Hotel Santa Caterina, the cliffside villa west of Amalfi town with terraced gardens above the sea
#5 in Top 20 Amalfi Coast for An Anniversary  ·  Five Star

Hotel Santa Caterina

The cliffside Amalfi classic the Gambardella family has run since 1904, and one of the coast's finest anniversary addresses.

The verdict: Hotel Santa Caterina is the cliffside villa just west of Amalfi town that the Gambardella family has owned since 1904, and it is the coast's warmest grand hotel. Terraced gardens drop to a saltwater pool cut into the rock and a private beach club, the Michelin-starred Glicine handles the anniversary dinner, and four generations of family ownership give it a service memory no chain can match. It is our number-five anniversary pick.

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"Family-run since 1904, cliffside above Amalfi town, the coast's most personal grand hotel for a milestone."

9.7Room & Design
9.9Service
9.8Location

HotelsForKings editorial score, one considered opinion against transparent criteria, not an average of user reviews. See our methodology.

Why choose Santa Caterina for an anniversary?

Because it celebrates continuity, which is exactly what an anniversary is about. Santa Caterina has been in the same family since Dr Giuseppe Gambardella opened it in 1904 with six rooms, and four generations later his descendants still run it. That is not marketing varnish; it shows up as staff who remember returning couples, a house style that has been refined rather than rebranded, and a sense that you are a guest of a family rather than a reservation number. For a couple marking decades together, staying somewhere that has kept its own promises for more than a century is quietly moving.

The setting does the rest. The hotel clings to the cliff on the road just west of Amalfi town, its rooms and terraces stacked down toward the Gulf of Salerno through lemon groves and gardens, with the sea filling every window. It is a member of The Leading Hotels of the World, and it competes at the very top of the coast while feeling less corporate than its rivals.

What are the rooms and villas like?

The main villa and its terraced grounds hold 66 rooms and suites, nearly all with a balcony or terrace and a sea view, decorated in the soft, classic Campanian style the family has kept faithful to rather than chasing trends. For a milestone that doubles as a family gathering, the hotel also has a small number of private villas within the grounds, each with its own pool and garden, which let a multi-generational group book connecting suites and a villa together on one property.

For the best of it, request a high sea-view suite with a large terrace, or one of the private villas if you are travelling as a family of eight or more. Book the specific category with the hotel directly, because on a stacked cliff site the outlook and the walk to your room vary meaningfully from one room type to the next.

Is the dining worth it?

Yes, and it is a real reason to stay. Glicine, the hotel's fine-dining room, holds a Michelin star under chef Giuseppe Stanzione and serves refined Campanian cooking, all Amalfi lemons, Cetara anchovies and Mediterranean seafood, on a terrace above the water. It is the natural choice for the anniversary dinner. For lighter days there is Al Mare, the informal seafront restaurant by the beach club for grilled fish and wood-fired pizza, and Senzafine, a newer rooftop that pairs Mediterranean produce with Japanese technique across a grill and a sushi bar. Reserve Glicine well ahead and ask for a cliff-edge table at sunset.

How do you reach the sea and the pool?

By a panoramic lift down the cliff, which is part of the theatre and also the main caveat. At the bottom sit a saltwater pool carved into the rock about twenty metres above the water and a private beach club with sun terraces and a swim platform, open roughly from mid-April to October. It is one of the most beautiful bathing set-ups on the coast. The trade-off is that the sea here is a plunge from a platform rather than a wade off a sandy beach, and everything below the main building is reached by lift and a few steps, which is worth knowing if anyone in your party has limited mobility.

How does it compare with the other top Amalfi hotels?

Santa Caterina sits within our Top 20 Amalfi Coast anniversary list, and the choice among the leaders comes down to setting and mood. The cliff-top Belmond Hotel Caruso in Ravello wins on its famous infinity pool and panoramic altitude; Palazzo Avino, also in Ravello, is the polished pink-palazzo alternative; and the Monastero Santa Rosa is the intimate former-convert with the coast's most dramatic terraced garden. Santa Caterina counters all of them with its family warmth, its position right at Amalfi town, and a Michelin-starred kitchen on site.

HotelSettingBest for
Hotel Santa CaterinaCliffside by Amalfi town, terraced gardens to the seaFamily-run warmth, a milestone with a family gathering
Belmond Hotel CarusoHigh in Ravello, above the coastThe iconic infinity-pool view and altitude
Palazzo AvinoRavello village, pink palazzoPolished service and a beach club by shuttle
Monastero Santa RosaFormer convent between Amalfi and PositanoSmall, private, spectacular gardens
Concierge tip

Book a private villa if the anniversary is also a family reunion, and reserve Glicine for the celebration dinner, asking for a cliff-edge two-top at sunset. Take the panoramic lift down to the saltwater pool early, before the beach club fills, when the water is glass and the light is best for photographs.

What are the honest trade-offs?

Santa Caterina is a top-five pick, not a flawless one, and a couple of things are worth knowing before you commit.

  • It is a vertical site. The sea, the pool and the beach club are reached by lift and steps down the cliff. It is manageable for most guests but not ideal for anyone with serious mobility limits.
  • Classic, not contemporary. The style is traditional Campanian elegance the family has preserved, not the pared-back modern design some travellers expect at this price. If you want cool minimalism, look elsewhere on the coast.
  • Peak-season cost and crowds. Rates are among the highest on the coast in July and August, and Amalfi town at your doorstep is at its busiest then. Late May, June and September deliver the same beauty with more room to breathe.

Read next

Santa Caterina: frequently asked questions

How old is the hotel and who owns it?

Dr Giuseppe Gambardella opened Hotel Santa Caterina in 1904 with six rooms, building on family hotelier roots from the 1870s. Four generations later it is still owned and run by the Gambardella family, now led by Giusi and Ninni Gambardella, which is the source of its consistent, personal service.

Does it have a Michelin star?

Yes. Its Glicine restaurant holds one Michelin star under chef Giuseppe Stanzione. The hotel also runs the informal seafront Al Mare and the newer rooftop Senzafine, which blends Mediterranean cooking with Japanese technique.

How do you reach the beach and pool?

A panoramic lift runs down the cliff to a saltwater pool carved into the rock and a private beach club, open roughly mid-April to October. The vertical site is part of the drama, but the sea is reached by lift and steps rather than on the level.

Is it good for a multi-generational trip?

It is one of the best on the coast for it. Alongside 66 rooms and suites, the grounds hold a small number of private villas with their own pool and garden, so a family can book connecting suites and a villa together while the owners handle the logistics personally.

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Further reading

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