When staying in Sirmione I suppose there are two points to consider first - time of year and whether to stay on the old town side of the draw bridge or outside. I imagine visiting Sirmione at the height of the season would be a terrible experience - the streets are narrow and even in October it was fairly busy. the area before the drawbridge is modern and anonomous- you really could be anywhere. However it all changes once you see the Old Fort by the drawbidge - then you are in the delightful old town. Cobbled streets- opening out with views of the lake, many hotels, restaurants, expensive shops, ice creams,old churches etc.
Hotel is at the far end of the old town- so very convenient for the town, ferry , restaurants fort and walks. Its also not very far from the spa and its an easy walk to the the Grotto of Catullo- not to be missed.
We had a second floor room with a balcony and view of the lake - essential and the view was much better than some of the more expensive hotels could offer. The room was simple and very clean. It had a pitched roof, lined with wood. The bathroom was small with one of those stupid showers with no door - so easy to flood!
I guess the bad points centre around aspects of the room. I have already mentioned the bathroom - add to that the pitiful bathroom goodies - basic to say the least - bring your own. the walls are paper thin and the first two nights were greatly distrubed by the person next door snoring - its bad enough with husband snoring - at least I could kick him!!!!! The third night was equally noisey because an Italian man two rooms along had the TV on a full blast resulting people banging on the walls - fortunately the night porter sorted this out.Although the street below was pretty quiet in the evening - with the window open you could hear people talking - didnt bother us. The dining room was on the floor above and we could here the chairs scrapping on the floor for some of the very early breakfasters - again not a real problem. The breakfast - possibly the worst coffee and juice ever encountered- however there was fresh fruit, croissants, ceral, bread, rolls, meat , cheese - and we managed fine - always took some bread rolls to feed the ducks on the lake!!
The ladies on the desk were very friendly and helpful - a request for more pillows was no problem and they were helpful about getting to Verona and dealing with taxis - the only things we asked them about.
For Verona - get a bus from the other side of the drawbridge - the ticket office and post office are right there. The Tourist office had one of the most unhelpful people I have ever come across - so give that a miss! Takes about an hour to get to Verona- we did two city bus tours that day - its a joint ticket with your own headphones which you take on both buses- valid for 24 hours. If you only have time to do one - I recommend the B tour which includes a stop to get out and take photos above the city. You can hop on and off at any of the stops but there are not many buses - so watch the time so you dont miss the bus back to Sirmione. If you want a taxi - its easier to walk to the bust stop area outside the drawbridge and pick up one there than order from your hotel.
Boat trips on the lake are easy - there are some private tours but we just used the ferry - check you times carefully - they dont all come back to Sirmione!
I would probably use this hotel again - the good points - location , view etc outweigh some of the bad ones. But I would be very careful about the time of year- also its an expensive area.I have no idea who the shops are aimed at since if you are flying in on a budget airline to Bergamo - you dont really have much of a luggage allowance.
We used the train to get to Sirmione from Bergamo- straight forward and reasonally cheap - however taxi from the station at Desenzano was 24Euros
dont forget to have an ice cream and spritz aperol
This review is the subjective opinion of a TripAdvisor member and not of TripAdvisor LLC