Mediterranean Live Webcams
22 live cameras across the Mediterranean world — Italy, Greece, Croatia, and Spain. Gothic cathedral spires, Adriatic harbours, Aegean islands, and sunsets over the Canary Islands.
Italy (6 cams)
Milan's Duomo, an alpine lake in the Venetian Dolomite foothills, and the medieval hilltop village of Scanno in Abruzzo — one of the most photographed villages in Italy.
Croatia (5 cams)
The Dalmatian coast from Split's Roman palace waterfront to Primošten's old town — a peninsula connected to the mainland by a single causeway, ringed by crystal Adriatic water.
Greece (6 cams)
Rhodes on the Aegean, and the mountain villages of Thessaly — green valleys below the Pindus range where Greek mountain life looks unchanged for centuries.
Spain (5 cams)
Three very different Spains — the volcanic Canary Islands off West Africa, a Costa Brava fishing port, and an Andalusian mountain reservoir above Málaga.
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Mediterranean Webcam Guide
Italy
Milan Duomo — The Cattedrale di Santa Maria Nascente is one of the largest Gothic cathedrals in the world, with 3,400 statues and 135 spires. The cam shows the Piazza del Duomo — one of Italy's main public gathering spaces, and the effective centre of the city. Evening light on the facade is exceptional.
Alpago / Lago di Santa Croce — This Venetian alpine lake sits at the foot of the Dolomites, about 80km north of Venice. The cam is run by the local sailing club (Lega Navale). The lake is popular for windsurfing and is surrounded by trails into the Belluno Dolomites.
Scanno, Abruzzo — A medieval hilltop village in the Abruzzo mountains, often cited as one of Italy's most beautiful. The lake below (Lago di Scanno) is shaped like a heart from above, and the area is part of a nature reserve that's one of the best places in Italy to spot Apennine wolves and Marsican brown bears.
Croatia — The Dalmatian Coast
Split — Croatia's second city is built inside and around a Roman palace — Diocletian's Palace, completed around 305 AD. The palace walls are now the city centre: people live, work, and run restaurants inside the ancient structure. The cam shows the Riva waterfront promenade and the Adriatic beyond.
Primošten — A small medieval town on a peninsula near Šibenik, connected to the mainland by a short causeway. The old town is entirely on the island, and the vineyard terraces visible from the cam produce Babić, a distinctive local red wine. The light here at sunset is extraordinary.
Medulin — On the tip of the Istrian peninsula, this small resort town has a large, shallow bay popular for windsurfing and water sports. The Istrian coast is geologically different from Dalmatia — limestone karst, lower hills, more similar to the Slovenian coast just to the north.
Greece
Rhodes — The largest of the Dodecanese islands, Rhodes has one of the best-preserved medieval cities in Europe (UNESCO World Heritage Site) and over 300 days of sunshine per year. The cam covers the west coast along the Akti Kanari shoreline. Rhodes was home to the Colossus — one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World — though no trace of it survives.
Thessaly / Trikala area — Inland central Greece, the Thessaly plains and Pindus mountain foothills. Trikala is an ancient city with a Vlach minority community; the nearby Meteora monasteries (one of the most photographed places in Greece) are a 30-minute drive. The mountain cam at Elati shows a very different Greece from the island stereotype.
Spain
Fuerteventura, Canary Islands — The Canary Islands are geologically African (they're volcanic islands in the Atlantic off Morocco) though politically Spanish. Fuerteventura is the flattest and driest of the major islands, with sand dunes at Corralejo and some of the best kitesurfing conditions in Europe due to consistent trade winds. The Pajara/Coronado Beach cam covers the south coast.
Costa Brava / Port de Llafranc — The Costa Brava (literally "wild coast") is the rugged rocky coastline of Catalunya from the French border down to Blanes. Llafranc is a small, elegant resort village with a perfect curved bay. Salvador Dalí lived nearby in Cadaqués, and the region's food culture is among Spain's finest.
Best Time to Watch
| Location | Best season | What to see |
|---|---|---|
| Milan Duomo | Year-round | Evening light, summer crowds, winter fog |
| Split / Croatia coast | Jun–Sep | Boats, tourists; Oct–May quieter, often stormy |
| Rhodes | May–Oct | Blue sky, clear Aegean water; winter: empty + dramatic |
| Fuerteventura | Year-round | Kitesurfers year-round; best Nov–Mar |
| Costa Brava | Jun–Sep | Swimmers, boats; spring/fall for dramatic light |
| Italian/Greek mountains | Apr–Oct | Snow in winter; summer hiking season |
FAQ
What time zone are Mediterranean cams on?
Italy, Croatia, Greece, and Spain (mainland) are all on Central European Time (CET = UTC+1, CEST = UTC+2 in summer). That's 3 hours ahead of London and 6–9 hours ahead of US time zones. Sunset in summer is around 8:30–9pm local time — add the offset to catch golden hour from the US.
Can I watch storms on the Adriatic?
Yes — the Adriatic is famous for the Bora (a fierce northeast wind from the mountains) and the Jugo/Sirocco (a warm south wind from Africa). The Split and Primošten cams sometimes show dramatic sea states during these events, especially in autumn and winter when they're most intense.
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