
Gallipoli's lively beach strip, known for turquoise water, beach clubs and Salento's biggest nightlife scene.
Baia Verde stretches for around 4 km south of Gallipoli's old town, a sandy beach with a gently sloping seabed that's become Salento's best-known destination for beach-club life and nightlife. It mixes equipped lidos with stretches of free sand, and after dark it turns into one of the liveliest strips of coast in the region. A dedicated FSE train station serves the area directly.
A mix of equipped beach clubs and free, unequipped sand runs along the roughly 4 km stretch. A summer ZTL restricts cars along the coast road, with a free shuttle from the A. Bianco stadium car park.
Beach clubs available: Yes — sunbeds and umbrellas can usually be rented in season.
Numerous well-known beach clubs line the beach, offering sunbeds, umbrellas, bars, restaurants and music, alongside free public sections.
By train: A dedicated Gallipoli Baia Verde station on the Ferrovie del Sud Est network serves the area directly, about a 15-minute walk from the beach.
By bus: Local buses connect Gallipoli's centre with Baia Verde in season.
Parking: By car: Baia Verde is about a 15-minute drive south of Gallipoli's old town along Viale delle Dune, though a summer ZTL restricts cars along the coast road itself. In summer, a ZTL keeps cars out of the immediate coast road; park in the outer car parks and take the free shuttle from the A. Bianco stadium car park or walk in.
On foot: From the outer car parks or the train station, it's roughly a 15-minute walk to the beach.
Baia Verde is what most people picture when they think of Gallipoli's turquoise-sea reputation: a long, sandy beach along Viale delle Dune with a shallow, gently sloping seabed, backed by a dense run of beach clubs, bars and restaurants. It's the beach most associated with Salento's beach-club and party scene, with well-known venues like Samsara Beach, Gondar Park, Lido Zen and Zeus Beach drawing crowds through the day and into the night, alongside the Cave Discoteque nearby. The beach itself extends about 4 km, offering both equipped lido sections and stretches of free, unequipped sand if you'd rather skip the music and cover charges. Facilities at the clubs typically include showers, changing cabins, sunbed and umbrella hire and full bar/restaurant service. Access has become more managed in recent years: a summer ZTL (limited traffic zone) restricts cars along the coast road, so visitors generally park in outer car parks and either walk in or use the free shuttle from the A. Bianco stadium car park. There's also a dedicated "Gallipoli Baia Verde" FSE train station, about a 15-minute walk from the beach - a genuinely useful option if you'd rather skip parking altogether. Baia Verde suits anyone who wants Gallipoli's classic beach-club-and-nightlife experience rather than a quiet swim - come for the music and social scene as much as the water, and plan around the summer traffic restrictions.
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