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Cortona, Italy

Relais Il Falconiere & Spa

LocationCortona, Italy
Relais Chateaux
Virtuoso

A seventeenth-century Tuscan manor on a hill above Cortona, Relais Il Falconiere has been held by the Baracchi family since 1860 and now operates as a wine-producing Relais & Chateaux property with a Michelin-starred restaurant. Thirty rooms are distributed across the villa, a chapel annex, and a cottage, priced from US$398 per night, with a full-service spa and an estate vineyard that feeds directly into the table.

Relais Il Falconiere & Spa hotel in Cortona, Italy
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The Approach: A Hill, an Estate, a Five-Generation Commitment

The road that climbs toward Relais Il Falconiere announces something specific before the building comes into view: olive groves on one side, vineyards on the other, and the silhouette of Cortona's medieval walls roughly three kilometres to the south. In the Tuscan countryside, this kind of approach is deliberately cultivated — the estate as a total environment, not simply a building with grounds attached. Il Falconiere belongs firmly to that tradition, and the five-generation Baracchi family ownership since 1860 has given the property the kind of accumulated coherence that purpose-built retreats rarely achieve.

That continuity shapes the service model as much as the architecture. Properties in the country-house Relais & Chateaux category — a tier that includes places like Rosewood Castiglion Del Bosco in Montalcino and Borgo San Felice Resort in Castelnuovo Berardenga , compete less on scale than on the depth of their local embeddedness. Il Falconiere's claim in that peer set rests on two interlocking credentials: a working winery producing wines served at the estate's own table, and a Michelin-starred restaurant operating from the restored lemon house on the property. Both feed back into each other, and both reward guests who stay long enough to engage with them properly.

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Rooms Distributed Across Three Buildings

The thirty rooms are not concentrated in a single structure. Some occupy the main seventeenth-century villa, others are positioned adjacent to the estate chapel, and a third group sits within a separate cottage. The dispersal gives the property a village-like scale , guests move through garden paths rather than hotel corridors , and each cluster offers a different relationship to the landscape. The villa rooms carry original frescoes and period furnishings alongside contemporary amenities; the chapel-adjacent rooms sit in a quieter position on the grounds; the cottage offers a degree of separation that families or guests wanting more privacy tend to gravitate toward.

The interior design across all thirty rooms follows the restored-manor register that Tuscan country houses have occupied for decades: antiques, hand-made textiles, wrought iron beds, and a muted palette that defers to the landscape outside rather than competing with it. The Baracchi restoration has been careful on this point , the seventeenth-century bones of the main villa are readable without the property feeling preserved in aspic.

The Restaurant: Michelin Recognition and Land-Anchored Cooking

Restaurant operates from the property's former lemon house and holds one Michelin star. In Tuscany, starred country-house restaurants increasingly divide into two camps: those that use regional ingredients as a starting point for modernist elaboration, and those that work closer to the traditional forms, treating local products as the end rather than the means. Il Falconiere's kitchen positions itself in the latter category, with a stated commitment to fresh, seasonal Tuscan produce and cooking traditions tied directly to the Cortona area.

Dinner on the panoramic terrace , now enclosed as a winter garden, which extends the season without sacrificing the view across the Val di Chiana , pairs directly with wines from the Baracchi family's own production. That vertical integration, from vineyard to table, is uncommon even within the upper tier of Italian agriturismo and relais properties. The lounge bar "La Dolce Vita" extends the food program into a more casual register, with the kitchen offering finger food alongside cocktails and estate wine selections, giving guests a lower-key point of entry into the same culinary tradition.

For broader context on where Il Falconiere sits among Cortona's dining options, see our full Cortona restaurants guide.

Service Architecture: Personalisation Over Procedure

Country-house hotels at this price point , from US$398 per night , succeed or fail on the quality of their anticipatory service rather than on checklist amenities. A dedicated concierge team handles itinerary building, which at Il Falconiere extends well beyond standard restaurant reservations. The property offers structured vineyard tours lasting up to six days, a format that places it closer to wine-travel specialist operators than to conventional hotel excursion programs. Cooking lessons, visits to local farms, and guided nature walks give guests who arrive with more than a passing interest in Tuscan food culture a way to engage substantively with the surrounding area.

Active programming runs in parallel: yoga sessions among the vines, personal training, e-bike hire (Pirelli-branded), and on-site Porsche charging infrastructure signal that the property is tracking a guest profile that moves between contemplative retreat and active outdoor engagement. Mixology classes round out the experiential offer, connecting to the cocktail and wine program at La Dolce Vita. The pattern across all of this is personalisation rather than mass scheduling , activities are framed around individual interests and needs rather than fixed group departures.

The Thesan Spa: Wellness Within the Estate Logic

The spa operates under the name Thesan, a reference to the Etruscan goddess of dawn , an appropriate provenance given that Cortona sits at the heart of Etruscan archaeological territory. Spa facilities include massage, beauty treatments, thermal baths, and structured wellness pathways, with the team positioned as advisors guiding guests toward treatments suited to their specific circumstances rather than offering a fixed menu of options. The approach mirrors the broader service philosophy of the property: staff as informed guides rather than transaction processors.

Guests looking for comparable wellness positioning in other Italian country-house contexts might consider Castel Fragsburg in Merano or, at a different scale and register, Borgo Egnazia in Savelletri di Fasano. Both occupy the same broad tier of Italian estate wellness but with distinct regional characters.

Placing Il Falconiere in the Cortona Peer Set

Cortona's accommodation tier runs from converted historic buildings at accessible price points through to estate properties with full food and wine programs. Within that range, Il Falconiere occupies the upper position, competing less with La Corte Dei Papi or Monastero di Cortona Hotel & Spa than with regional estate properties further afield, including Villa di Piazzano and, at a broader Tuscan scale, properties like Castelfalfi in Montaione.

For guests extending a broader Italian itinerary, the estate model here contrasts instructively with palace-hotel formats like Aman Venice or Four Seasons Hotel Firenze in Florence , both of which operate at comparable price levels but within urban, monument-scale properties rather than working agricultural estates. The choice between them is fundamentally about what kind of Tuscany a guest wants: the city-anchored museum version, or the land-rooted, production-connected one.

Other Italian comparisons worth mapping against include Casa Maria Luigia in Modena for another family-run estate with a serious food identity, Castello di Reschio in Lisciano Niccone for Umbrian estate character at a neighbouring address, and Il Pellicano in Porto Ercole for the coastal counterpart within Tuscany's luxury property tradition.

Planning Your Stay

Relais Il Falconiere sits approximately three kilometres from Cortona's historic centre, reachable by car. Rates begin at US$398 per night. The property is affiliated with Relais & Chateaux and can be contacted directly through the hotel's website at falconiere@relaischateaux.com or by phone at +39 0575 61 26 79. For guests combining the Tuscan interior with southern Italy, Borgo Santandrea on the Amalfi Coast or Il San Pietro di Positano form natural extensions of an itinerary built around properties of similar character and ownership culture. Those moving north toward the lakes might add Passalacqua in Moltrasio to the sequence.

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