Quick Facts: Port of Castellammare di Stabia | Italy | Molo Borbonico (Bourbon Pier) / Porto di Castellammare di Stabia | Docked | ~1 km to city center | UTC+1 (CET) / UTC+2 (CEST in summer)
Castellammare di Stabia sits at the southern curve of the Bay of Naples, a working port town that most cruisers sprint through on their way to Pompeii or Capri β which means you’ll have its thermal spas, ancient villas, and mountain funicular almost entirely to yourself. This is also the closest cruise port to Pompeii (just 8 km), making it the single most convenient base for that iconic day trip. Plan your transport before you step off the gangway: taxis linger but prices vary wildly without agreement upfront.
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Port & Terminal Information
The cruise terminal sits at Molo Borbonico (Bourbon Pier) within the larger Porto di Castellammare di Stabia. It’s an industrial working port, not a polished passenger terminal, so expectations should be set accordingly. Find the terminal location on Google Maps before you arrive.
- Docking: Ships dock directly β no tender required, so you gain valuable time
- Terminal facilities: Basic. There is a small tourist information point near the port gate, but no dedicated luggage storage, no reliable ATM inside the terminal, and no Wi-Fi hub
- Shuttle: No official port shuttle; the town center is a flat, straightforward 10β15 minute walk
- Nearest ATM: Banco di Napoli branch on Corso Garibaldi, ~800 m from the pier gate
- Distance to city center: ~1 km to Piazza Fontana Grande, roughly 12 minutes on foot
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Getting to the City

- On Foot β The town center is completely walkable from the pier. Head up Via Molo Borbonico to Corso Garibaldi and you’re in the heart of it within 15 minutes. Flat, easy pavement.
- Bus/Metro (Circumvesuviana) β This is your power move. The Circumvesuviana railway station (Castellammare di Stabia stop) is ~1 km from the pier. Line EAV runs directly to Pompeii Scavi (10 min, ~β¬1.50), Sorrento (30 min, ~β¬2.80), and Naples (45 min, ~β¬3.50). Trains run every 20β30 minutes. Buy tickets at the station window or newsstands β machines are unreliable.
- Taxi β Available near the port gate. Expect β¬10β15 to the town center (though it barely warrants it), β¬20β25 to Pompeii, and β¬40β55 to Sorrento. Always agree the fare before getting in β meters exist but aren’t always used. Reject any driver who won’t name a price.
- Hop-On Hop-Off β No HOHO bus operates from this terminal. Skip that search.
- Rental Car/Scooter β Not practical for a cruise day. Traffic on the Amalfi-adjacent roads is unpredictable, and parking near major sights is a headache.
- Ship Shore Excursion β Worth it specifically for Capri (boat logistics are complex) or if you want a guided Pompeii experience with skip-the-line entry included. Independent travelers doing Pompeii by Circumvesuviana save significantly but queue longer.
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Top Things to Do in Castellammare di Stabia, Italy
You have genuine options here β ancient ruins, volcanic springs, a mountain aerial tramway, and Capri just offshore. Here’s what’s worth your hours.
Must-See
1. Pompeii Archaeological Park (β¬18, EU students under 25 free) β The UNESCO-listed ruins of the city buried by Vesuvius in 79 AD, just 8 km and 10 minutes by Circumvesuviana from the port. Book timed entry online in advance β queues without a reservation can cost you 45 minutes. A guided Pompeii tour on Viator adds essential context. Allow 3β4 hours minimum.
2. Villa di Arianna & Villa San Marco (free) β These are the local ancient Roman villas buried by the same eruption as Pompeii, right here in Castellammare di Stabia on the Varano hill. Far fewer visitors than Pompeii, with gorgeous frescoes still in situ. Open TueβSun 9amβ7:30pm (last entry 6pm). Allow 1.5 hours.
3. Antiquarium di Stabia (β¬4) β The museum housing finds from the Stabiae villas β frescoes, mosaics, and artifacts rescued from the volcanic debris. Small but beautifully curated. Located at Via Marco Mario De Vita, open TueβSun 9amβ2pm. Allow 45 minutes.
Beaches & Nature
4. Monte Faito by Funivia (β¬10 round trip) β A cable car that climbs from Castellammare to 1,100 m on the Lattari Mountains, with extraordinary views over the entire Bay of Naples. The station is walking distance from Piazza Fontana Grande. Runs AprilβOctober, weather permitting. Allow 2 hours for the ride and a short walk at the top.
5. Terme di Stabiae / Antiche Terme (β¬15β25 day access) β Thermal mineral spring spa facilities in town, fed by natural volcanic springs known since Roman times. A genuinely local experience β not a tourist spa. Go early before day-trippers arrive. Allow 1β2 hours.
6. Spiaggia di Castellammare (free) β The town’s own beach runs north of the port. Volcanic sand, calm water, and beach clubs renting loungers for β¬10β15. Not the Amalfi Coast, but perfectly pleasant for a swim without going far.
Day Trips
7. Capri Island (ferry β¬20β25 each way) β The island is 50 minutes by hydrofoil from the port. The Blue Grotto (β¬15 entry + rowing boat surcharge) is the headline, but Villa Jovis and the town of Anacapri are equally rewarding. Book a Capri Blue Grotto boat tour from Castellammare to handle the logistics β from USD 176.56. π Book: From Castellammare di Stabia: Capri Blue Grotto Boat Day Tour Allow a full day.
8. Sorrento (30 min by Circumvesuviana, β¬2.80) β Perched on cliffs above the bay, Sorrento is visually spectacular and extremely walkable. Corso Italia for shopping, Villa Comunale gardens for views. Busy but beautiful.
9. Herculaneum (Ercolano) (β¬15) β Smaller and better-preserved than Pompeii, with upper floors of buildings still intact. 20 minutes back toward Naples on the Circumvesuviana. Often overlooked, always rewarding. Allow 2β3 hours.
Family Picks
10. Funivia Monte Faito β Kids love the cable car, and the forested summit has picnic areas and open walking paths. See #4 above.
11. Pompeii with Kids β More tangible and dramatic than any museum. Plaster cast figures of eruption victims make history viscerally real for older children (ages 10+). Browse family-friendly guided Pompeii tours on GetYourGuide.
Off the Beaten Track
12. Dining at a Local Home β Show Cooking Experience (from USD 100.72) β A genuinely rare find: a 2.5-hour cooking and dining experience inside a Castellammare local’s home, with hands-on preparation of regional dishes. Book this experience on Viator. π Book: Dining Experience at a local's Home in Castellammare di Stabia with Show Cooking Ideal for foodies with a 6+ hour port call.
13. Corso Garibaldi Passeggiata (free) β The town’s main promenade is best mid-morning. Locals do their shopping, bar-hopping, and gossip here. Stop at a bar for a caffΓ¨ and pastiera β this is real Campanian life, unfiltered.
14. Punta Scutolo Coastal Path (free) β A short coastal walk south of town with views back across the bay toward Vesuvius. Barely marked on tourist maps, never crowded. Allow 45 minutes.
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What to Eat & Drink

Castellammare di Stabia is Neapolitan food territory at its most unpretentious β pizza, fried street food, fresh seafood, and pastries that haven’t been adjusted for tourist palates. Prices here run 20β30% lower than Sorrento or Capri for the same quality.
- Pizza fritta β Deep-fried pizza stuffed with ricotta and salami; buy from street vendors on Corso Garibaldi; β¬2β3
- Spaghetti alle vongole β Clams from the bay, olive oil, white wine, parsley; order at any waterfront trattoria; β¬10β14
- Pastiera napoletana β Wheat and ricotta tart, perfumed with orange blossom; any local pasticceria; β¬1.50β2.50 per slice
- Totani fritti β Fried squid rings, heavier and chewier than calamari; street stalls near the port; β¬4β6
- Limoncello β Produced locally with Campanian lemons; buy in any alimentari; β¬8β15 per bottle
- Granita di limone β
ποΈ Things to Book in Advance
These highly-rated experiences fill up fast β book before you arrive to avoid missing out.
This page contains affiliate links. If you book through them, we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.
π Getting to Castellammare di Stabia, Italy
Use the interactive map below to explore the port area and plan your route from the terminal.

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