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A 5-day Sicily private tour itinerary with bookable experiences starts from £80 per person, with 10 activities all rated 5 stars on Viator. The geographic logic: 2 days in Palermo (cooking class, photoshoot, catamaran), 1 day in Cefalù (sea-view villa), 1 day on Etna (north-side hike or sunrise tour), 1 day in Taormina and Savoca. I recommend starting with the cooking class in a panoramic Palermo villa (171 reviews, 5 stars) to dive straight into Sicilian life on your very first day.
Sicily moves at two speeds. On one hand, you have the standard car-hire road trips rolling from Palermo to Agrigento, ticking off the same sights from the same viewpoints. On the other — and this is what I wanted to highlight here — you have a Sicily of private experiences: a Sicilian cook who takes you through his kitchen garden before teaching you to make fresh pasta; a local volcanologist guide who leads you across the jet-black lava fields left by the January 2026 eruption; a Palermitan photographer who unlocks the Arab-Norman alleyways you would never find alone.
I have hand-selected 10 of Sicily’s highest-rated Viator experiences — every single one rated 5 stars, every single one backed by more than 50 verified reviews. They cover five distinct days: gastronomy in Palermo, sea and olive groves, a pasta workshop in Cefalù, a hike on Etna, and the Taormina-Savoca-Castelmola loop blending a Greek theatre, a Godfather village, and medieval fava-bean wine. This isn’t a packed schedule — it’s an itinerary that breathes, with one or two booked experiences per day and the rest left free for wandering.
Start by locking in your slot for the cooking class in the panoramic Palermo villa — the standout experience in this itinerary, 171 reviews, and the only one that takes you from a herb garden to a plated meal in under three hours with rooftop-and-sea views over the Tyrrhenian. Sicily is best understood through what you eat.
Why Sicily in 5 days: the Pixidia angle
Sicily is the Mediterranean’s largest island (25,711 km²) and the only Italian region where so many cultural layers coexist: Greek, Roman, Byzantine, Arab, and Norman. Seven monuments in Palermo were inscribed as UNESCO World Heritage in 2015 under the label “Arab-Norman Palermo,” including the Cappella Palatina — a 12th-century chapel clad in 6,400 m² of Byzantine mosaic. Mount Etna, Europe’s highest active volcano (3,357 m), has been a UNESCO Natural Heritage site since 2013 — and its 1 January 2026 eruption left fresh black lava flows visible from the north-side trails.
The problem with most “5 days in Sicily” articles is that they all propose the same road trip: Palermo Day 1, Cefalù Day 2, Agrigento Day 3, Etna Day 4, Taormina Day 5 — useful for orientation, useless for actual booking. Here, every day is anchored by at least one concrete experience with a local: a chef in his villa, a guide on the volcano, a photographer in the backstreets. Peak season is May–June and September–October: temperatures 20–28°C, manageable crowds, swimmable sea. July–August draws 40% of annual arrivals — go in another month for a Sicily that breathes.

The 10 best Sicily experiences for your 5-day itinerary

1. Cooking class in a panoramic Palermo villa
This is the star Palermo experience in this selection: a villa perched above the city, a kitchen garden of herbs and vegetables, and a Sicilian chef who shares — in three unhurried hours — the secrets of pasta ca’ muddica, round arancine, and sweet-sour caponata. The combination of the setting — panoramic views over terracotta rooftops and the Tyrrhenian Sea — and the quality of cooking instruction is unique in Palermo. My first-night pick without hesitation.
- Ingredients picked fresh from the villa garden
- 4 to 5 traditional Sicilian dishes prepared and eaten together
- Panoramic view over Palermo and the Tyrrhenian Sea

2. Professional photoshoot in Arab-Norman Palermo
A way to explore Palermo that no guidebook suggests: 90 minutes with a local photographer in the lanes around the Teatro Massimo — Italy’s largest opera house — composing portraits in Arab-Norman courtyards of ochre facades and red domes. A high-resolution gallery lands in your inbox within 48 hours. Best in the morning on your first day, before the afternoon heat builds.
- Dedicated professional photographer (camera provided)
- HD gallery delivered within 48 hrs by email
- Guided tour of hidden lanes around Teatro Massimo

3. Full-day catamaran from Palermo with Sicilian lunch on board
Day two in Palermo is spent at sea. Morning departure from La Cala harbour, heading towards wild coves on the northern coast unreachable on foot, swimming and snorkelling in crystal-clear water, then a stop at Mondello beach for an on-board lunch — seafood pasta, Sicilian wine, local dessert. The most efficient way to see Palermo from the sea and understand why the 12th-century Normans chose it as their capital.
- Full lunch included: seafood pasta, wine and dessert
- Snorkelling equipment provided on board
- Stop at Mondello beach and wild coves inaccessible on foot

4. From Capo Market to table: cooking class with a Sicilian family
Letizia, Giuseppe and their mother Rosa welcome you at the Capo market — one of Palermo’s three historic markets, more residential and less touristy than the Ballarò — to choose the meal’s ingredients together. Four hours later you sit down to eat what you cooked, local wine included. The most immersive option on this list for understanding Sicilian cuisine in its seasonal, neighbourhood logic.
- Capo Market shopping with the family
- Full meal prepared and eaten together (wine included)
- Sicilian cooking secrets passed down through generations

5. Pasta and wine workshop at the Cefalù Sea Villa
Cefalù is best visited in two stages: the Norman cathedral in the morning (one of the nine UNESCO Arab-Norman sites on the island), then Villa Palamara in the afternoon. This five-hour class in a sea-view villa begins with a glass of Sicilian fizz, continues with hand-shaping fresh pasta, and ends at the table with the estate’s own wine. A maximum of 6 to 10 participants keeps the session lively but never rushed.
- Seafront villa with panoramic terrace over the Mediterranean
- Sicilian fizz, white or red wine and water included
- Group of 6 to 10 participants — intimate atmosphere guaranteed

6. Private extra-virgin olive oil tasting on a Sicilian estate
Sicily is Italy’s third-largest olive oil producer, yet its Nocellara del Belice oils remain largely unknown on the tourist trail — unlike Tuscany’s. This private immersion on an olive estate takes you from grove to bottle: a tour of the trees, a cold-press extraction walkthrough, and a guided tasting of five or six oils paired with a Sicilian food spread. A niche experience you simply won’t find on any group-tour itinerary.
- Grove and press visit with technical explanation
- Sicilian lunch with olive oil pairing, local wine and coffee included
- Entirely private experience — no commercial access

7. Guided hike on Etna’s north side from Piano Provenzana
Etna’s north side is the least visited and most dramatic — birch forest above 1,800 m, 4×4 access, no cable car, no crowds. From Piano Provenzana, this English-speaking guide (group capped at 10) takes you across the fresh black lava fields of the January 2026 eruption, still steaming in places, in a lunar landscape found nowhere else in Europe. Full equipment provided: hiking boots, helmet, trekking poles, head torch.
- Expert guide on the north side — max 10 in the group
- Fresh 2026 lava flows from the January eruption
- Full kit included: boots, helmet, poles, waterproof jacket

8. Etna at sunrise: private tour with a Sicilian breakfast
Pre-dawn departure from central Catania, 4×4 transfer up to the Sartorius Mountains (1,720 m) — ancient adventive craters turned natural viewpoints above the Gulf of Catania. You watch the sunrise from 1,700 m altitude: raking light over lava rock, visibility to Syracuse on a clear day. Traditional Sicilian breakfast included: warm brioche with lemon or coffee granita, strong espresso. The most photographic private Etna experience, for early risers.
- Private 4×4 transfer from central Catania
- Sicilian breakfast included: granita, brioche, espresso
- Exclusive Sartorius Mountains viewpoint at sunrise

9. Private Savoca, Taormina and Castelmola tour with a local guide
The Savoca-Taormina-Castelmola loop is the finest way to close a Sicilian itinerary. Savoca, a village of fewer than 100 people perched in the hills north of Taormina, is the setting for Michael Corleone’s wedding in Coppola’s The Godfather (1972) — Bar Vitelli is intact, cats nap on the steps. Then Taormina and the ancient Greek theatre overlooking Etna and the Ionian Sea, before Castelmola and its medieval fava-bean wine at 382 m. Local guide in an air-conditioned vehicle, snacks included.
- Savoca — The Godfather village (Bar Vitelli intact)
- Taormina Greek Theatre with Etna and sea backdrop
- Castelmola: medieval village and fava-bean wine tasting

10. Taormina and Castelmola: private excursion with cannoli tasting
The most accessible private Taormina option: pick-up at your hotel or cruise terminal, a 45-minute drive to Castelmola for the mountain panoramas first, then down into Taormina for Corso Umberto I, Piazza IX Aprile, and a look at the Greek theatre with Etna as backdrop. Cannoli tasting in Castelmola is included. Wi-Fi and water on board. The perfect option if you’re short on time or arriving by cruise ship.
- Hotel or port pick-up — air-conditioned vehicle with Wi-Fi
- Cannoli tasting in Castelmola included
- Taormina: Corso Umberto, Piazza IX Aprile, Etna view
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Book my Vulcano adventurePractical tips for your 5-day Sicily itinerary

Getting around: Palermo (PMO) and Catania (CTA) are the two main gateways from the UK. For a Palermo → Cefalù → Etna → Taormina route, a hire car is essential between Catania and Etna’s north side (Piano Provenzana). The Palermo-Cefalù leg is ideal by train (1 hr, coastal views, frequent service). Taormina’s centre is pedestrianised — park at Lumbi or Porta Catania and walk up or take the cable car.
Taormina crowds: up to 3 million visitors a year for 11,000 residents. Arrive before 10am or after 5pm for Corso Umberto I. In May–June and September–October footfall is manageable. July–August: best avoided if you dislike crowds.
Booking ahead: private villa cooking classes and Etna excursions fill up 3–6 weeks ahead in season. The Palermo villa class and the Etna north hike are the two to secure first. Everything else can be booked a week in advance outside peak summer.
Budget guide: the 10 experiences in this list range from £80 (photoshoot) to £220 (private olive oil tasting) per person. Booking 1–2 activities per day over 5 days, expect to spend £300–£600 per person on experiences, excluding accommodation and flights.
Frequently asked questions about the 5-day Sicily itinerary
What is the highest-rated experience for a 5-day Sicily itinerary?
All 10 experiences in this itinerary are rated 5.0 out of 5 on Viator. For a first trip to Sicily, I recommend starting with the cooking class in the panoramic Palermo villa (171 reviews): it combines culinary immersion and a bird’s-eye introduction to the city in three well-structured hours on day one.
When is the best time to visit Sicily for a 5-day trip?
May–June and September–October are the best windows for a 5-day Sicily trip: temperatures of 20–28°C, a swimmable sea (22–24°C), manageable crowds and lower prices than July–August. July–August accounts for 40% of annual arrivals, producing long queues in Taormina and at Palermo’s UNESCO sites. March–April is excellent for cities and culture, but Etna’s upper slopes may still carry snow.
Do I need a hire car for a 5-day Sicily itinerary?
A car is recommended but not essential for the whole route. The Palermo–Cefalù leg works very well by train (1 hr, sea views, regular service). The north side of Etna from Catania, and the mountain roads to Savoca and Castelmola, do require either a hire car or a private guided excursion — as in cards 7 and 9 of this itinerary, both of which include transport.
Is Etna accessible after the 2026 eruption?
Yes. The 1 January 2026 effusive eruption on Etna’s north side (fissure at 2,100 m) and the Bocca Nuova crater explosion in March 2026 led to temporary restrictions that have since been lifted. As of May 2026, both sides (north from Piano Provenzana, south from Rifugio Sapienza) are open to hikers accompanied by a licensed guide. The fresh black lava flows are now a photographic highlight that local guides actively include in their routes.
How much does a 5-day Sicily itinerary cost with Viator experiences?
Booking 1–2 experiences per day from this 10-item list, the activity budget sits between £300 and £600 per person for the five days. Cooking classes run from £115 to £220, Etna tours from £140 to £170, Taormina visits from £149 to £175. Prices reflect rates at time of writing — Viator pricing varies by date and availability. The Cefalù sea villa class at £120 per person offers the best value on this list.
Sources
- UNESCO WHC — Arab-Norman Palermo and the Cathedral Churches of Cefalù and Monreale (List 1487) — consulted 19 May 2026
- etna3340.com — Etna 2026 eruption and visitor guide — consulted 19 May 2026
- taorminatoday.com — Teatro Antico di Taormina summer 2026 programme — consulted 19 May 2026
- hitsicily.com — Palermo markets: Ballarò, Vucciria, Il Capo — consulted 19 May 2026
- guidevulcanologicheetna.it — Etna summit crater access, north and south sides — consulted 19 May 2026
- sicilyintour.com — The Godfather filming locations in Savoca — consulted 19 May 2026
- Lonely Planet — Hiking Etna: practical guide — consulted 19 May 2026
- Viator API — 11 products 5.0★ / 50+ reviews, destinationId 205 (Sicily), 4815 (Palermo), 4237 (Taormina) — data extracted 19 May 2026
This article contains affiliate links to Viator, Airalo, SafetyWing and Aviasales. Pixidia earns a commission on bookings made through these links at no extra cost to you. Experiences were selected on the basis of their Viator ratings and editorial relevance, without any payment from providers.
Ready to explore Sicily in 5 days?
Book your experiences in advance: private villa cooking classes and Etna excursions fill up 3–6 weeks ahead in peak season.
See tour #1 — Palermo cooking villa