每位乘客可以携带一件大行李(29" x 21" x 11" / 74 x 53 x 28 cm)和一件小行李(22" x 14" x 9" / 56 x 36 x 23 cm)。豪华轿车最多可容纳 2 件大行李。我们始终会为您安排最合适的车辆,以确保您的行李能够容纳。如有超大行李,或您不确定行李是否能放下,请 联系我们。
During the summer season, daily visitor numbers may be capped and advance reservations are sometimes required to enter La Pelosa — check current access rules before your visit, as policies can change from year to year. Spots can sell out during peak periods, so checking ahead is strongly recommended. Plan this alongside your transfer booking so the timing lines up.
Stintino sits roughly 46 km (29 miles) from Alghero, making it around a 50-minute drive. From Sassari it is approximately 40 km (25 miles), roughly 45 minutes by car. Cagliari is significantly further -- around 260 km (162 miles) -- so a day trip from the capital means a longer travel day, though still very doable with a private transfer that lets you set your own schedule. Most visitors find four to six hours in Stintino is enough to enjoy the beach and the village before heading back.
Quite a lot for a village its size. The Museo Tonnara di Stintino tells the story of the founding families and the tuna-fishing industry that defined this community for generations -- it is small but well put together and worth an hour of your time. The twin harbors of Porto Vecchio and Porto Nuovo are ideal for a slow walk, and Cala Grande offers a rockier alternative for snorkelers. From Stintino you can also join a short boat excursion to Asinara, a protected national park island with albino donkeys, hiking trails, and near-empty beaches -- the crossing takes around 20 minutes each way.
Stintino is a small fishing village on the northwestern tip of Sardinia, home to La Pelosa -- consistently ranked among the best beaches in Europe. The combination of powdery white sand, shallow turquoise water, and an Aragonese tower rising from the sea creates the kind of scenery most travelers only see on postcards. Beyond the beach, you have a tight-knit harbor village with a rich tuna-fishing heritage, local seafood worth seeking out, and a view across the water to Asinara island. It is compact and unhurried, which makes it ideal for a day trip rather than a longer stay.
Stintino has a genuine fishing village food culture, which means the seafood is the real thing. The signature dish is potato and lobster soup -- a rich, hearty preparation unique to this village. Octopus prepared alla stintinese and pasta with sea urchin are also local staples. Skip the international menus and look for restaurants near the harbor where the catch is local. A long lunch here is one of the better ways to spend the middle of your day before heading back.
Renting a car means navigating unfamiliar roads, finding parking in a small village that fills up fast in summer, and dealing with the logistics yourself. A private Daytrip transfer drops you directly at your destination, lets your driver wait or return for you, and -- unlike a rental -- gives you the option to add a sightseeing stop on the way. The road from Alghero to Stintino passes through coastal scenery worth slowing down for, and your driver can suggest spots. You arrive relaxed rather than stressed about parking, and your return is already arranged.