Naples in 6 Days on a Budget (With Daily Costs)
Six days in Naples: the budget version
Six days on a budget in Naples stays entirely in the city, no Pompeii, no Vesuvius, no Amalfi Coast, and turns into the kind of trip where you stop checking sights off a list. This plan carries the 5-day plan forward in full, the Cappella Sansevero, Napoli Sotterranea, MANN, Vomero, and the Porta Nolana market day, then adds a sixth day built for a slower, unhurried second look at whatever earned a rushed first visit. Six days on the same EUR1.50 transport ticket lands at EUR305-395 total for two people.
| Day | Focus | Rough spend (2 people) |
|---|---|---|
| Day 1 | Centro Storico walk, Cappella Sansevero, Duomo nave, pizza | EUR55-70 |
| Day 2 | Napoli Sotterranea, Quartieri Spagnoli, Toledo art station, Castel dell’Ovo sunset | EUR50-70 |
| Day 3 | MANN, Municipio station ruins, deeper Centro Storico | EUR75-85 |
| Day 4 | Vomero funiculars, Castel Sant’Elmo, Villa Floridiana, Chiaia | EUR50-60 |
| Day 5 | Porta Nolana market, pizza fritta and sfogliatella crawl, Castel Nuovo | EUR45-60 |
| Day 6 | Slow revisit day, San Gennaro Treasure Chapel, souvenir shopping | EUR30-50 |
Book these before you go:
- Book the Sansevero slot : a single small chapel, closed Tuesdays, and slots move fast once released.
- Book a Sotterranea tour : the online skip-the-line price beats a wasted trip to a sold-out walk-up slot.
- Check rates on Booking.com : six nights in the Centro Storico keeps every day on this page walkable.
Where to stay for 6 nights on a Naples budget
Centro Storico still wins over six nights, close enough to walk to days 1, 2, 3, and 6, and a short funicular or bus ride from days 4 and 5. Add Naples’ nightly tourist tax to your math, roughly EUR3-6 per person per night by star rating, billed at the front desk and rarely shown in the rate you booked online, and note it stops applying past 14 consecutive nights if you’re staying even longer.
Getting around without a rental car
Don’t rent a car: the historic-centre ZTL runs 24 hours a day, every day of the year, and camera fines starting around EUR80 catch rental plates the same as local ones. A single UnicoCampania urban ticket costs about EUR1.50, valid 90 minutes across ANM buses, the metro, and all four funiculars, with a day pass around EUR4.50. You won’t touch the Circumvesuviana fare on this trip at all.
Day 1: Centro Storico and the Veiled Christ
Walk Via San Biagio dei Librai and Via dei Tribunali, the dead-straight ancient spine called Spaccanapoli, past the Baroque facade of Gesù Nuovo and the cloister at Santa Chiara. Keep your booked slot at the Cappella Sansevero : EUR12 full, EUR8 reduced for ages 18-26, built around the Veiled Christ sculpture. Book online up to 60 days out, arrive on time since more than 15 minutes late forfeits the slot, and cover your shoulders and knees, the same rule applies at the Duomo down the street, whose nave is free daily. Lunch is a numbered ticket at L’Antica Pizzeria da Michele, open since 1870 and still serving only two pizzas. Close on San Gregorio Armeno’s nativity-figure workshops, free to browse, then a EUR3-5 pizza fritta from a street stall for dinner.
Day 2: underground Naples, the Spanish Quarter, and the sea
Book a morning slot with Napoli Sotterranea : EUR10 at the door on Piazza San Gaetano, EUR15 online skip-the-line, EUR8 reduced for ages 5-17. The 90-minute to two-hour descent through Greco-Roman aqueduct cisterns and WWII air-raid shelters is the best-value ticket in the city. Surface into the Quartieri Spagnoli, the grid either side of Via Toledo, gritty by day and genuinely safe, with cheap fried snacks and Maradona murals worth a detour. Ride the metro one stop to Toledo station, covered by the ticket you already validated, for the mosaic-lined shaft regularly ranked the most beautiful metro station in Europe. Finish at the free Castel dell’Ovo and the Lungomare Caracciolo promenade beside it for sunset.
Day 3: MANN and the city under the city
Spend the morning at MANN : EUR20 full, EUR2 reduced for EU citizens 18-25, free on the first Sunday of the month, though the Egyptian collection and the Secret Cabinet stay closed on free days. Closed Tuesdays, last entry 18:30. It holds the mosaics, frescoes, and bronzes pulled off the walls at Pompeii and Herculaneum, better context than either ruin gives you on-site, whether or not that site is on your trip at all. Change trains at Municipio station on the way back, where a slice of excavated Roman-era port, baths, and ship timbers sits integrated into the platform level, no separate ticket needed. Spend the afternoon back in the Centro Storico’s side streets you rushed past on day 1.
Day 4: Vomero’s views and Chiaia’s seafront
Take any of the four funiculars, Centrale, Chiaia, Montesanto, or Mergellina, up to Vomero on the same ticket you’ve used all trip. Castel Sant’Elmo costs just EUR5 to enter (EUR2 reduced) for the widest bay view in the city; the adjoining Certosa di San Martino museum costs a few euro more for the cloister and city-model rooms if you have the time. Villa Floridiana’s gardens are free and quieter than either. Ride back down to Chiaia for the Villa Comunale gardens and the seafront promenade, good for an evening aperitivo before dinner.
Day 5: markets, pastries, and the pizza that isn’t da Michele
Start at the Mercato di Porta Nolana, loud with fish stalls and produce, free to wander and a good spot for a cheap seafood snack standing up. Spend the rest of the day on Naples’ actual specialty rather than a single pizzeria: a sfogliatella (EUR2-4) from a historic pasticceria, an espresso standing at the bar (EUR0.90-1.20, never sitting, which roughly doubles the price), and a pizza fritta from a friggitoria, all cheaper and arguably better than a sit-down dinner. Walk past Castel Nuovo (Maschio Angioino) at Piazza Municipio on the way through, its five towers free to admire from outside even if you skip the museum inside.
Day 6: the slow day Naples actually rewards
Go back to whatever earned a rushed first visit. San Gregorio Armeno for an actual souvenir this time, not a photo taken while walking past, or a second pass through Spaccanapoli’s side streets for the antique and craft shops on Via San Biagio dei Librai. If you skipped the Duomo’s Treasure Chapel (EUR13, EUR9.50 reduced) or the San Gennaro Chapel inside the cathedral (a further EUR3.50), this is the day to add either. Close it out with caffè sospeso, the local tradition of paying forward a stranger’s coffee, at whichever bar has become your regular by day 6.
Is 6 days enough time for Naples?
Six days covers the full paid-attraction list, Sansevero, Sotterranea, MANN, Vomero, plus a market day and a genuinely unhurried sixth day, more city than most visitors give Naples credit for holding. Pompeii, Herculaneum, Vesuvius, and the Amalfi Coast are still untouched by design; see the naples-italy day plans and the Naples Italy guide for those.
Should you add a day trip to a 6-day Naples stay?
Only if you’re willing to treat it as separate time, not a swap. Pompeii alone needs 3-4 hours on-site plus Circumvesuviana travel both ways, and the Amalfi Coast eats a full day in bus and ferry logistics that works far better as an overnight in Positano or Amalfi than a rushed round trip. Six days inside the city is already a complete trip on its own.
How much does 6 days in Naples actually cost?
Budget roughly EUR305-395 total for two people across six days: Sansevero, Sotterranea, MANN, Castel Sant’Elmo, transport, and real meals, with day 6 running cheap almost by default. Cut MANN’s EUR40 by timing day 3 to a first Sunday of the month, and the total drops closer to EUR265, since day 5’s markets, day 6’s wandering, and the Duomo nave all cost nothing beyond food.
Money moves that matter over 6 days
Stand at the bar for coffee instead of taking a table; standing runs about EUR0.90-1.20, seated roughly double for the same cup. Keep your phone zipped away, not in your hand, around Napoli Centrale and on the metro, where distraction-team pickpocketing is a known pattern. Buy pastries and fried snacks from whichever shop has the actual queue of locals, not the one with the biggest sign facing the tourist route.
Check that the tourist tax appears as its own line on your final hotel bill; it’s legitimate, but it should never be a surprise at checkout.