Ancient Rome Itinerary: Arena Floor, Forum, Catacombs & the Appian Way
Standard Colosseum tickets only scratch the surface. This ancient-history day takes you onto the arena floor through the Gladiator's Gate, across the Forum and Palatine Hill, down into the catacombs and out along the 2,300-year-old Appian Way — with the special-access tours worth booking for each.
At a glance
- 1Colosseum arena floor at opening
- 2Roman Forum & Palatine Hill
- 3Catacombs beneath the city
- 4Appian Way by e-bike
Morning: through the Gladiator's Gate
Book an arena-floor tour for the first slots of the day and you enter the Colosseum the way the fighters did, stepping straight onto the reconstructed arena with the seating bowl rising around you. Arena access is a restricted-entry ticket that standard admission does not include, and slots are capped — reserve two to three weeks ahead in summer. Guided versions run about 3 hours and bundle the Forum and Palatine into one ticket.
Midday: the Forum and Palatine Hill
Your Colosseum ticket covers the Roman Forum and Palatine Hill next door, so walk the Via Sacra past the Senate house and the Temple of Julius Caesar while the ticket is still valid. The Palatine, where emperors built their palaces above the Circus Maximus, is the quieter half — most visitors skip it, which is exactly why you shouldn't. Allow two hours, carry water, and go with a guide if you want the ruins decoded rather than just admired.
Afternoon: underground into the catacombs
Escape the afternoon heat 10–15 metres below street level in the catacombs, the tuff-rock burial tunnels early Christians carved outside the ancient walls. Entry is by guided visit only, typically 40–45 minutes through narrow galleries of tombs and frescoes; small-group tours often pair them with the bone-lined Capuchin Crypt. It stays around 15°C underground year-round, so bring a layer even in August.
Late afternoon: ride the Appian Way
Finish on the Via Appia Antica, the 312 BC 'queen of roads', where original basalt paving stones still carry ancient cart ruts past tombs, villas and the arches of the Roman aqueducts. The park is far bigger than it looks, so most travellers cover it by e-bike or golf cart on a guided half-day ride of about 3–4 hours. Time it for the low golden light — and note the road closes to cars on Sundays, the best day to ride it.
Book the experiences in this itinerary
Top-rated tours for exactly what this plan recommends in Rome — prices per person.







