Every spring, the same scene plays out across thousands of British households. Someone opens a laptop, types a destination into a search engine, and immediately drowns in options. Beach resorts, city breaks, all-inclusives, villa rentals: the choice has never been wider, and paradoxically, that makes it harder.
Against this backdrop, one trend is consolidating with a clarity that is difficult to ignore: more and more families are choosing a holiday park by the sea in Italy as their answer to the summer question. Not out of fashion, but for reasons that hold up under scrutiny. This guide exists to explain what those reasons are, and to help you choose well.
Why Italy Has Become a Top Destination for Seaside Holiday Parks
Italian beach tourism never stopped working. It simply stopped being obvious. While Spain and Greece competed for the bulk of British mass tourism, Italy’s coastline quietly refined its offer, investing in higher-quality facilities, family-oriented infrastructure and a value proposition that today is genuinely difficult to match anywhere in western Europe.
The climate makes a compelling case on its own: the Adriatic summer is among the most reliable in the Mediterranean, with consistently high temperatures and minimal rainfall from June through September. For a family that has booked months in advance and cannot afford meteorological surprises, that predictability is worth considerably more than it might appear. Add to this the sheer variety of what Italy offers along its coastline, and you begin to understand why the country is reclaiming its position at the top of the European summer shortlist.
The Adriatic Coast vs the Tyrrhenian Coast: Which Side Should You Choose?
It is the first question that many families do not know they need to ask. Italy’s two principal coastlines are fundamentally different tourism products, and the choice between them shapes the entire holiday.
The Tyrrhenian coast, to the west, is the Italy of the postcards: dramatic cliffs, hidden coves, crystalline water, hilltop villages that look impossible and turn out to be real. It is extraordinarily beautiful, and equally demanding with young children. The seabed drops quickly, beaches are often narrow, and the tourism infrastructure is built around couples and independent travellers rather than families managing pushchairs, inflatables and the logistical complexity of a day by the sea with small people in tow.
The Adriatic, to the east, tells a different story. Shallow water stretching for hundreds of metres, fine sand, calm conditions: it is structurally the most child-friendly sea in Italy. The concentration of camping villages and holiday parks along this coast is dense and competitive, with facilities that have invested heavily over the past two decades in water parks, entertainment programmes, quality accommodation and services designed around family life. For those travelling with children, the Adriatic is rarely the wrong choice.
What a Quality Holiday Park by the Sea Actually Offers in 2026
The image of camping as a spartan experience belongs to another era. Quality holiday parks on the Italian coast have redefined the concept so thoroughly that first-time visitors frequently arrive with low expectations and leave reconsidering everything they thought they knew about this kind of holiday.
A water park has become close to standard in the better facilities: slides with differentiated height requirements, access reserved exclusively for guests, sun loungers and parasols included. A private beach sits alongside, eliminating the logistics of finding space on a public stretch of sand each morning. Accommodation options range from traditional pitches to air-conditioned mobile homes with fully equipped kitchens, through to glamping tents that marry the atmosphere of the outdoors with the comfort of a proper bed and a private bathroom.
Facilities like Holiday Park Spiaggia e Mare, on the Lidi Ferraresi, embody this evolution: positioned directly on the seafront, with an accommodation range that covers very different needs, a restaurant serving a dedicated children’s menu, a bike hire centre and a guest-only water park. This is no longer a compromise between nature and comfort. It is a considered choice that delivers both.
The Emilia Romagna Stretch: a Coastline Worth Knowing
Among the areas of the Adriatic coast, the Emilia Romagna and Ferrara stretch deserves its own chapter. It is not the most famous, not the first to appear in a generic search. It is, arguably, the one that offers the best overall balance for British families looking for something more than a week beneath a parasol.
The Lidi Ferraresi, north of the more commercial Riminese stretch, have a character of their own. The Po Delta brings with it fishing valleys, nature reserves and a biodiversity that survives just steps from the shoreline. The atmosphere is quieter, the facilities are on average more carefully managed, and the geographical position adds a layer of value that very few European beach destinations can genuinely claim.
From here, Ravenna and its UNESCO mosaics are less than an hour away. Ferrara, with its intact Renaissance street plan, is equally close. Venice is reachable in a day. The Abbey of Pomposa, celebrating its millennium this year, sits just minutes away by car. A beach holiday that, each morning, can become something else entirely: that is the offer this coastline makes, and it has few equivalents in Europe.
How to Choose the Right Holiday Park
Navigating the available options requires a few clear criteria. The first concerns proximity to the beach: the difference between an accommodation five minutes from the sea and one thirty seconds away is, with children, the difference between two entirely different holidays. It is worth confirming this detail before finalising any booking.
The second criterion concerns accommodation type: mobile homes for those who want flexibility and their own kitchen, glamping for those seeking the outdoor experience without sacrificing comfort, bungalows as a considered middle ground. Each choice carries practical implications that are better evaluated in advance than discovered on arrival.
The third concerns children’s facilities: water park, entertainment programme, safe beach access, dedicated menus. The fourth, frequently underestimated, concerns the journey itself: Bologna Airport is served by direct flights from London Heathrow with British Airways and from London Luton and Stansted with Ryanair. From Bologna, the principal holiday parks along the Ferrara coast are a little over an hour by hire car, with rental agencies available at the terminal.
One final point, and it is not a generic observation: the best positions in the most sought-after facilities sell out months before summer. Those who wait until May to organise July tend to find that the options they actually wanted are already gone. In this particular market, the early decision is almost always the right one.

