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First person
To the source

The waters at Saturnia have been used since the time of the Etruscans. Jane Kitchen travels to Italy to visit one of the most iconic thermal springs in the world


We smell it before we see it: the pungent scent of sulphurous waters permeates Terme di Saturnia Resort, seeping into the lobby. It’s quite possibly the strangest first impression of a five-star hotel I’ve ever had. But it’s the waters that people come here for – we’ve driven 2 hours from Siena, down roughly paved, precariously twisty roads, to the remote landscape of Maremma, where spring waters have gushed from the centre of the earth for more than 3,000 years, since the time of the Etruscans, who called the town Aurinia and used the springs for sacred rituals in the 7th century BC.

Legend has it that the Roman god Saturn, tired of the constant warfare of men, took a thunderbolt to the earth, causing a river of hot water to gush through the valleys and envelop all things so that their spirits were quietened. The Romans renamed the town and the springs Saturnia and the first modern hotel was built on the site in 1919. Terme di Saturnia was born.

Since then, people have been coming to the resort to experience the thermal spring’s health-giving properties; the water – which contains bicarbonate, alkaline, calcium, magnesium and carbon dioxide in addition to 14 mg per litre of sulphur – is said to have beneficial effects on every system in the body, from skin and the respiratory system to bone health. It flows at 500 litres per second from underground, which means the water is naturally replenished in the resort’s pools every 4 hours. Unlike many hot springs, which often need to be cooled for bathing, Saturnia’s water is a perfect 37.5°C.

A 40-year journey
We’ve come to Saturnia after a long weekend of celebrations for my cousin’s 40th birthday – a fitting time to visit, as the thermal water makes a 40-year journey underground from Mount Amiata, flowing through travertine passages lined with clay and picking up its mineral content along the way. The water bursts from the spring into the resort’s main pool, then spills over into other pools and finally to a stream that moves downhill until it reaches an old stone mill. It’s here where the iconic terraced pools of Saturnia are located with their milky blue waters. This is where my cousin heads with his wife and two young children, keen to see beautiful pools from Instagram first-hand. It’s a bonus that they’re free and open to the public. “Just think,” I tell my cousin, who’s grown up summering in Tuscany, “you’re soaking in rainwater that fell onto Mount Amiata the year you were born!”

Up at the hotel, my husband and I don our robes to check out its five thermal pools. The main pool, which houses the spring, is a deep cerulean blue and is shaded throughout with darker hues, which I only realise after a few minutes of floating are actually clusters of algae. The thermal plankton is gelatinous in texture but rich in minerals and is used in the resort’s treatments and cosmetics.

Third-generation visitors
I fashion an armchair of sorts from foam noodles and simply float in the water, which is filled with small bubbles that gently caress your skin as they burst, in addition to the algae that feels incredibly silky. The pool is full of mostly Italians doing the same thing – soaking, chatting, relaxing. In fact, 75 per cent of the resort’s guests are nationals, with the average age between 35 and 50, and “younger and younger with the years passing,” says general manager Antonello Del Regno. Many are second and third-generation visitors, having first come as children and now bringing their own families. Up to 40 per cent of business is from repeat guests, says Del Regno.

“In Italy, Terme di Saturnia is recognised as the ultimate escape for wellbeing, having such a long tradition since the Romans,” he says. “Families celebrate festivities and important achievements with us – it’s like a second home … a gift from generation to generation to take care of yourself.”

I get a text from my cousin: the children are enjoying the shallow waters at the public pools, but he advises us to stay put at the tranquil resort as it’s packed where he is.

Beyond spa & beauty
The hotel’s thermal area includes five outdoor thermal pools, as well as whirlpools, contrast therapy and indoor and outdoor relaxation areas. But the resort also includes a Spa & Beauty Clinic with 53 treatment rooms, where guests can have massages, mud therapy, inhale thermal vapours, medical and beauty treatments, nutritional guidance, hydrokinesis and Tecar Therapy, as well as fillers, injections, skin peels and laser treatments.

The Terme di Saturnia Method focuses on different goals – losing weight and shaping the body, elimination of toxins, stimulation of the immune system and reactivation of energy flows – and the team includes several specialised medical practitioners.

“The healing water is a treatment in itself, with so many health benefits,” says Del Regno. “Most weekend guests are happy just with that and then they’ll choose a classic massage or facial.” Midweek guests, he says, are different, choosing longer programmes and more treatments advised by doctors. Regardless, he reports that the spa capture rate is an incredible 98 per cent.

Terme di Saturnia has also recently introduced a series of programmes focused on areas such as metabolic health, qi gong and yoga. “We wanted to grow awareness of Terme di Saturnia not only as a medical spa but also as the perfect location for holistic wellness,” says Del Regno. “Prevention instead of cure is the keyword now. Nature, expertise, healing waters and medical know-how are the perfect premise for this.”

Mesmerising highlights
With only one night at the resort, my husband and I dedicate our time to the original treatment of balneotherapy and taking to the waters.

At 8am the next day, I take advantage of the cooler air to go for a run down to the old mill. I have the place nearly to myself and am mesmerised as the thermal steam punctuates the morning light. I imagine this is what it used to be like before Instagram got the best of it. I’m struck that the highlights of Saturnia are the ones that can’t be captured in a photograph or reel: the pure relaxation felt by floating in perfectly warm water that’s taken 40 years to surface – and yes, that waft of sulphur. Not everyone likes it, but to me, it’s a signal of the power of the minerals in the water. It smells like true healing.

Sister site coming soon
Writing this article weeks later, it’s announced that Terme Italia Holding, the operating company behind Terme di Saturnia, is scheduled to open one of the largest thermal parks in Italy in early 2025.

The €50 million (US$55.3 million, £42.1 million), 16,000sq m De Montel Terme di Milano will boast 10 pools ranging from 22˚C to 38˚C and accommodate up to 700 guests. Companies helping to bring it to market include bbspa_Group, Starpool and Myrtha Wellness.

The thermal park is a redevelopment project of Milan’s renowned De Montel horse racing stables. It’s also part of the Reinventing Cities initiative. Reinventing Cities is underpinned by C40 – a design competition launched by a network of mayors of 100 world-leading cities to “transform underutilised urban sites into beacons of sustainability and resilience”.

I can’t wait to return to Italy to see how the old and new thermal spas compare.
Jane Kitchen takes to the sulphurous waters with her husband Christian / photo: Jane Kitchen

"Terme di Saturnia is like a second home to many families ... a gift from generation to generation to take care of yourself" – Jane Kitchen

Read more from this issue of Spa Business magazine

View contents of Spa Business 2024 issue 3
The Terme di Saturnia Resort offers a more tranquil experience
The Terme di Saturnia Resort offers a more tranquil experience / photo: SDM : Terme di Saturnia
Pools are a perfect 37.5˚C and the healing water is a treatment in itself
Pools are a perfect 37.5˚C and the healing water is a treatment in itself / photo: SDM : Terme di Saturnia
Shaping the body is one focus, along with eliminating toxins and boosting immunity
Shaping the body is one focus, along with eliminating toxins and boosting immunity / photo: SDM : Terme di Saturnia
The company behind Terme di Saturnia is opening a €50m thermal park in Milan next year
The company behind Terme di Saturnia is opening a €50m thermal park in Milan next year / photo: SDM / J+S
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21-23 Jun 2026

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Midlands (Venue TBA), Liphook, United Kingdom
22-22 Jun 2026

World Bathing Day

Worldwide,
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©Cybertrek 2026
Uniting the world of spa & wellness
Get Spa Business and Spa Business insider digital magazines FREE
Sign up here ▸
News   Products   Magazine   Subscribe
First person
To the source

The waters at Saturnia have been used since the time of the Etruscans. Jane Kitchen travels to Italy to visit one of the most iconic thermal springs in the world


We smell it before we see it: the pungent scent of sulphurous waters permeates Terme di Saturnia Resort, seeping into the lobby. It’s quite possibly the strangest first impression of a five-star hotel I’ve ever had. But it’s the waters that people come here for – we’ve driven 2 hours from Siena, down roughly paved, precariously twisty roads, to the remote landscape of Maremma, where spring waters have gushed from the centre of the earth for more than 3,000 years, since the time of the Etruscans, who called the town Aurinia and used the springs for sacred rituals in the 7th century BC.

Legend has it that the Roman god Saturn, tired of the constant warfare of men, took a thunderbolt to the earth, causing a river of hot water to gush through the valleys and envelop all things so that their spirits were quietened. The Romans renamed the town and the springs Saturnia and the first modern hotel was built on the site in 1919. Terme di Saturnia was born.

Since then, people have been coming to the resort to experience the thermal spring’s health-giving properties; the water – which contains bicarbonate, alkaline, calcium, magnesium and carbon dioxide in addition to 14 mg per litre of sulphur – is said to have beneficial effects on every system in the body, from skin and the respiratory system to bone health. It flows at 500 litres per second from underground, which means the water is naturally replenished in the resort’s pools every 4 hours. Unlike many hot springs, which often need to be cooled for bathing, Saturnia’s water is a perfect 37.5°C.

A 40-year journey
We’ve come to Saturnia after a long weekend of celebrations for my cousin’s 40th birthday – a fitting time to visit, as the thermal water makes a 40-year journey underground from Mount Amiata, flowing through travertine passages lined with clay and picking up its mineral content along the way. The water bursts from the spring into the resort’s main pool, then spills over into other pools and finally to a stream that moves downhill until it reaches an old stone mill. It’s here where the iconic terraced pools of Saturnia are located with their milky blue waters. This is where my cousin heads with his wife and two young children, keen to see beautiful pools from Instagram first-hand. It’s a bonus that they’re free and open to the public. “Just think,” I tell my cousin, who’s grown up summering in Tuscany, “you’re soaking in rainwater that fell onto Mount Amiata the year you were born!”

Up at the hotel, my husband and I don our robes to check out its five thermal pools. The main pool, which houses the spring, is a deep cerulean blue and is shaded throughout with darker hues, which I only realise after a few minutes of floating are actually clusters of algae. The thermal plankton is gelatinous in texture but rich in minerals and is used in the resort’s treatments and cosmetics.

Third-generation visitors
I fashion an armchair of sorts from foam noodles and simply float in the water, which is filled with small bubbles that gently caress your skin as they burst, in addition to the algae that feels incredibly silky. The pool is full of mostly Italians doing the same thing – soaking, chatting, relaxing. In fact, 75 per cent of the resort’s guests are nationals, with the average age between 35 and 50, and “younger and younger with the years passing,” says general manager Antonello Del Regno. Many are second and third-generation visitors, having first come as children and now bringing their own families. Up to 40 per cent of business is from repeat guests, says Del Regno.

“In Italy, Terme di Saturnia is recognised as the ultimate escape for wellbeing, having such a long tradition since the Romans,” he says. “Families celebrate festivities and important achievements with us – it’s like a second home … a gift from generation to generation to take care of yourself.”

I get a text from my cousin: the children are enjoying the shallow waters at the public pools, but he advises us to stay put at the tranquil resort as it’s packed where he is.

Beyond spa & beauty
The hotel’s thermal area includes five outdoor thermal pools, as well as whirlpools, contrast therapy and indoor and outdoor relaxation areas. But the resort also includes a Spa & Beauty Clinic with 53 treatment rooms, where guests can have massages, mud therapy, inhale thermal vapours, medical and beauty treatments, nutritional guidance, hydrokinesis and Tecar Therapy, as well as fillers, injections, skin peels and laser treatments.

The Terme di Saturnia Method focuses on different goals – losing weight and shaping the body, elimination of toxins, stimulation of the immune system and reactivation of energy flows – and the team includes several specialised medical practitioners.

“The healing water is a treatment in itself, with so many health benefits,” says Del Regno. “Most weekend guests are happy just with that and then they’ll choose a classic massage or facial.” Midweek guests, he says, are different, choosing longer programmes and more treatments advised by doctors. Regardless, he reports that the spa capture rate is an incredible 98 per cent.

Terme di Saturnia has also recently introduced a series of programmes focused on areas such as metabolic health, qi gong and yoga. “We wanted to grow awareness of Terme di Saturnia not only as a medical spa but also as the perfect location for holistic wellness,” says Del Regno. “Prevention instead of cure is the keyword now. Nature, expertise, healing waters and medical know-how are the perfect premise for this.”

Mesmerising highlights
With only one night at the resort, my husband and I dedicate our time to the original treatment of balneotherapy and taking to the waters.

At 8am the next day, I take advantage of the cooler air to go for a run down to the old mill. I have the place nearly to myself and am mesmerised as the thermal steam punctuates the morning light. I imagine this is what it used to be like before Instagram got the best of it. I’m struck that the highlights of Saturnia are the ones that can’t be captured in a photograph or reel: the pure relaxation felt by floating in perfectly warm water that’s taken 40 years to surface – and yes, that waft of sulphur. Not everyone likes it, but to me, it’s a signal of the power of the minerals in the water. It smells like true healing.

Sister site coming soon
Writing this article weeks later, it’s announced that Terme Italia Holding, the operating company behind Terme di Saturnia, is scheduled to open one of the largest thermal parks in Italy in early 2025.

The €50 million (US$55.3 million, £42.1 million), 16,000sq m De Montel Terme di Milano will boast 10 pools ranging from 22˚C to 38˚C and accommodate up to 700 guests. Companies helping to bring it to market include bbspa_Group, Starpool and Myrtha Wellness.

The thermal park is a redevelopment project of Milan’s renowned De Montel horse racing stables. It’s also part of the Reinventing Cities initiative. Reinventing Cities is underpinned by C40 – a design competition launched by a network of mayors of 100 world-leading cities to “transform underutilised urban sites into beacons of sustainability and resilience”.

I can’t wait to return to Italy to see how the old and new thermal spas compare.
Jane Kitchen takes to the sulphurous waters with her husband Christian / photo: Jane Kitchen

"Terme di Saturnia is like a second home to many families ... a gift from generation to generation to take care of yourself" – Jane Kitchen

Read more from this issue of Spa Business magazine

View contents of Spa Business 2024 issue 3
The Terme di Saturnia Resort offers a more tranquil experience
The Terme di Saturnia Resort offers a more tranquil experience / photo: SDM : Terme di Saturnia
Pools are a perfect 37.5˚C and the healing water is a treatment in itself
Pools are a perfect 37.5˚C and the healing water is a treatment in itself / photo: SDM : Terme di Saturnia
Shaping the body is one focus, along with eliminating toxins and boosting immunity
Shaping the body is one focus, along with eliminating toxins and boosting immunity / photo: SDM : Terme di Saturnia
The company behind Terme di Saturnia is opening a €50m thermal park in Milan next year
The company behind Terme di Saturnia is opening a €50m thermal park in Milan next year / photo: SDM / J+S
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In the fast-paced world of fitness and wellness, where high-intensity workouts push us to our limits and the sweat pours, the importance of efficient recovery cannot be overstated. [more...]

Longevity in spas: a strategic choice, not a default setting
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+ More featured suppliers  
COMPANY PROFILES
G.M. Collin

G.M. Collin develops superior skin care products, from preventive care to combating the first signs [more...]
+ More profiles  
CATALOGUE GALLERY
+ More catalogues  

DIRECTORY
+ More directory  
DIARY

 

21-23 Jun 2026

Spa Life International (UK)

Midlands (Venue TBA), Liphook, United Kingdom
22-22 Jun 2026

World Bathing Day

Worldwide,
+ More diary  
 


ADVERTISE . CONTACT US

Leisure Media
Tel: +44 (0)1462 431385

©Cybertrek 2026

ABOUT LEISURE MEDIA
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LEISURE MEDIA HANDBOOKS
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