Half a month in Rome, my spending philosophy collapsed
🌟 Just rolled back from Rome! My bestie said I was stunned by the "Eternal City’s cost performance"——
“Spending over 15,000 RMB per person for half a month + devouring gelato like crazy + killing three power banks, friends keep asking ‘Are you sure you didn’t time travel back to the Roman Empire?’”
I can’t hold it in! This “Rome Spending Collapse Diary” walked out on my own two feet and must be exposed👇
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💸 Budget collapse scene: 20,000 RMB splurged in 15 days for an epic experience
• Flight assassin: Shanghai✈️Rome round trip with taxes for 8,000 RMB! Booking a Russian airline connecting flight saved 3,000 RMB compared to direct flights (lesson learned: midweek departures + booking six months ahead is key)
• Transport genius move: Bus ticket 1.5 euros/100 minutes! Download TicketAppy to scan and ride, single-day ticket 7 euros to roam the whole city💨
• Accommodation shock: Airbnb near Termini Station 120 euros/night! Stairs so narrow I was panting carrying my suitcase up to the fourth floor, host gave a hand-drawn map (secret code “stay ten days and get pasta?” I tested, got a whole bag of coffee grounds)
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🏛️ God-tier highlights! Free access to millennia-old relics
✅ Free highlights
▫️ Trevi Fountain coin toss: 0 euros to make a wish! Snagged the prime spot at 5 a.m., tossed the coin over the shoulder with the right hand just like in Roman Holiday📸
▫️ Spanish Steps sunset: free to sit all day! Took backlit silhouette photos at 4 p.m., ice cream vendor laughed saying “You pose better than Audrey Hepburn”
✅ Must-experience with some pain
▪️ Colosseum underground: 24 euros including guided tour! Touched gladiator entrance passage, AR glasses restored the moment the beast cages rose
▪️ Vatican Museums: 20 euros ticket! Climbed the spiral staircase to photograph the Genesis dome, queued 2 hours to enter, legs weak
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🚶 Half-month time travel route! Full-on walking mode
First week: Immersed in imperial glory
• Day 1-3: Colosseum + Roman Forum + Palatine Hill combined ticket 16 euros! Standing among ruins watching sunset gild the marble columns, headphones playing Gladiator soundtrack to tears
• Day 4-5: Pantheon + Piazza Navona + Flower Market! Free entry to the dome to see light through the 9-meter oculus, ate 3-euro panini while street artist played accordion
• Day 6-7: Borghese Gallery + Pincian Hill! 20 euros ticket staring at Bernini’s sculpture Apollo and Daphne, leaf textures so realistic it gave me goosebumps
Second week: Artistic stroll finale
• Day 8-10: Trastevere antique hunting! Bought 5-euro vintage postcards, met an old man opening a hand-crank music box that made me laugh to tears
• Day 11-12: Appian Way cycling! Rent bike 15 euros/day to pedal on millennia-old stone roads, green tunnel like a scene from Cinema Paradiso
• Day 13-15: Day trips to Ostia Antica + Tivoli! Train ticket 10 euros round trip, Hadrian’s Villa with stunning water gardens
• Bonus: Stocked up on salami before leaving! Bought 8 euros per pack wrapped in greaseproof paper at the market, so fragrant customs eyed it across borders
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🍝 Taste bomb list! After eating, I want to marry a Roman uncle
✅ Blindly go for the hits
▫️ Chariot pasta: 12 euros/plate! Thick rigatoni coated in pepper cheese sauce, old man at the small shop taught me how to twirl the fork without spilling sauce
▫️ Fried artichokes: 8 euros/serving! Jewish Quarter old shop, tear petals and dip in olive oil, bitter then sweet aroma blew my mind
🚫 Run away at night series
• Tourist “gourmet Italian meal”: 40 euros/serving? Turn around to a family-run alley shop, same Carbonara only 10 euros!
• Trendy gelato: 5 euros/scoop? Better to eat 3-euro old shop pistachio flavor, rich enough to lick your hand💢
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💡 Hard-earned tips from blood and tears
1️⃣ Pitfall prevention magic:
✔️ Breakfast: rush to the bar stand for coffee! 1.5 euros cappuccino with croissant, saves 4 euros compared to sitting area
✔️ Churches: wear shoulder-covering clothes + long skirt! Vendors outside St. Peter’s Basilica sell scarves ripping off at 10 euros
2️⃣ Transport secrets:
🚌 Bus: must validate ticket when boarding! Fare evasion fines start at 100 euros, inspectors especially target Asian faces
🚇 Metro: avoid transfers between lines A and B! Termini station is a maze, better to walk more
3️⃣ Hidden perks:
• Bring a water bottle! Free drinking fountains everywhere, sweeter than mineral water
• Museum free days! First Sunday of every month Colosseum/Borghese free entry, book on official website
Really don’t stay in Rome for half a month lightly…
I’m afraid you’ll say: “Isn’t the 1.5-euro bus ticket great? Why take a 20-euro taxi!”😭
— After all, squatting by the Trevi Fountain rubbing coins waiting for the light to reflect, priceless✨
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Last espresso:
When eating artichokes in the Jewish Quarter, the stall owner suddenly added a spoon of lemon juice:
“Girl, this dish is bitter first then fresh—just like Rome’s stones, polished for a thousand years to shine.”
I looked at his shiny apron and sparkling coin box, and suddenly understood—
The luxury of travel is never in expensive tickets,
But in the sour juice handed by strangers,
And the whole spring freely gifted by the Eternal City.🏛️
(Secret code for skipping lines, DM me for quick send! Staff said Thursday afternoon is the least crowded~)
This small but exquisite museum was originally the private residence of Borghese. There are several sculptures in the house that are amazing. Outside the museum is the Borghese Park. After visiting the museum, you can continue to enjoy the passing of time in the park. It is worth a visit.
I only just found out about this museum and hadn't had high hopes of getting tickets. But then I saw that Ctrip offered a tour, which was a great idea. However, the tour was in English, and I barely understood anything. It's best to learn about the artwork beforehand. The entire tour lasted two hours, and the tour guide took me all the way through. Afterward, I didn't have time to explore on my own. Also, the meeting point was actually right outside the museum entrance. Ctrip's description wasn't clear, so I contacted customer service, which was thankfully resolved.
Haha, we missed the time perfectly. Everyone, please pay attention to the reserved date. It also gives me a good excuse to go to Rome again. The pictures were taken at the nearby Piazza del Popolo. There weren't too many people there, so we could go shopping together.
Caravaggio paintings look more colorful in person. As for these ceiling frescoes, well, it's easy to understand why some of them are so important subjects in the art world. One of these frescoes directly demonstrates Michelangelo's use of color in a very obvious way.
I didn't do enough research and almost didn't make an appointment to visit the Borgose Gallery. Fortunately, there was still a guided tour in Italian, so I quickly grabbed it and wasted more than 20 euros. The museum is limited to two hours for visiting in batches. The viewing experience is first-class, and the ban on taking photos also makes the works themselves receive more attention. Looking around at 360 degrees, Bernini's delicate and expressive handwriting is amazing. Raphael and Caravaggio's paintings each occupy an entire exhibition hall. Interestingly, it seems that it is popular in the classical art museum world to "sandwich" modernist works in the works. Is it to express contrast or keep up with the times? This time, I encountered Lucio Fontana, who is also a great artist. However, if his works are not explained, you will really think that the exhibits are temporarily missing signs or unfinished frames. There are many "masterpieces" with a ball of oil mud and a few holes. Sharing the same hall with classic works can help boost the audience's confidence. After all, everyone can pretend to be such an artist.
You should find time to visit the Borghese Gallery. And for your first visit, get a guide so you can understand better and enjoy what you see. Also visit the Villa Borghese Gardens and have lunch in nature.
This is a must-see museum for our family in Rome. Because there is a temporary Picasso exhibition going on there, the staff does not allow taking photos, including the permanent collection exhibition, which is a particular pity for our family.
There are so many art galleries in Rome. Borghese is relatively small, but it is a collection of fine works and is worth seeing. It is convenient and fast to buy tickets on Ctrip. It feels good to use the software we are used to when visiting museums abroad. I will not comment on the masterpieces of the masters. Photography is not allowed in the museum, but I saw many people taking pictures, so I took a few pictures.