There is a part of Italy that most travelers still pass over on their way somewhere else, and that is precisely why it remains so extraordinary. Calabria and Basilicata, the toe and the instep of the boot, are the country’s wildest, most ancient frontier. Here mountains tumble straight into the sea, cave cities rise from rocky ravines, Greek temples stand in fields of wild fennel, and villages perched on cliffs seem to belong to another century. To travel through these two regions is to leave behind everything you thought you knew about Italy. And the only way to do it properly is from behind the wheel, with time, curiosity, and an open horizon.
A Land of Mountains and Two Seas
Few places in Europe pack so much landscape into so little distance. In Calabria, the Ionian Sea on one side and the Tyrrhenian on the other are separated by mountain ranges still cloaked in beech and pine, the Sila and the Aspromonte, where wolves roam and shepherds still make caciocavallo cheese the old way. In Basilicata, the dramatic Pollino massif rises in the south, while to the east the strange clay badlands of the calanchi unfold like a lunar landscape under the southern sun.
The roads here climb, curl, and descend through scenery that changes by the kilometer. A bend reveals a medieval village clinging to a ridge. A coastal road opens onto a turquoise bay. A mountain pass spills into a valley of olives and bergamot. Self-driving these regions is not always quick, but it is endlessly rewarding. Every detour is a discovery.
Matera and the Heart of Basilicata
Basilicata is small but unforgettable. At its center stands Matera, the city of sassi, where ancient cave dwellings carved into limestone have been continuously inhabited for nine thousand years. Once one of Italy’s poorest places, Matera is now one of its most remarkable, a UNESCO site that glows like honey at sunset and feels almost biblical at night when the lamps come on one by one across the ravine.
Beyond Matera, Basilicata rewards the curious. The hilltop village of Pietrapertosa and its neighbor Castelmezzano sit among the jagged Lucanian Dolomites and connect by a zipline that flies across the valley. Maratea, on the short Tyrrhenian coast, offers cliffs, secret coves, and a giant statue of Christ watching over the sea. Inland, vineyards around Mount Vulture produce Aglianico, one of southern Italy’s finest red wines, deep and structured, perfect with the region’s lamb and hand-rolled pasta.
The Many Faces of Calabria
Calabria reveals itself slowly. Tropea, with its old town perched on a sandstone cliff above one of Italy’s most beautiful beaches, is the postcard. But the real Calabria stretches far beyond. The coastal road through Capo Vaticano and Scilla traces dramatic shorelines where Homer once placed monsters and where evening light turns the sea pink. Inland, the Sila plateau offers cool forests, alpine-style lakes, and silent country roads where you can drive for an hour without meeting another car.
To the south, the ancient Greek heritage runs deep. The bronze warriors of Riace in Reggio Calabria are among the most extraordinary surviving sculptures of the classical world. The ruins at Locri Epizefiri remind you that this was once Magna Graecia, the new Greece beyond the sea. The hill towns of the Aspromonte, Gerace, Stilo with its Byzantine church, Bova with its Greek-Calabrian dialect, feel like living history.
The food matches the landscape: bold, generous, unforgettable. Spicy ‘nduja spread on warm bread, swordfish from the Strait of Messina, red onions of Tropea, dense breads, sheep’s cheeses, and citrus fruits whose perfume drifts across whole valleys in winter.
Why Self-Drive Is the Only Way
These are regions where the small roads matter more than the highways. Public transport is limited, and many of the most magical places, a hilltop monastery, a hidden beach, a family vineyard, are reachable only by car. A self-drive journey here gives you what these regions reward most: time, freedom, and the chance to follow your instincts.
Planning with Italy Trails
A trip through Calabria and Basilicata is more rewarding when the logistics are quietly handled in the background. Italy Trails designs tailor-made self-drive itineraries through Italy’s deep south, pairing comfortable rental cars with carefully chosen masserie, boutique stays, and cave hotels in Matera, along with suggested routes that connect the highlights with the lesser-known corners. The pace and the discoveries remain yours.
An Older, Truer Italy
Calabria and Basilicata do not perform for visitors. They simply exist, ancient, proud, and quietly extraordinary. Take the road south. The Italy you find there will stay with you.


















