The Ultimate Guide to Packing for Europe in Summer

The Ultimate Guide to Packing for Europe in Summer
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Summer in Europe is stunning but tricky to pack for one season, a dozen climates. This guide covers exactly what to wear from the Mediterranean heat to the cooler, rainier north!
Athens in July is 34°C (93°F) and relentless sun. Dublin in August rarely breaks 18°C (64°F) and delivers rain without apology.
If the itinerary covers more than one country, which most summer Europe trips do, the wardrobe needs to handle all of it. Linen dresses for the Mediterranean heat. A proper waterproof for Ireland and the UK. Outfits that carry from a morning of cobblestone sightseeing to a 10pm dinner when the sun is still in the sky.
The good news: with the right pieces, it absolutely can. This guide walks through exactly what to pack for summer in Europe, country by country, so every destination is covered, from what the weather actually does to what women are wearing on the ground.
For the full year round capsule strategy and packing logistics, see our Complete Packing Guide to Europe.
(Editable) Printable Checklist
Printable Travel Checklist
If you need an all-in-one resource for planning, look no further, because we’ve developed a printable travel checklist that will make it all super simple!
The travel checklist features unique categories to help you pack for your trip efficiently including a list of things to bring on vacation and other helpful reminders. It includes all the items listed in various categories above and has spaces where you can fill in your own information:
- Write in an item’s weight (lighter items means less overall baggage weight).
- Note if you need to purchase something or if you already own it.
- Organize where you’ll pack each item.
Our readers looove our checklist! Check out our Ultimate Packing List for Vacation to access the editable checklist, or download the print-friendly PDF version here for easy, stress-free packing.
Sun protection that actually looks good, the J.Crew Wide Brim Packable Straw Hat is a summer Europe must-have that shields you from the strong Mediterranean sun and packs flat when you head indoors.
Is Summer a Good Time to Visit Europe?
One of the most popular times to visit, and genuinely worth it. The days are extraordinary: sunset at 9 or 10pm means sightseeing runs late, outdoor dining stretches into the evening, and the long golden light is something that justifies the trip on its own. Festivals, outdoor markets, beach towns, and a version of European city life that only fully exists in summer.
The honest trade-off: crowds. July and August bring the year’s heaviest tourist traffic to the major sites, the Colosseum, the Louvre, the Sagrada Família all require patience or early starts. Hotels book up and prices peak. For anyone with flexibility, June delivers almost all the summer benefits with noticeably fewer crowds.
One underrated summer option worth knowing: Northern Europe. Stockholm, Amsterdam, and Copenhagen in July are warm, beautiful, and far less gridlocked than Rome or Barcelona. The midnight sun in Scandinavia is extraordinary. Southern Europe gets the summer reputation, Northern Europe gets the summer experience.
The Taos Trulie Sandals are a reliable summer shoe for Europe, supportive enough for miles of cobblestone streets, stylish enough to wear straight from sightseeing to dinner without a second thought.
What to Wear in Europe in Summer: Country by Country
Summer temperatures vary significantly across Europe, far more than most travelers expect when they’re packing. Always check the extended forecast at weather.com for the specific cities on the itinerary before finalizing any packing decisions.
The country-by-country guide below covers the key packing considerations for each destination.
Quince 100% European Linen Button Front Dress: Regular XS-XL | Plus 1X-3X
France
Summers in France are warm and occasionally very hot, with temperatures averaging 23–28°C (73–82°F) in July and August and heat waves pushing significantly higher in recent years. Paris in summer is beautiful, long evenings, terraces packed, the Seine glittering, and warm enough that linen and lightweight fabrics earn every bit of their reputation here.
Pack linen pants and a mix of short-sleeve tops and lightweight button-downs as the daily foundation. Dresses shine in Paris in summer: a midi dress with clean sneakers or sandals is one of the most natural looks on the city’s streets. Readers consistently reach for their lightest pieces and still find Paris warm enough to want them.
Outerwear: A light packable layer for evenings and the occasional summer rain shower. Nothing heavier is needed.
Shoes: Comfortable sneakers or sandals for sightseeing, a loafer or ballet flat for evenings.
Check out our Paris Packing Guide for more tips!
Quince European Linen Long Sleeve Shirt: Sizes XS-XL | 1X-3X
Italy
Summer in Italy means heat and sun, and the further south, the more intense both become. Rome and Sicily in July regularly hit 30–33°C (86–91°F).
Northern Italy, Milan, Venice, Florence, is warmer than the rest of Europe but slightly more temperate at 26–30°C (79–86°F). Wherever in Italy the itinerary lands, the formula is the same: breathable fabrics, comfortable shoes, and a scarf that handles religious site dress codes without requiring a wardrobe change.
Linen is the fabric of summer Italy. Linen tops, linen pants, linen dresses, breathable, quick-drying, effortlessly stylish, and genuinely worn by local women of all ages. Wide-leg linen pants with a fitted top are a practical and polished sightseeing outfit. Midi dresses work beautifully and handle Vatican and Duomo dress codes automatically.
Outerwear: A light packable layer for air-conditioned interiors and evening breezes.
Shoes: comfortable sandals for warm days, sneakers for heavy sightseeing days. Break everything in before departure, cobblestones in July heat are no place to break in a new pair.
Check out our Italy Packing Guide for more tips!
Spanx Cropped Wide Leg Jeans with Patch Pockets | Sizes: XS-3X Regular, Tall, Petite
United Kingdom
The UK in summer is warmer than its reputation, and less reliable than the calendar suggests.
July averages 20–23°C (68–73°F) in London, which is genuinely pleasant. It also delivers stretches of grey, cool, rainy days without notice. The rule for packing for the UK in any season applies in summer too: always have a proper waterproof layer in the bag.
Short sleeves and light layers work for warm days. A fitted long-sleeve knit handles cool evenings and the inevitable grey spell. Jeans remain a staple, wide-leg and straight-leg are the current silhouette, and work across the full range of UK summer temperatures.
Outerwear: A packable waterproof jacket is non-negotiable, even in July. Not a light layer, a proper waterproof.
Shoes: Comfortable sneakers for sightseeing, ankle boots for cooler days and evenings.
Check out our Packing Guides to London and Scotland for more tips!
Lands’ End Waterproof Hooded Raincoat | Sizes: XS-XL Regular | XS-XL Petite | S-XL Tall | 1X-3X Plus
Ireland
Ireland in summer is one of the most common packing miscalculations in European travel. June, July, and August average 15–18°C (59–64°F) with frequent rain and wind that makes it feel cooler. The landscapes are extraordinary; green, dramatic and completely worth the layers required to enjoy them.
Long-sleeve tops, a merino or cashmere wool sweater, and a proper waterproof jacket are the essential trio. Not a packable layer, a real waterproof with a hood that actually functions in sideways rain. Jeans and comfortable waterproof boots complete the picture.
Outerwear: A warm waterproof jacket for all three summer months. This is the one destination in the guide where the summer outerwear answer is the same as winter.
Shoes: Waterproof leather boots or waterproof sneakers. Sandals can stay home for an Ireland itinerary.
Check out our Ireland Packing Guide for more tips!
Pact Softspun V-Neck Tee | Sizes XS-3X
Germany
Germany in summer is warm, sometimes hot, with temperatures averaging 22–26°C (72–79°F) in July. Berlin in summer is one of Europe’s most underrated seasonal cities; long days, outdoor culture at its best, excellent energy. Afternoon thunderstorms are a regular part of the summer pattern across much of the country, so a packable waterproof earns its place even on sunny mornings.
Neutral colors and clean silhouettes fit naturally with the local aesthetic. Short-sleeve tops, lightweight button-downs, and linen or wide-leg pants are comfortable and appropriate across the full range of summer activities. A maxi dress is a practical and elegant choice for warm days and transitions easily to evening.
Outerwear: A packable waterproof for afternoon storms. A light knit for evenings.
Shoes: Comfortable sneakers for city sightseeing, sandals for warmer days.
Check out our Germany Packing Guide for more tips!
Boden Tala Tiered Jersey Maxi Dress | Sizes: 0-22 Regular
Spain
Spain in summer is hot. Barcelona reaches 28–30°C (82–86°F) in July and August. Madrid runs hotter. Andalusia hotter still. The formula for summer packing in Spain is simple: the lightest fabrics available, prioritize breathability over everything else, and embrace the fact that evenings here are when the city comes alive.
Linen dominates, linen tops, linen dresses, linen wide-leg pants. Bold colors and prints look completely at home in Spain’s vibrant summer aesthetic. Sundresses and midi dresses are ideal and practical. Locals dress up for evenings, so one elevated option; a nicer dress, an elevated blouse with tailored pants, earns its place in the bag.
Outerwear: A light layer for evenings and air-conditioned interiors only.
Shoes: Comfortable sandals and sneakers for sightseeing, ballet flats or loafers for evening dining.
Check out our Spain Packing Guide for more tips!
Old Navy High-Waisted Linen-Blend Straight Ankle Pants: Sizes XXS-4X
Portugal
Portugal in summer is hot, significantly hotter than many travelers expect. Lisbon in July and August regularly hits 32–37°C (90–99°F), and the city’s hills make the heat feel more intense, not less. June is more forgiving at 26–29°C (79–84°F) and is arguably the best month to visit. The Algarve and coastal regions are slightly cooled by Atlantic breezes, but the heat is still very real.
Pack the lightest fabrics available. Linen dresses and wide-leg linen pants are the most practical and most stylish choice for Portugal in summer, breathable, packable, and completely appropriate from a morning of sightseeing to an evening in a restaurant. Readers who travel to Lisbon in summer consistently mention that lighter is always better than expected.
Outerwear: A light layer for evenings and cool interiors only. Sun protection, a hat and sunscreen, is more important than any outerwear decision.
Shoes: Comfortable sandals and sneakers. Cobblestone and tile surfaces in Lisbon are notoriously slippery, so grip matters.
Check out our Portugal Packing Guide for more tips!
Quince Silk Tiered Maxi Dress | Sizes XS-XL
Greece
Greece in summer is extraordinary and genuinely hot. Athens in July and August averages 30–34°C (86–93°F) and frequently exceeds that. The Greek islands are slightly cooled by the Aegean breeze, making them more comfortable in peak summer than the capital. The Acropolis and other ancient sites are fully exposed to the sun, early morning visits are not optional in July, they’re essential.
Pack linen and lightweight fabrics exclusively. Airy dresses, linen tops, wide-leg pants, the lightest options in the bag. Bold colors, white, and Mediterranean blues all look extraordinary against Greece’s sun-soaked backdrop. Sun protection is a primary packing consideration: a wide-brimmed packable hat and high-SPF sunscreen for the exposed ancient sites.
Outerwear: Nothing beyond a light cardigan for cool interiors.
Shoes: Comfortable sandals for most of the trip, sturdy closed-toe sneakers for the archaeological sites where uneven ground, slippery marble, and many stairs make support essential.
Check out our Greece Packing Guide for more tips!
Lands End Relaxed Supima Cotton Long Sleeve T-Shirt | Sizes: XS-XL Regular, Petite,Tall and 1X-3X Plus
Austria
Austria in summer is warm and beautiful, particularly in Vienna and the lake districts. July and August average 24–27°C (75–81°F), with warm days, pleasant evenings, and occasional afternoon thunderstorms. The local style in Vienna leans polished and slightly conservative, the city rewards slightly more considered outfits than the beach destinations further south.
Midi dresses and linen pants are natural choices for summer in Austria, comfortable for the heat and appropriate across the full range of activities from museum days to lakeside afternoons. Long-sleeved options and a light knit for evenings round out the warm-weather wardrobe.
Outerwear: A packable waterproof for afternoon storms and a light layer for evenings.
Shoes: comfortable sneakers for city sightseeing, sandals for the lakes and warmer days.
Check out our Austria Packing Guide for more tips!
Spanx Poplin Oversized Button-Down | Sizes XS-3X
Sweden
Sweden in summer is one of Europe’s best-kept travel secrets. Stockholm in July averages 20–23°C (68–73°F), warm, genuinely beautiful, and without the crowds that overwhelm Southern Europe at the same time of year. The legendary midnight sun means daylight that stretches impossibly late, and the outdoor culture; archipelago islands, waterfront cafés, summer markets, is extraordinary.
Scandinavian style is minimal and considered: neutral colors, quality basics, clean silhouettes. Pack light layers that work across varying temperatures. A linen or cotton shirt, wide-leg pants or a simple dress, a light knit for evenings. The days are long, so outfits need to carry through a full range of activities.
Outerwear: A light packable waterproof for the occasional summer rain, especially in late July and August when rain increases.
Shoes: Comfortable sneakers, sandals for warmer days.
Check out our Stockholm Packing Guide for more tips!
Unbound Merino V-Neck T-Shirt | Sizes XS-XL
Switzerland
Switzerland in summer varies significantly by altitude. Lower regions like Geneva and Zurich average 24–27°C (75–81°F) in July. Higher altitude areas run considerably cooler, even in peak summer. If your itinerary includes any hiking or mountain excursions, a warm layer is essential regardless of the season.
For city days, the formula is the same as elsewhere in summer Europe: light layers, breathable fabrics, comfortable shoes. For active days in the mountains; quick-dry technical fabrics and layering become more relevant. Switzerland’s outdoor culture means sporty and polished often coexist naturally.
Outerwear: A light packable waterproof for city days; a warmer layer for any mountain or high-altitude activities.
Shoes: Comfortable sneakers for cities, sturdy waterproof hiking shoes for trails.
Check out our Switzerland Packing Guide for more tips!
Lands’ End Wanderweight Packable Down Long Jacket | Sizes XS-3X
Norway
Norway in summer is mild, magical, and perfect for outdoor adventures. Bergen and Oslo in July average 18–22°C (64–72°F), genuinely pleasant rather than hot, with long days and extraordinary scenery. The fjords, the coastal towns, the mountain trails: summer is when Norway is at its most accessible and most beautiful.
Layers are still relevant here even in summer, mornings and evenings run cool, and the weather can shift quickly, particularly near the coast and in the mountains. A merino base layer, a good mid-layer, and a waterproof outer shell cover the full range of Norwegian summer conditions.
Outerwear: A proper waterproof jacket is more important than any other clothing decision for Norway.
Shoes: Waterproof boots for fjord hikes and coastal walks; comfortable sneakers for city days.
Check out our Norway Packing Guide for more tips!
Shop Ecco Soft 7 Sneaker: Nordstrom | Ecco
The Netherlands
The Netherlands in summer is warm, breezy, and alive with canal-side culture. Amsterdam in July averages 20–23°C (68–73°F), comfortable rather than hot, with long days, outdoor markets, and the kind of relaxed city energy that summer here does better than almost anywhere. Rain is still a regular possibility, and the canal winds make evenings feel cooler than the temperature suggests.
Dutch style is relaxed and effortlessly cool, neutral tones, quality basics, practical but considered. Wide-leg pants and a fitted top, a simple dress with a light layer, clean sneakers that look intentional: these are the looks that feel at home in Amsterdam’s summer streets. Jeans remain a local staple even in summer warmth.
Outerwear: A packable waterproof for rain and a light knit for evening canal-side dinners.
Shoes: Comfortable sneakers, sandals for warmer days.
Check out our Packing Guide to The Netherlands for more tips!
Build Your Summer Capsule Wardrobe
Summer is the lightest pack of the four seasons, fewer layers, lighter fabrics, more flexibility per piece.
The Travel Fashion Math still applies: three bottoms multiplied by four or five tops creates well over a week of combinations. Add two dresses and the count climbs further, covering a two-week trip with room to spare.
The Quince 100% European Linen Long Sleeve Shirt is a European travel staple lightweight and breathable for warm days, polished enough for any setting, and easy to layer over a tank or under a cardigan when temperatures drop.
Tops
Summer tops are where the season does its best work, light, versatile, endlessly mixable. Short sleeves form the foundation: two or three fitted tees, a ribbed V-neck, and a quality linen button-down that works open over a fitted top or alone. The linen shirt earns its place on every summer Europe trip, breathable in heat, packable to nothing, and polished enough for evenings.
One long-sleeve lightweight knit for cool evenings in Northern Europe and the UK, air-conditioned museums, and overnight trains. It takes up almost no space and covers every scenario where the temperature drops unexpectedly.
At least one top should be genuinely elevated. A silk-feel blouse, a quality linen shirt, a beautifully draped V-neck, something that makes dark jeans or a midi skirt feel like a dinner outfit rather than the end of a sightseeing day.
The J.Jill Wearever Smooth-Fit Knit Jeans are a smart travel bottom for Europe, they look like jeans but feel like leggings, with a smooth knit fabric that moves with you through long sightseeing days without ever feeling stiff or restrictive.
Bottoms
Jeans remain the most versatile bottom even in summer, they transition from morning sightseeing to evening dinner without effort, look appropriate across every European city, and handle temperature fluctuations better than lighter alternatives.
Wide-leg linen pants are the summer star. Breezy in heat, polished enough for evenings, packable to almost nothing, and genuinely worn by women across every Southern European city in summer. They’re also the smart multi-climate solution: light enough for Athens, warm enough for cool Amsterdam evenings.
Tailored shorts in a quality fabric earn their place for genuinely hot destinations, not athletic shorts, not denim cut-offs, a well-cut pair that handles a city afternoon and a casual dinner equally well. A midi skirt rounds out the options: packable, effortlessly European, practical for religious sites.
Leggings earn their place even in summer, worn under pants or jeans on cool northern evenings or long flights, they add warmth without bulk. That second use, under trousers rather than just under skirts, is the one that gets overlooked most and delivers the most comfort when needed.
The Quince European Linen Scoop Neck Midi Dress is a perfect summer Europe dress, 100% European linen keeps you cool in the heat, the midi length covers you for religious sites, and the classic gingham print feels effortlessly chic in any European city.
Dresses
Dresses are the standout summer piece for the vacation traveler. One piece, a complete outfit, zero coordination required, and in the heat of Southern Europe, significantly more comfortable than any pants-and-top combination.
Pack two. A light jersey or linen-blend midi for day, worn with sandals and a crossbody for sightseeing, dressed up with a simple sandals and a scarf for evenings. A second option that’s slightly more elevated for nicer dinners or a special evening: a silk-feel midi, a quality wrap dress, a polished shirt dress.
Both should cover the knees or come close. A lightweight scarf for shoulders and the same dress handles religious site dress codes anywhere in Italy, Spain, or Portugal without requiring a wardrobe change.
Readers who travel to Europe in summer consistently report that they wore their dresses more than anything else they packed. For the best summer dress options for European travel, see best summer dress for Europe!
J.Crew Short Barn Jacket in Denim | Sizes XXS-3X
Outerwear: The Most Important Packing Decision
Summer is the lightest outerwear season, not the no-outerwear season. The destination makes all the difference here.
For Cool and Rainy Summer Destinations
Ireland and the UK need a proper waterproof jacket even in July. This is the most common summer packing mistake for Western European itineraries. London and Dublin deliver cool, grey, genuinely wet days in August. A packable layer isn’t sufficient. A real waterproof jacket with sealed seams and a functioning hood is what’s needed.
For Warm Summer Destinations
Southern Europe (France, Italy, Spain, Portugal, Greece) doesn’t need a warm jacket. What it does need is a light packable layer for heavily air-conditioned interiors, evening breezes, and the occasional afternoon thunderstorm in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland.
The Waterproof Rule
Regardless of destination: waterproof, not water-resistant. Water-resistant fabrics handle a light drizzle; they fail in sustained rain. For Northern and Western Europe destinations, this distinction matters significantly.
Check out our full roundup of the Best Rain Jackets Women Love for Travel.
The Practical Rule
Pack outerwear for the coolest destination on the itinerary. A packable waterproof that handles Dublin’s rain lives at the bottom of the day bag in Barcelona. The reverse, arriving in Ireland underprepared, is not solvable on the ground.
The Naot Dylan Slingback Sandal is the kind of shoe that makes a European summer trip effortless, supportive enough for full days on cobblestone streets, polished enough to wear straight to dinner without changing.
Best Shoes for Europe in the Summer
The only rule that actually matters for summer Europe shoes: comfort first, everything else second. The average sightseeing day covers 15,000–20,000 steps on cobblestones, museum marble, and uneven surfaces.
Summer adds heat to that equation, feet swell in warmth, and shoes that fit fine at home can become a problem by midday on a hot Roman street. Break every pair in thoroughly before departure.
Discover the Best Walking Shoes for Europe in our full guide, with expert recommendations for comfortable shoes that stand up to long days and cobblestone streets.
The Summer Three-Pair Formula
Sandals earn equal billing with sneakers as the primary sightseeing shoe in summer, the one season this is genuinely true. In Athens, Rome, Barcelona, and Lisbon in July, a comfortable strapped sandal is often the better choice for a full day outdoors. The criteria: a strap and buckle for stability, leather or quality synthetic materials, a sole with grip for cobblestones, and broken in before departure.
Sneakers remain essential, comfortable, minimal, worn by locals of all ages across every European city. For Northern European destinations and any day involving significant cobblestone miles, sneakers are the more practical primary shoe.
A loafer or ballet flat rounds out the three for evenings, when sandals feel too casual and sneakers too relaxed for a nice dinner. If the sneakers are clean and minimal enough to work for evenings, skip the third pair entirely.
The Travelon Anti-Theft Classic Crossbody is a smart pick for Europe, locking compartments, slash-resistant straps, and RFID-blocking protection mean you can explore confidently without worrying about pickpockets.
Bags
A secure, stylish day bag is as important as any clothing decision in summer Europe. Summer brings the year’s heaviest tourist traffic, which means the year’s most active pickpocket season at popular sites, busy metros, and crowded markets.
The crossbody is the most practical and most popular choice, it keeps belongings close to the body, leaves hands free, and is harder to access quickly than a bag worn on the shoulder or back. Wear it in front in crowded areas. A beautiful leather crossbody with a secure zip closure works as well as a technical anti-theft bag in most European cities and looks considerably more at home.
See our full guide to choosing the Best Travel Purses for Europe, full of popular options for busy sightseeing days and global adventures.
Compass Rose Carryon Size Packing Cubes are a game changer for staying organized sized perfectly for a carry-on, they compress your clothes to maximize space and make unpacking at your destination effortless.
Packing Strategy
Before anything goes into the suitcase, lay everything on the bed and ask of every single item: will this genuinely be worn at least three times on this trip? Summer packing specifically benefits from this discipline, the instinct to pack light is right, and the “just in case” extra layers are almost never worn in the Mediterranean heat.
The goal, as with every season, is carry-on only. Europe’s metro stairs, cobblestone streets, and boutique hotel lifts make a rolling carry-on significantly easier than a checked bag, and summer’s light wardrobe makes carry-on only more achievable than any other time of year.
For trips over a week, plan to do laundry rather than pack more clothing. Most hotels and Airbnbs in Europe have laundry access or can arrange it; laundromats are available in every major city. Merino and quick-dry synthetics dry overnight in a hotel room. Cotton does not.
See our Complete Guide to Europe for the full packing strategy including luggage recommendations, fashion insights and packing tips.
Here are three easy options for how to do laundry while traveling!
T Shirt 1 | T Shirt 2 | Shirt | Tank | Shorts | Dress | Jacket | Pants | Bag | Hat | Sneakers | Sandals
Quick-Reference Summer Packing Checklist
For a complete, printable, editable version to customize for the specific trip, download the Travel Fashion Girl Printable Packing Checklist.
Clothing
Shoes
Accessories
- Compact travel umbrella
- Sunglasses with UV protection
- Packable sun hat (Southern Europe and exposed sites)
- Travel-size sunscreen
Gear and Organization
Documents and Safety
- Passport (on person)
- Passport photocopy (stored separately)
- Backup cash in hidden wallet
- Visa requirements checked per destination
- Travel insurance confirmed
Toiletries
- Travel-size only, buy anything forgotten on arrival
- Sunscreen (essential from June across Southern Europe)
- Detergent sheets for sink washing
Breezy, polished, and endlessly versatile the Quince Linen Pants are the kind of summer Europe bottom you’ll reach for every single day.
Ready to Start Packing?
Summer in Europe rewards the traveler who packs for the actual trip, not for a generic idea of summer. The itinerary determines everything: what works in Lisbon at noon is wrong for Dublin at any hour.
Build the wardrobe around the specific destinations, lean into linen for the south, keep the waterproof accessible for the north and west, and trust that lighter is almost always the right call.
Which summer destinations are on the itinerary this year? Are you heading to the heat of Southern Europe or the long golden days up north? Share in the comments.
If you’re traveling to Europe, read these articles to start packing for your trip:
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