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Levico Terme combines Habsburg thermal baths, a glacial lake, and Alpine trails in Trentino. Find hotels and practical travel tips for your stay.
Levico Terme sits in the Valsugana valley of Trentino, northeastern Italy, roughly 20 km east of Trento. The town built its reputation on thermal waters — iron- and arsenic-rich springs that drew European aristocracy to its grand hotels from the late 19th century onward. The Habsburg-era park, Parco delle Terme, still anchors the town center, its lakeside promenades and Liberty-style buildings intact. Lake Levico, a small glacial lake immediately adjacent, adds swimming and non-motorized boating to the offer.
Visitors arrive in two distinct waves. Summer brings Italian and German-speaking families seeking the lake, cycling routes along the Valsugana cycle path — one of the longest in the Alps — and hiking access into the Lagorai mountain range. Winter draws a quieter crowd focused on the thermal spa facilities and proximity to ski areas at Panarotta (around 1,800 m elevation). The town's compact size — roughly 7,500 residents — keeps the atmosphere calm relative to larger Trentino resorts.
Levico Terme is served by regional trains on the Trento–Venezia line, with a station in town. The A22 motorway (Brenner–Modena axis) is accessible via Trento Est, about 25 km west. Most thermal hotel packages run Sunday-to-Sunday and include spa access as a standard feature.