Pasta making€25–€52Hands-onRanked & testedUpdated 8 min read
Best Pasta Making Classes in Rome (Tested & Ranked)
Rome's 8 best pasta making classes, ranked from more than 16,000 verified reviews — fresh fettuccine and ravioli, classic Roman sauces, and the kitchens where it's done right.
Hand-rolling and cutting fresh fettuccine — the heart of every Rome pasta class.
RC
Rome Cooking Class — editorial team
Compiled from GetYourGuide partner data across 150+ Rome cooking classes and a Rome cooking-class research brief, June 2026.
Why make pasta in Rome
Rome is one of the few cities where making pasta counts as a cultural experience, not just a cooking lesson. The best classes here hand you the secrets of cacio e pepe, amatriciana and perfect fettuccine in the same kitchens where generations of Italian home cooks learned them.
We went through more than 16,000 verified reviews across Rome's top-rated pasta classes to rank the best options available right now.
We focused on the criteria that matter when you're handing over your euros and two holiday hours:
Review volume & rating — a minimum of 700 verified reviews
Truly hands-on — no demonstration-only classes
Value for money — what's included against the price
Location — convenience and setting
What you actually make — complexity and range of dishes
Free cancellation — every class on this list qualifies
The 8 best pasta making classes in Rome, ranked
The two highest-rated, best-value picks lead; the rest follow by review volume and the kind of traveller they suit best.
#1 · Best overall
Pasta & Tiramisu Class with Fine Wine by the Vatican
★★★★★Rated 4.9 out of 54.9·6,576 reviews·€24
✓ Free cancellation up to 24 hours before
Rome's single most-reviewed cooking class. Handmade pasta and tiramisù from scratch with a local chef in a neighbourhood restaurant near the Vatican, with free-flowing fine wine and Prosecco.
Top Pasta Making by the Pantheon (Wine, Dessert & Limoncello)
★★★★★Rated 4.9 out of 54.9·3,434 reviews·€47
✓ Free cancellation up to 24 hours before
Make two or three fresh pasta shapes with a team of instructors two minutes from the Pantheon, finished with organic Tuscan wine, limoncello and dessert.
3-in-1 Fettuccine, Ravioli & Tiramisu Cooking Class
★★★★★Rated 4.9 out of 54.9·2,849 reviews·€52
✓ Free cancellation up to 24 hours before
Real chefs, no demonstrations: make fettuccine and ravioli entirely by hand plus tiramisù from scratch near Piazza Navona — the category's most technique-dense class.
The best-value entry point: make fresh fettuccine from scratch at a restaurant overlooking Piazza Navona, then dine over the square's fountains with a drink and limoncello included.
Fettuccine & Tiramisù Class with Wine & Limoncello
★★★★★Rated 4.8 out of 54.8·2,149 reviews·€42
✓ Free cancellation up to 24 hours before
Everything by hand — no machines, no pre-made dough. Fresh fettuccine with the Roman sauce of your choice plus tiramisù, paired with wine and a closing limoncello.
Pasta & Tiramisu Cooking Class near the Spanish Steps
★★★★★Rated 4.8 out of 54.8·1,807 reviews·€49
✓ Free cancellation up to 24 hours before
Steps from the Spanish Steps in Rome's most elegant quarter. A welcome drink, small groups and an unhurried, polished evening of pasta and tiramisù. Available in English and Spanish.
Make two pasta dishes and a Neapolitan pizza from dough to wood-fired oven, plus tiramisù, in an outdoor Roman garden — with unlimited wine and metro pickup included.
A half-day in the hilltop wine town of Frascati: a 15th-century family cellar, a town walk, fresh pasta with Roman sauces and a proper two-wine tasting. The most immersive option here.
Most classes teach fettuccine as the primary pasta — a wide, flat ribbon that's forgiving for beginners. You mix 00 flour with eggs, knead the dough, rest it, roll it thin by hand and cut it into ribbons, then choose a classic Roman sauce: carbonara, cacio e pepe, amatriciana, or tomato and basil. Higher-end classes also cover ravioli.
How long
Most run 2.5–3.5 hours. The cooking itself takes 60–90 minutes, followed by a sit-down meal of everything you made.
Experience needed
None at all. Every class on this list is designed for complete beginners and guided step by step.
What to bring
Wear clothes you don't mind getting flour on. All equipment and ingredients are provided.
Language
All classes here run in English. The Spanish Steps class also runs in Spanish.
What recent guests say
Reviews sourced verbatim from each class's GetYourGuide listing. We do not edit or solicit reviews.
★★★★★
Best night of our holiday. Learnt how to make best ever Ravioli and Tiramisu and had great company. The wine may have helped.
Verified guest · United Kingdom
★★★★★
You really get to make your own pasta and tiramisu and it actually looks and tastes great. Guaranteed a great memory for all.
Verified guest · United States
★★★★★
April did a great job at making us feel like true chefs. A great experience with prosecco while we wait, pasta making, and dinner with drinks after.
Verified guest · United States
★★★★★
My family loved our pasta class! My children were able to make pasta just as well as the adults. We've already bought the '00' flour to make our own at home.
Verified guest · United States
Frequently asked questions
How much does a pasta making class in Rome cost?
Classes on this list run from about €25 to €52 per person. The Vatican class starts from €25 (book early for that price); classes with multiple dishes or premium locations sit at €42–€52.
What do you make in a pasta cooking class in Rome?
Typically fresh fettuccine with a Roman sauce of your choice, plus tiramisù. More ambitious classes add ravioli or cover two or three pasta shapes.
Are pasta making classes suitable for complete beginners?
Yes — no cooking experience is required. Instructors guide you through every step, from mixing the dough to plating the finished dish.
Can I take a pasta class in Rome with children?
Most welcome children aged 4 and up. The 3-in-1 class and the Pantheon class both have strong track records with families.
Do pasta classes include wine?
Almost all do. Several offer free-flowing wine throughout, and the Frascati class includes a formal wine tasting.
How far in advance should I book?
Popular evening slots book out 2–4 weeks ahead in peak season (April–October). Every class offers free cancellation, so there's no risk in booking early.