There’s something deeply magnetic about silence. Not the silence of an empty room, but the kind that echoes through crumbled stone streets and overgrown squares where life once hummed with conversation, laughter, and daily routines. The TikTok hashtag #GhostTowns has accumulated over 2 billion views, proving that Europe’s abandoned villages have caught the collective imagination of travelers worldwide. These aren’t just relics collecting dust in forgotten corners. They’re places where history whispers through every crack in the wall, and locals are increasingly vocal about wanting visitors to experience them before they vanish entirely.
Why the sudden urgency? Honestly, it’s complicated. According to Juan Barbed, founder of co-living experience Rooral, “Spain is one of the countries in Europe with the biggest demographic gap,” noting, “Half our villages are dying, like in the terminal stage.” The same phenomenon ripples across Italy, France, and parts of Eastern Europe. Communities that once thrived are now caught between complete abandonment and a fragile chance at revival through sustainable tourism. Let’s explore five remarkable villages where locals believe tourism might just be the lifeline they desperately need.
Craco, Italy: The Medieval Village Frozen by Disaster

Perched dramatically on a cliff in southern Italy’s Basilicata region, Craco looks like something plucked straight from a fantasy film. It has been featured in movies like Quantum of Solace. The town’s decline began between the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century, when more than 1,300 impoverished residents moved to the United States. In 1963, Craco began to be evacuated following a landslide, and in 1972, a flood worsened the situation even further. After an earthquake in 1980, the ancient site was completely abandoned.
What makes Craco compelling isn’t just its haunting beauty. As of early 2025, Craco is accessible via guided tours with added safety measures due to the region’s geological instability, and visitors are urged to respect preservation efforts, especially in delicate structures such as the old monastery and castle tower. Local guides have become passionate advocates for their village, showing visitors the medieval architecture while sharing stories of families who once called this precarious hillside home. The village receives conservation funds through tourism, creating a delicate balance between preservation and access.
Kayaköy, Turkey: The Ghost Town with a Greco-Turkish Past

Technically on Europe’s edge but culturally intertwined with the continent, Kayaköy tells a story that’s both tragic and beautiful. Once a Greek artisan town known as Leivissi, Kayaköy has been mostly uninhabited since 1923, when the Greek Orthodox residents were forcibly exiled as part of a population exchange negotiated at the end of the Greco-Turkish War. Unlike many abandoned sites, this one wasn’t lost to natural disaster or economic decline but to political upheaval that severed communities overnight.
Now, hundreds of stone houses cascade down the rocky hillside, their hollow windows staring out like empty eyes. Recent efforts to restore part of the old ghost town have brought new life back to Kayaköy, along with a handful of cafes, restaurants, and hotels that cater to the growing tourist crowd. Local authorities implemented sustainable tourism regulations in recent years, recognizing that the village’s haunting beauty could either bring meaningful economic revival or become just another overcrowded attraction. The tension between those two futures is palpable.
Belchite, Spain: A Civil War Memorial Frozen in Time

Walking through Belchite feels uncomfortably intimate. During the Spanish Civil War in the late 1930s, Belchite became the site of one of the most brutal battles of the conflict. In 1937, buildings were razed to the ground, and most of the townspeople were murdered. Unlike other war-damaged towns that were rebuilt, Franco’s regime made a deliberate decision to leave old Belchite untouched as a monument to the conflict, constructing a new village nearby instead.
A visit to this village is now limited to guided tours to avoid overexploitation. Local guides, often descendants of those who fled the violence, lead visitors through skeletal church facades and bullet-riddled walls. There’s no sugarcoating here, no attempt to romanticize the horror. Yet there’s power in that honesty. The tours aren’t merely about sightseeing but about bearing witness to what war does to ordinary places and ordinary people. It’s heavy, sure, but locals believe these stories need telling.
Ostana, Italy: The Village Revived by Visionary Leadership

Here’s where the story shifts from melancholy to hopeful. In the heart of the Upper Po Valley at the foot of the majestic Monviso lies Ostana, one of the most beautiful villages in Italy, which tells an extraordinary story of resilience and rebirth thanks to the passion and commitment of Giacomo Lombardo, an enlightened mayor who dedicated his life to the rebirth of the country. What makes Ostana different? It’s not just preserved as a museum piece. People actually live here again.
With the aim of reaching 100 inhabitants, Ostana continues to work for sustainable repopulation. The land association, which manages 300,000 square meters of land, entrusts it to farmers to reclaim abandoned land. This isn’t about filling houses with tourists for a weekend but about creating genuine community infrastructure that allows people to build lives. The village has become a model for how thoughtful leadership combined with tourism revenue can reverse depopulation. Visitors contribute economically while locals maintain authentic daily rhythms, a balance many villages struggle to achieve.
Anento, Spain: From 100 Residents to Tourism Success Story

Sometimes the transformation happens quickly. Anento, a picturesque village occupying a limestone valley in the province of Zaragoza, has gone in 10 years from having just 100 inhabitants and 2,000 visitors a year to welcoming some 45,000 tourists annually. That’s not a typo. The village increased its visitor numbers more than twentyfold in a decade.
How did they do it? To maintain this momentum, two new restaurants, a hotel, agritourism flats, and a tourism office have recently been built in the village, while the former football pitch has been converted into a car park. Local businesses adapted to welcome visitors without losing the village’s character. The strategy centered on highlighting Anento’s natural limestone valley setting and medieval architecture. Residents credit the success to controlled growth, ensuring tourism enhances rather than overwhelms village life. Though challenges remain, Anento demonstrates that with community buy-in and careful planning, even the smallest villages can carve out sustainable futures.
Why Locals Want You to Visit Now

There’s urgency behind these invitations that goes beyond economics. As younger generations continue to move toward urban centers, the remaining elderly populations of Europe’s semi-abandoned villages and hamlets will pass away, taking a large portion of the region’s history, tradition, and lifestyle with them. The more that village populations shrink, the more birthrates plummet, and economies slow down; the more schools are closed down; the more doctors are centralized into larger towns. It’s a downward spiral that accelerates with each passing year.
The Italian government and the EU are moving forward with a plan to save at least 250 villages in danger of becoming ghost towns. Each region has chosen one village at risk of abandonment and submitted plans to the National Recovery and Resilience plan. Similar initiatives exist across Spain and France. Locals view responsible tourism not as exploitation but as a partnership, a way for outsiders to appreciate these places while contributing to their survival. The emphasis is always on “responsible” though. Nobody wants their village turned into a theme park or overrun by influencers treating it as just another Instagram backdrop.
These aren’t just pretty ruins to photograph and forget. They’re communities fighting for survival, histories demanding to be remembered, and landscapes deserving protection. When locals urge travelers to visit, they’re offering something precious: the chance to witness places balanced on the edge between memory and oblivion, and perhaps, through your visit, tip the scales toward preservation. What do you think? Would you visit one of these villages, knowing your presence might help keep its story alive?
<p>The post Europe’s “Ghost Towns”: 5 Beautiful Villages Locals Are Urging American Travelers to Visit first appeared on Travelbinger.</p>