Honest Hu Altomincio Village Review: Eurocamp’s Lake Garda Parc

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In a hurry? Here’s the verdict

Hu Altomincio Village is a 800-pitch Eurocamp parc on the banks of the river Mincio, ten minutes from the southern shores of Lake Garda – and after ten days there with our children, I’d happily book it again and recommend it to others. The pools are brilliant, the entertainment suits mixed-age families, there are food options onsite if you don’t want to leave the parc to eat, and the location means bucket-list destinations like Verona, Venice, Borghetto, Sirmione and Milan are are all within striking distance. It is busy in school holidays (this is tourist hotspot Lake Garda after all), but get out early for sightseeing/or to beat the heat and you’re in for a treat!

The details:

Lake garda with kids why eurocamp's hu altomincio was our best family holiday yet

Why we chose Hu Altomincio for our Lake Garda holiday

@thisbristolbrood

Thinking of a family getaway to Lake Garda? We loved this @Eurocamp Holidays site just 10 minutes from the lake, on the banks of the River Mincio. Why we loved it: 🏡 The Setup: It fit our family of five quite happily in a 3 bedroom mobile, which had air con, and a dishwasher. Tip: Request a spot at the end of the site near the pools and the entrance to the riverside path. 💦 Waterpark: Swimming pools, a spongy-floored lagoon for little ones, and slides that kept the kids busy for hours. 🎭 Beyond the Pool: High ropes, mini golf, night markets, evening entertainment, traffic-free cycle paths to Peschiera and picturesque Borghetto. Perfect for different age groups too – from our four year old to older tweens. A great base: You’re perfectly placed for exploring towns around the lake e.g Sirmione, and Lazise, or day trips to Verona (20 mins – book on thetrainline.com) and Venice (90 mins). 🏰🍷 It’s a summer hotspot! Head out early for the sights, then retreat to the pool in the afternoon to snag a lounger and a cheeky Aperol. 🍹 One of our favorite holidays to date. Who’s ready for an Italian summer? 🍕🍦 #lakegarda #eurocamp #italy #FamilyHoliday #traveltok

♬ So Much Happiness – Lux-Inspira

Trying to find a holiday that satisfies both a four-year-old and two ‘cool’ tweens with a high threshold for being impressed can sometimes be a challenge, but this campsite nails it.

From Bristol to Lake Garda by car. Yes, with three kids. Yes, I’d do it again (more on the UK to Lake Garda drive here, and our Alps overnight stops here).

Choosing a base in a region as touristy as Lake Garda is no small feat. I spent weeks weighing up the options. Should we be right on the water’s edge? Slightly inland? On the western side, or the southern shore? In the end, two things tipped it for Hu Altomincio Village:

The swimming pools – With a large pool, a shallow lagoon pool with a spongy floor, baby/toddler pool and lots of waterslides, my three were entertained for hours.

And the location. The almost-entirely-flat, mostly-car-free 45km Mantua-Peschiera cycle path runs directly past the parc – very exciting for a newly-cycling 4-year-old and for us, who don’t often get the chance to cycle as a family on traffic-free roads.

While the river is a sight to behold, you’ll see straight away how fast-moving the water is. Save your swimming for the pools and lake though – don’t be tempted to get in the Mincio. There are clear warning signs along the bank for very good reason. No swimming, no paddling, no paddleboarding.

PLUS within an easy drive or train hop you’ve got the romantic rooftops of Verona, the canals of Venice, trendy Milan, plus some of the prettiest old towns on the lake (Sirmione, Lazise, Borghetto).

Check availability at Hu Altomincio Village on Eurocamp →

Hu Altomincio accommodation: our Premium 3-bedroom mobile home

Despite booking late in June (don’t be like me), we struck gold with our pitch.
Our home for the ten days was a Premium 3-bedroom mobile home (sleeps 6) which felt more boutique cabin than mobile home – clean, functional, with a generous decking area, air-con (a total lifesaver in 40°C) and, drumroll please…a dishwasher!

Because we’d driven, we packed our own towels and bed linen in the boot to save a bit of cash on the hire – well worth doing if you’ve got the space.

As for the pitch, we were at the end of a dead-end road, so there was zero through traffic, making it quieter and less overlooked than other pitches. On one side was a rushing stream right (with netted fence for safety), the pools were a short stroll, the riverside cycle path was practically on our doorstep, and there was a parking area just behind the mobiles opposite us, meaning we could unload the car with our stuff and food much more easily than those that were deeper into the site.

Review Hu Altomincio eurocamp premium holiday family travel peschiera del garda italy

Not all mobile home pitches are as good as ours was. Plenty are tucked further into the parc with no parking right next to them, which is a bit of a pain when you’ve just done a big shop. When you book, request a pitch towards the far end of the site as close to the central pool complex and the river as possible, ideally on a no-through road.

Eurocamp can’t always guarantee a specific spot but they do make a note of preferences. It’s worth flagging in advance and double-checking when you check in.

Book your Premium mobile home at Hu Altomincio with Eurocamp →

Hu Altomincio swimming pools and water park

With 800 pitches on-site, I had braced myself for a daily Battle of the Sunbeds, but it was nowhere near the frantic towel-flinging Olympics I’ve witnessed at certain other resorts (as seen on TikTok).

If you’re dead-set on a prime water’s-edge spot, or you need a big cluster of loungers for a large group, get down at 9am when the pool gates open. The lagoon side fills up first.

After about 11am things tend to get busy. But if you’re a slow-morning family or have gone out for the earlier hours of the day, even rocking up mid-afternoon we always found a spot somewhere.

The parc is split into two main aquatic hubs:

The Kids’ Lagoon – a soft-landing paradise

Similar to Park Albatros in Tuscany, the entire lagoon pool floor is shallow, spongy rubber – grippy underfoot, and a million times safer for wobbly toddlers, sprinting children and two-aperols-down adults than slippy tiles. At just 30cm deep it’s a world of fountains, mini slides and a whale slide.

This area is also home to the bulk of the water slides, and the parc is happy for guests to take inflatables down all of them (you can buy these in the on-site shop, but see my Top Tip below before you part with €30 for an inflatable unicorn).

My older two could manage every slide independently, while my four year old only needed a hand on the two biggest, meaning I could position myself perfectly to watch him whizz down the smaller ones on repeat from the comfort of a sunlounger, Aperol in hand (gamechanger). There is also a tiny baby lagoon behind the bar for the very smallest splashers.

The Main Complex – Olympic pool, spray park and tipping bucket

For anyone who wants more than a paddle, there’s a proper Olympic-sized pool – head there at opening if you actually want to do lengths without dodging a flotilla of inflatables.

Beyond it is a spray park and the much-shrieked-at tipping bucket (you know the one that fills up, then dumps a tonne of water on the people beneath it much to the delight of many).

In the mornings, staff lower specialised aqua bikes into the water for fitness classes. I did not partake, although it looked really fun and the music definitely made it feel like we were at a summer pool party!

Top Tip: don’t buy expensive inflatables on day one

Keep an eye out for departing guests – many families flying home will often donate their lilos, rings and unicorns for the next wave of holidaymakers. We picked up two perfectly serviceable inflatables in our first 48 hours. Do also pass yours on when you leave, karma and all that.

Bringing the dog?

Hu Altomincio has a dedicated dog beach beside the pools (sadly no dogs in the main pools for obvious reasons). Worth checking the dog policy in your specific mobile home before you book if you’re bringing a pooch – some allow them, some don’t.

Like the look of it? Check Hu Altomincio prices and availability at Eurocamp →

On-site activities at Hu Altomincio: keeping every age group happy

In addition to a packed activity programme, there’s tons to do on-site:

For the thrill-seekers, the Treetop Adventure Course is a must – there’s something very fun about a zip wire that flies directly over the swimmers in the pool (minimum height 140cm, so my 4-year-old missed the cut, but the tweens were in their element). For smaller legs, there are jump nets.

You’ll also find a brilliant playground, mini golf and a mini train that chugs through around the parc all day – handy if your mobile home is at the far end of the parc, have a vehicle lover in your brood or if you’ve over-Aperoled at lunch and need a lift back.

For the in-betweens there’s table tennis, the games room, kart hire, bike hire (including trailers for little non-cyclists) – we brought the kids own from home, but got two adult ones for a couple of days.

Evenings bring nightly entertainment at the main square, including family discos, night markets, gelato, and evening shows that my kids loved to stay up late and watch.

MiniClub runs an outdoor programme of games, parties and creative activities for the smaller ones, while older kids get sports tournaments and group challenges.

WiFi

We had no problems with the WiFi which is free.

See what’s included in your stay – Eurocamp at Hu Altomincio Village →

Food and drink at Hu Altomincio: what to eat, where to drink

Whether you fancy a long, lazy Italian dinner or a quick bite between slides, there’s plenty going on. We mixed self-catering with a couple of nights out and a few quick nuggets and chips or a pizza.

The Bars

Bar Froggy

Morning espresso, midday sandwich, sundowner Aperol with a view of the pools (poured into a plastic cup so you can sit with your drink by the water).

Bar La Terrazza del Mincio – a cold beer.

Bar La Diga – by reception; handy on arrival or for those whose spot is close to the entrance.

Restaurants and Quick Bites

Ristorante Osteria del Mincio – an open-air Italian dinner with local specialities and international favourites for the picky kids.

Pizzeria Bella Italia – you know it!

The Take Away – a godsend on the nights you just want to eat on your decking with a glass of wine. Pizzas, lasagne, roast chicken, nuggets, the lot.

Street Food Trucks – keep an eye out for these.

The Sweet Spots

Gelateria Lover – no Italian holiday is complete without daily gelato and Lover delivers proper homemade scoops.

The Candy Shop – a sugar-filled hut of kids dreams. Approach with caution.

Stocking Up

The Market – surprisingly well-stocked. Fresh baked goods, local fruit and veg, Italian and international essentials.

The Shop – souvenirs, swimming costumes, inflatables.

Closest off-site supermarket

For a bigger weekly shop, our favourite was Conad Superstore (NUOVA, Via Tangenziale, 4, 37019 Peschiera del Garda VR), less than a 10-minute drive away. Stock up here on allll the Italian goodies. And if you’re driving home, you get can a excellent olive oil by the gallon – we stocked up!

Trolley loads of pasta, wine and Italian biscotti work out a lot cheaper than the on-site shop for the bulk of your stay.

The on-site cats

Keep an eye out for the parc’s friendly resident cats. My youngest spent half the holiday trying to befriend one whenever it came in the direction of our mobile.

Things to do at Hu Altomincio

Cycling from Hu Altomincio to Peschiera del Garda

If you love to get out and about on a bike during your summer travels, there is one reason above all others to pick Hu Altomincio over the dozens of other Lake Garda parcs, it’s this: the river path runs directly past your mobile home.

It is almost entirely flat, almost entirely traffic-free, and winds it way through some of the prettiest countryside in Lombardy.

Our newly-cycling 4-year-old made it the full length to Peschiera del Garda and back, just one month after taking off his stabilisers and in some serious summer heat (the breeze on our cycling backs was actually much nicer than sitting still!)

You can hire bikes from Hu Altomincio itself, trailers and babyseats are available. It was 27 euros for 1 day for an adult bike and 3 euros to rent a helmet.

Peschiera del Garda

A ten-minute drive or a leisurely cycle north and you’re at Peschiera del Garda on the southern tip of the lake – whose fortress is a UNESCO World Heritage site. Massive pentagonal walls rise straight out of the water in a star shape, surrounded by canals that welcome the odd boater. Behind the 16th century ramparts, beautiful old streets are dotted with bars and restaurants, plenty of gelato, plus a busy little town centre for browsing.

From here you can also catch ferries to take you around the lake (go early as queues build and check the timetable first as some might leave you stranded somewhere for hours – not ideal with little kids!)

You can hire sun loungers for around €20 for 2 on the pebbly beach here. There are also pedalos and boats for hire.

The towns get toasty in August – look for bars with water mist fans that spritz a fine cool spray. They were a godsend in 40°C!

Cycling from Hu Altomincio to Borghetto sul Mincio

Heading south along the cycle path from the parc takes you to Borghetto sul Mincio, frequently rated one of Italy’s most beautiful villages. This tiny hamlet is built around a series of ancient watermills which sit directly on the river, connected by stone bridges and flower-lined walkways.

The village is dominated by the Visconti Bridge, a 14th-century fortified dam that looks lifted from a fairytale.

Waterside dining: several restaurants have terraces overhanging the river, all specialising in Tortellini di Valeggio (locally known as ‘love knots’).

If you can, time your visit for sunset. The golden hour light hitting the stone and the Scaligero Castle on the hill above is, as you can imagine, really rather lovely.

I don’t think you could pick a duff restaurant in Borghetto. One evening we ate at Caffe Visconti – almost boat-like in appearance, as it juts out on a platform into the river. Dining here is quite thrilling – the Mincio river water rushes past fast on both sides of the open-air covered terrace, which kept my son hypnotised for most of the meal. It’s incredibly picturesque.

Lake Garda towns: Sirmione, Lazise and beyond

Exploring the towns dotted around the lake is a great day or evening trip out. We stayed near Peschiera del Garda for 10-days and here are our pick of the south shore highlights:

Sirmione

Take the ferry from Peschiera del Garda across to Sirmione. Make sure you check the ferry timetables – some crossings take 40 minutes, others 4 hours (as they go around the whole lake rather than direct). Arrive at the port around 20 minutes early to get tickets as it gets busy and is first-come, first-served.

A panoramic footpath leads from the ferry drop off in Sirmione town, past the 13th century moated fortress, Castello Scaligero, to Jamaica Beach, a striking stretch of shoreline where rock shelves meet the lake. It’s beautiful but precarious underfoot: the surface is smooth and often very slippery, so crocs or beach shoes are essential (either that or crawl out on hands and knees!)

For the return, hop on the small tourist train (€1.50 per person) back to the old town. There’s plenty to linger for: a scatter of shops, cafés and restaurants, a children’s playground, the Grotte di Catullo – the sprawling ruins of a Roman villa more than 2,000 years old at the tip of the peninsula – and a thermal spa.

Lazise

Many of the beaches around Lake Garda are pebbly, so you’ll need water shoes. check out Lazise if you want a rare sandy beach on the lake.

Enclosed by well-preserved medieval walls, the town opens onto a lakefront marina of bobbing boats and café terraces that spill towards the lake. Stroll the promenade as the light softens towards evening.

Day trips from Hu Altomincio

Hu Altomincio is a brilliant base for several Italian bucket list destinations, plus Lake Garda’s major theme parks. I’d never been to Verona or Venice before this trip and the fact that we squeezed in both (plus Bologna – 1h50 and Florence – 2h45) really blew my mind.

Gardaland and Movieland Studios

You are absolutely spoilt for choice when it comes to theme parks in this corner of Italy. Gardaland is right on your doorstep and it’s worth checking online or via Hu Altomincio for deals on Gardaland, which is where you’ll find Peppa Pig World and the Lego Waterpark. All bookable through GetYourGuide.

We heard brilliant things from other guests about the parks, though it was so hot during our stay that we couldn’t quite face it. That said, they do open in the evenings if you want to dodge the midday sun!

Movieland Studios is the more bonkers, hammier sister park, and has an attached aqua park called Caneva. For something unique, the Medieval Times jousting and dinner banquet is an interesting one for older kids.

Verona – 20 minutes by train

Just 20 minutes away on the train (you can book on trainline.com) or you can drive and park at Piazza Cittadelle (secure, underground parking near the Arena).

Because it’s so busy in the summer season, and the heat creeps up fast, I’d recommend getting up early to beat the crowds and the sweltering temperatures. We arrived in the city around 9am and our first stop was Juliet’s balcony (you know, Shakespeare’s star-crossed lover from “fair Verona” where we lay our scene?) – it’s free to enter the courtyard and grab a quick pic or you could book a fast-track ticket and audio guide if you wanted to explore further.

The Funicolare di Castel San Pietro is well worth doing. Tickets are just €1.50, and arriving early meant we walked straight on. Take the ride up for sweeping views over Verona’s terracotta rooftops and spires, then wander back down on foot at your own pace.

Don’t miss Ponte Pietra – spanning the Adige, it is Verona’s oldest bridge, first built by the Romans in 100 BC. After some of its arches were destroyed in the Second World War, it was painstakingly rebuilt. And be sure to stop by Ponte Pietra Focacceria and its mouthwatering counter of traditional Italian focaccia.

Venice – 90 minutes

Venice in the summer? Insanity? We weren’t sure, but were willing to give it a go. Once again, we tried to get up and out early (three kids), and it was a HOT 40 degree day on our visit. Was it worth it? Absolutely. I’m SO glad we made it happen. And it was nowhere near as bad as I thought it would be. It was busy, yes, but not unbearable and we managed fine with three very overheated kiddos in tow.

As there were engineering works on the train line to Venice from Peschiera del Garda during August, ramping up the journey time from the fastest 1h16 to over 3 hours, we decided to drive the 90 minutes by car.

Following a tip off from a fellow camper, we parked at Tronchetto, an artificial island in the Venetian Lagoon, located at the most western tip of the main Venice island. The island was created in the 1960s, and now is used as a car park for tourists, since vehicles cannot be driven into the city historic centre.

From there, we hopped on the People Mover tram (€1.50), although an alternative option is to catch the water bus from here to Piazza San Marco.

Yes, the gondola is expensive (around €100 for a 30-minute private cruise). Yes, we did it anyway. Yes, it was 100% worth the splurge. We found one down a quieter backstreet rather than on the busier waterways and it was one of the most memorable parts of the trip. We’d timed it with an ice cream for the kids and they loved ducking under bridges and cruising down the narrow alleyways.

Pro tip: book gondola rides, San Marco skip-the-line tickets and Doge’s Palace tours via GetYourGuide – it will save you from the queues in peak season.

Milan

If you fancy a change of pace from the lakeside, Milan is a brilliant shout for a day trip. It takes around an hour to get to from Peschiera del Garda station to the city, and you can be wandering past the Duomo or window shopping in the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II before you know it and still be back to the parc in time for the evening disco.

Bologna

A couple of hours drive away is Bologna. Not somewhere I would have had on my list to visit necessarily as a priority, but given it’s proximity and it’s positioning for breaking up the drive south to Florence (you basically drive straight past), we factored in lunch in Bologna. Because bolognese, well ragù really, in Bologna sounded exactly like something we wanted to do.

We parked up and made a beeline for Via Pescherie Vecchie, a tiny medieval side street just off Piazza Maggiore that is a brimming with authentic Italian osterias and bustling with locals tucking into plates of traditional Italian cuisine.

All the al-fresco tables were rammed (a good sign and what drew us in!), so we ducked inside Zerocinquantuno and I cannot recommend it highly enough. Think hams hanging from the ceiling, red-and-white checked tablecloths, counters piled high with cheeses, huge jars of pasta and bread I’d never laid eyes on before (crescentine fritte).

Things on our to do list if we went back?

We tried to strike a balance during our stay of sightseeing and daytrips, plus chill out time around the pool, especially after a long drive, but if I were to go back I’d add the Malcesine cable car to our list or the more vintage Prada Costabella cable car.

The views look absolutely breathtaking, with Malcesine’s rotating cabins giving you a full 360-degree look at the mountains and the water below.

The Funivia Prada-Costabella cable car seems lesser-known, and is therefore possibly quieter during the busy summer months. It’s a bit more ‘old-school’ and has a Basket Lift, where you hop into a two-person open basket for the first leg from Prada to Ortigaretta. From there, you switch to a traditional two-seater chairlift that takes you right up to Cima Costabella at over 1,850 metres.

How much does a holiday at Hu Altomincio cost?

Costs depend on when you go, what mobile home grade you pick and if you’re loyal Eurocamp users. The earlier you book, the more discounts are often available to you..

Our rough breakdown for a family of five over 10 nights in August:

  • Premium 3-bed mobile home (10 nights) via Eurocamp – approx £2500 (this includes loyalty discounts as we have booked with them before).
  • Channel crossing (ferry return) – £145 – Le Shuttle. P&O ferries – £120. *If you book through Eurocamp, they get huge discounts on ferry prices so definitely get them to book your travel if you can. We couldn’t in this instance as we got Le Shuttle for our journey out.
  • Fuel + tolls (UK to Lake Garda return) approx: £220-£320 + £140-£200 return
  • Crit Air sticker (works as vignette in Switzerland too): 4,91 €
  • Overnights en route (Calais, then Strasbourg, return Lake Lugano, Colmar and Reims).

Check live prices for your dates at Hu Altomincio →

Best time to visit Hu Altomincio Village

As a family of five with three children in school, we are tied to school holidays which dictates when we can make the trip. But here is how the season breaks down:

June – lovely weather, much quieter pools, manageable heat.
July – busier, hotter (35-40°C)
August – the parc is bustling and the lake towns absolutely heaving. Beautiful but not for crowd-averse types, unless you get up and out early in the morning.
September – beautiful shoulder-season weather, water still warm, much cheaper. A brilliant option if you don’t have school-age kids tying you down.

Top tips for booking Hu Altomincio

  • Request a pitch towards the back of the site if you can, close to the central pool complex and the river, ideally on a no-through road and near the parking spots. Mention this in advance – Eurocamp will note it on your booking.
  • Pack your own bed linen and towels if you’re driving. Saves a chunk on the hire fees.
  • Book Eurotunnel as early as possible for the best rates, they often offer 10% off if you book at the beginning of the year or a loyalty discount if you have stayed with them before.
  • If you are booking through Eurocamp and driving, make sure you get them to book your ferry travel or Le Shuttle – it is much cheaper.
  • Pre-book Gardaland, Verona train tickets and Venice attractions – it’s much cheaper, skips the worst of the queues and avoids disappointment.
  • Pack lake shoes or crocs for pebbly beaches!
  • Join the Facebook group Lake Garda Tips and Tricks – people post ideas for things to do, best times to do it, places to eat – anything and everything about Lake Garda. Got a question? Ask away and you’ll get lots of helpful responses from people who are passionate about the area and have visited recently.
  • If you’re flying, Milan is often the cheaper airport to get to, if not the closest. Check flight prices here.

Book Hu Altomincio Village direct with Eurocamp →

Hu Altomincio: pros and cons

The wins

  • Brilliant pool complex that suits every age group from toddlers to teens
  • Great location with a flat, traffic-free cycle path to Peschiera and Borghetto
  • Within easy reach of Verona, Venice, Milan and theme parks like Gardaland
  • The accommodation was spacious, modern, air-conditioned and spotlessly clean
  • Far less of a sunbed-Olympics vibe than other big resorts

The not-so-wins

  • It’s busy in school holidays – that’s just Lake Garda life
  • Not all pitches are created equal; you’ll want to flag your preferences when booking. I’m not sure how I’d feel if I was miles from the life of the site or TOO close to the action.
  • You’re a 10-minute drive from Peschiera del Garda, so can’t just walk out into the town. This might be tricky if you don’t have your own car.

Getting to Hu Altomincio Village

Arriving by car

If you are planning a road trip, the easiest way is just to put it into your Sat Nav – Località Torrente Valle, 10, 37067 Salionze di Valeggio sul Mincio VR – GPS 45.3861139 – 10.7078442

Coming from Verona (Valerio Catullo) Airport

Verona is your closest hub. You can hop on the 482 bus directly from the airport and get off at the Salionze – Bivio Diga stop, which sits right next to the parc. You can book a taxi transfer by emailing infopoint.altomincio@huopenair.com. Just make sure to give them at least 48 hours’ notice.

Coming from Milan Malpensa

If you are flying into Malpensa, catch the train from the airport to Milano Centrale, then hop on a second train over to Peschiera. Once you arrive at Peschiera station, the 482 bus will take you straight to the Salionze – Bivio Diga stop by the parc entrance. Alternatively, you can pre-book a taxi transfer via the info point email mentioned above.

Coming from Bergamo (Orio al Serio) Airport

From Bergamo, take the shuttle bus to Bergamo train station and catch the train to Peschiera. From the station, it’s the same 482 bus to the Salionze – Bivio Diga stop. Taxis can also be arranged through the parc’s info point if you email them in advance.

From Peschiera Station

If you are already at the station, take the 482 bus to the Salionze – Bivio Diga stop, or drop the parc a line 48 hours before you arrive to arrange a private transfer.

Want to make it a fortnight? Pair Hu Altomincio with Hu Firenze

If you’ve got two weeks at your disposal, Hu Altomincio pairs beautifully with Hu Firenze, tucked into the Tuscan hills a 20-minute bus ride from Florence. It’s roughly a four-hour drive south (and you should definitely stop at Bologna for lunch en route!), which means you can do the lake-and-pools-and-Aperol half of your holiday at Hu Altomincio, then peel off into Tuscany for Renaissance art, famous architecture, seriously good food, gelato (there is never enough gelato) and a culture hit.

That’s exactly what we did – after years of talking about going to Florence one day, we were in a position to make it happen. Italian summer of dreams.

Full Hu Firenze review coming very soon – I’ll link it here the second it’s live.

Final thoughts on Hu Altomincio Village

Hu Altomincio Village offers an activity-packed holidays for those who want it, as well as being a gateway to authentic Italian culture. Whether you’re sipping an Aperol on your decking, watching your little’un whizz down a slide for the 47th time, or wandering Borghetto’s stone bridges as the sun sets, it’s a parc that caters to the whole brood.
This holiday’s going down as one of our absolute favourites to date. Sunshine, wine, gelato, fortress towns, theme parks, seeing some of the great Italian cities for the first time.
If you’ve been thinking about an Italian summer – this is your sign.

Check the latest prices and availability at Hu Altomincio Village on Eurocamp

How does Hu Altomincio compare to Park Albatros in Tuscany?

Both are brilliant Italian Eurocamp parcs with spongy-floored lagoons. Park Albatros is closer to the beach and Pisa; Hu Altomincio is better for Lake Garda, Verona and Venice and has the river cycle path. I’ve reviewed Park Albatros here – pick the one that fits your preferences best.

Have you stayed at Hu Altomincio? Or got another Eurocamp parc you’d recommend? I’d love to hear in the comments below!

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