.
How to get there
The easiest approach is on foot from Framura train station via Via del Mare — a ten-minute walk that runs daily and keeps cars out of the equation entirely. If you drive, paid parking is available near the beach from April 1 through September 30 at €2.00 per hour or €13.00 per day; parking is free in winter. Spaces are limited close to the sea, so the train is genuinely the recommended option in summer. Access to the beach and promenade is wheelchair-friendly.
Who it's for
For couples
The combination of Blue Flag water, a scenic cycle path, and medieval ruins above the shore makes this a genuinely atmospheric place for two — quieter than the Cinque Terre villages and easy to reach by train without the stress of parking.
For families
Swimming is rated safe, access is easy, and the beach and promenade are wheelchair-accessible, so families with young children or anyone with mobility needs can settle in without difficulty. The on-site dining means you're not hunting for lunch with tired kids in tow.
Our take
Feet in the sand, eyes on the screen
Framura doesn't shout. It sits quietly between the famous Cinque Terre villages and lets the Blue Flag water, the old railway path, and the watchtowers do the talking. The mixed pebble-and-sand shore is comfortable rather than dramatic, and the safe swimming makes it genuinely suitable for all ages. The naturist zone is handled matter-of-factly — it's part of the beach, not a big deal. Skip July and August if you can; June and September give you the same blue water with far fewer people sharing it. The train connection from Framura station is the detail that makes this place work — leave the car behind and the whole visit becomes easier. A well-rounded, honest Ligurian beach that earns its Blue Flag without needing to oversell itself.
What to do
The Ciclovia Maremonti runs right alongside the beach — a scenic cycling and walking path carved from an old railway line, threading through tunnels with open sea views at every exit. If you wander uphill into the commune's hamlets of Setta and Anzo, three medieval watchtowers stand as quiet reminders of the coast's defensive past. The Parish Church of San Martino in the Costa hamlet is worth a short detour, its square bell tower — itself a former watchtower — rising above the roofline. Swimming is safe here, and the blue water invites a long, unhurried float.
Frame the medieval watchtowers from the shoreline with the blue water in the foreground for a shot that puts the whole history of this coast in one image.
The Ciclovia Maremonti tunnel exits are a reliable second location — the circular frame of rock around a slice of open sea is hard to improve on. Early morning, before the day-trippers arrive, gives you clean light and an uncluttered beach.
Where to eat
Right at the beach, Spiaggia di Framura offers on-site dining so you don't need to go far after a swim. About a kilometre away, La Cueva Blanca combines a beach establishment with boat tours to the Cinque Terre, making it a practical base if you want to explore the coastline by sea as well as on foot.
Where to stay
Sesta Terra Natural Resort sits just 0.6 km from the beach and carries a strong 4.6 out of 5 rating across more than 300 reviews — a solid choice if you want comfort close to the shore. For a more budget-conscious stay, Camping Framura is 2 km away and rated 4.1 out of 5 by over 530 guests, with a well-established reputation among visitors to the area.
Photography
Shoot from the waterline in the early morning when the blue water catches soft directional light and the medieval towers are visible on the ridge above — the pebble-and-sand foreground adds texture without competing with the backdrop. The Ciclovia Maremonti tunnels frame a classic Ligurian shot: stand at a tunnel mouth and let the arc of rock frame the sea beyond.
Good to know
Part of the beach is a designated naturist zone — respect the boundary and the people using it. July and August bring the heaviest visitor numbers, so aim for June or September if you want a quieter stretch of shore. Paid parking fills up fast on summer weekends, which is another reason to take the train from Framura station. True digital-detox spot — bring offline books, the cell signal fades and there's nowhere to plug in a laptop.
Map
Nearby places
La Cueva Blanca | Tour in barca alle 5 terre, Stabilimento balneare
Spiaggia di Framura
Sesta Terra Natural Resort
Camping Framura (S.R.L.)
Ciclovia Maremonti
Watchtowers of Framura
Parish Church of San Martino
Things to see around Framura
Ciclovia Maremonti
Scenic cycling/walking path on old railway with sea views and tunnels.
Watchtowers of Framura
Three medieval watchtowers in hamlets of Setta and Anzo.
Parish Church of San Martino
Ancient church in Costa hamlet with square bell tower (former watchtower).
Frequently asked
The information on this page is provided for guidance only and may evolve. Access conditions, safety and infrastructure can change without notice. Always check official sources before traveling.
Nearest beaches
Other family beaches in Italy
Reviews of this beach
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Photo credits
Sources and licenses for the photos shown above.
- Photo 1 — Davide Papalini · source · CC BY-SA 3.0
- Photo 2 — Davide Papalini · source · CC BY-SA 3.0
- Photo 3 — Cristina Maioglio · source · CC BY-SA 4.0
- Photo 4 — Terensky · source · CC BY 3.0









